'David Powers is an outstanding scholar of classical Islamic law and legal system. His research focuses on the history of Islamic law and its application in Muslim societies. He has published intensively in this area and here he places in the hands of the readers two decades’ work on the nature and performance of key Islamic legal institutions in the medieval Islamic West... this volume adds significant new details on Islamic legal and socio-cultural history, thus enhancing our understanding of both substantial and methodological aspects of the Islamic legal system and its general development, particularly in western Islam. Thus, this important work can be appreciated by students of Islamic law, Middle East scholars, and even the general public.' Bustan: The Middle East Book Review 'Each case study is in itself interesting and significant, but Powers' arguments are strengthened when the essays are read together ... anyone interested in Islamic legal development, comparative legal studies, the intersection of legal and social history, or women, family, and property in the western Islamic Mediterranean will want to read the essays collected here, and read them together.' Al-Masaq