Dictionary of Islamic finance

著者

    • Khorshid, Aly

書誌事項

Dictionary of Islamic finance

Aly Khorshid

(Euromoney books)

Euromoney, c2011

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内容説明・目次

内容説明

With Islamic finance strengthening and attracting interest from the world of conventional finance, there is a growing body of work on the subject. However, many reference books are not intended to be read from cover to cover, and this can lead to confusion surrounding the idiosyncrasies of the specific Arabic and Quranic terms used. This Dictionary of Islamic Finance is intended as a companion glossary to be on hand whenever a word or phrase crops us that requires a deeper explanation. With many Islamic financial mechanisms having no direct equivalent in conventional finance, this is not a simple English-Arabic dictionary; it is an illuminating work that assumes little pre-knowledge of the subject. This authoritative encompassing dynamic resource brings together the best current Islamic terms used in the field of finance, banking and economics for students, Scholars, business, government officials, community groups, economists, stock and capital markets, as well as those working in conventional finance.

目次

Contents PART 1 AN INTRODUCTION TO ISLAMIC FINANCE 1 Foundation of Islamic finance The Islamic financial alternative Bibliography 2 A brief history of Islamic banking and finance Profit sharing Credit facilities The spread of Islamic banking 3 Principles of Islamic finance Introduction Usury Usury in Islam Usury in the Qur'an Usury in the Sunnah 'Hadith' Usury in Judaism Usury in Christianity Usury in Hinduism and Buddhism Usury in modern reformist thinking Usury and the law Modern Islamic banking Grameen Bank The basic pillars of Islamic finance Shariah advisory council/consultant Islamic investment principles Bai al-inah (sale and buy back agreement) Bai al-dayn Bay' bi-thaman ajil (deferred payment sale) Bai muajjal (credit sale) Bay al-salam Basic features and conditions of salam Hibah (gift) Ijarah Advantages of ijarah Ijarah thumma bai (hire purchase) Ijarah wa iqtina Mudarabah (profit sharing) Murabahah (cost plus) Musawamah Musharakah (joint venture) Qard hassan (interest free loan) Sukuk (Islamic bonds) Takaful (Islamic insurance) Wadi'ah (safekeeping) Wakala (agency) Islamic equity funds Islamic schools of thought Shi'a Sunni The Hanafi madh'hab The Maliki madh'hab The Shafi'i madh'hab The Hanbali madh'hab 3 Correct guidance Bibliography 4 Role and responsibilities of Shariah advisory boards Corporate governance in Islamic banking and finance Ethics of the Shariah and conventional finance systems Shariah scholars Shariah advisory boards Development of Islamic finance and banking Shariah advisers - challenges for the industry Two drafts issued by the IFSB The guiding principles on the conduct of business Principle 1 - honesty and fairness Principle 2 - due care and diligence Principle 3 - capabilities Principle 4 - information about clients Principle 5 - information to clients Principle 6 - conflicts of interest and duty Principle 7 - Shariah compliance The guiding principles on the Shariah governance system Principle 1 - general approach Principle 2 - competence Principle 3 - independence Principle 4 - confidentiality Principle 5 - consistency Malaysian model Appointment of members of a Shariah committee Qualification Disqualification Resignation and termination Restrictions on the Shariah committee Duties and responsibilities of the Shariah committee Conclusion 5 Sukuk and securitisation Definition of sukuk Definition of securitisation 6 Sukuk in the 21st century Characteristics of sukuk History of Islamic debt securities The principles of sukuk Types of sukuk Bonds versus sukuk Sukuk al-ijarah Steps involved in the structure Shariah observations on sukuk al-ijarah Sukuk al-mudarabah Steps involved in the structure Mudarabah and muqaradah sukuk Profits and losses in mudarabah and muqaradah sukuk Sukuk al-musharakah Steps involved in the structure Sukuk al-salam Steps involved in the structure Sukuk al-murabah Sukuk al-istisna Hybrid sukuk Structuring Islamic asset-backed securities SPV Criteria of securitised assets Sales criteria Benefits of asset-backed securitisation Profit and loss in sukuk Sukuk in short 7 Ethical investment and Islamic investment Evolution of corporation between global and Islamic finance Non-Muslim support for asset-backed practice Challenges and opportunities: how to progress External to the institution Growth markets and scope of services Standardisation - a fine balance Fee services/transaction banking Benchmarking Internal to the institution Product configuration and process orchestration Greater operational risk Cost management Know your customer norms E-documentation Credit risk scoring and modelling 8 A guide to using this dictionary Who is this dictionary for? What do the definitions consist of? Modern Islamic finance Islam and Muslim history Western finance Limitations of the dictionary Translation and transliteration Alphabetical ordering Cross-referencing PART 2 DICTIONARY OF ISLAMIC FINANCE

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