Department of Arabic and Islamic Studies

Felicitas Opwis

In her scholarly inquiries Felicitas Opwis addresses the religious sciences of Islam and the historical, social, and political environment in which Islamic thought is articulated. Her main research field focuses on Islamic jurisprudence, and in particular how the formulation of Islamic legal theory is related to intellectual discourse in other fields of Muslim learning, and to the political and social environment. She investigates how Islamic jurisprudents tackle the perpetual dilemma of achieving legal change without changing the scriptural foundations of the law. Through close comparative analyses she looks at how and why legal principles, such as public interest and juristic preference, change over time. Opwis has published books and articles on the development of the concept of maslaha and the purposes of the law (maqasid al-shari’a) in the pre-modern and contemporary period. Her research addresses construction of authority within schools of law; re-interpretation of particular legal principles; whether or not a “reformation” has occurred in Islamic law; and how approaches to Islamic law by contemporary Muslim jurisprudents alter the nature of Islamic legal theory.