Mohammad Pourmand

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Media Jurisprudence and Media Communication: A New Arena in the Field of Humanities and Jurisprudential Studies Ali Darabi, Studies in the Transformation of Humanities, Fall 2022, Issue 11, 26 pages (pp. 116–141). Explanation of the Jurisprudential Ruling on Responding and …

Hujjat al-Islam Mohammad Reza Mahmoudi, in an exclusive note, examined:

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Hujjat al-Islam Mohammad Reza Mahmoudi is a young researcher at the Islamic Seminary who, in addition to jurisprudence, has studied law and media at the university level. In this exclusive note, he outlines the characteristics of Islamic media for its presence in the international arena. He believes that attention to five key features of Islamic media not only fulfills the satisfaction of the Lawgiver but also garners the favor of international audiences. The full text of this exclusive note follows:

Hujjat al-Islam Mohammad Qotbi, in an exclusive interview with Contemporary Jurisprudence:

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Note The name of Hujjat al-Islam Mohammad Qotbi is intertwined with innovation. For years, he has initiated projects whose primary characteristic is their novelty. The former head of the Islamic Propagation Office in Isfahan once addressed the organization of playhouses; …

Dr. Mehdi Meqdadi Davoudi, in an exclusive note, outlined:

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Although media jurisprudence has gained attention as one of the contemporary jurisprudential fields in recent years, with several advanced courses and numerous writings dedicated to it, it has rarely been discussed from a methodological and foundational perspective. Dr. Abbas Meqdadi Davoudi, a researcher of media jurisprudence, in this exclusive note, elaborates on the differences between traditional and modern approaches to media jurisprudence and outlines the requirements of each.

Hujjat al-Islam Mohammad Mahdi Rafipour Tehrani, in an exclusive interview with Contemporary Jurisprudence, stated:

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Media jurisprudence, compared to other emerging jurisprudential fields, is among those for which significant research and educational steps have been taken. The existence of several advanced courses on media jurisprudence, alongside dozens of books and articles on its various topics, heralds the formation of a new chapter titled “Media Jurisprudence” among contemporary jurisprudential chapters. One of the instructors of these advanced courses is Hujjat al-Islam Mohammad Mahdi Rafipour Tehrani. Born in Tehran, he moved to Qom in 2001 after completing his preliminary studies and benefited from the advanced courses of scholars such as Ayatollahs Tabrizi, Vahid Khorasani, Haeri, and Shobeiri Zanjani. For years, he has been engaged in teaching various courses on jurisprudence, exegesis, principles, and philosophy, and for several years, he has been teaching advanced courses on media jurisprudence at the Tehran Seminary. His four-volume collection, Jurisprudential Explorations, represents part of his jurisprudential efforts. In his conversation with Contemporary Jurisprudence, he elaborated on the foundations of media jurisprudence. According to him, with the current principles of jurisprudence, which focus solely on articulating obligations and excuses, speaking of the efficiency of jurisprudence is meaningless. The full text of Contemporary Jurisprudence’s exclusive interview with this professor of advanced media jurisprudence courses is as follows: