Hujjat al-Islam wal-Muslemin Hossein Adabi in an Exclusive Article:

Principle of media jurisprudence/21

It could be said that media is both simple and complex. It is simple in the sense that almost everyone considers themselves familiar with it and recognizes and uses at least some of its manifestations. It is complex because defining it precisely presents challenges, including overlaps with art, culture, virtual space, and more, making it extremely difficult to delineate boundaries between them. Hujjat al-Islam wal-Muslemin Hossein Adabi Charami, a professor of advanced levels at the Mashhad Seminary and a researcher of media jurisprudence, explores the nature and dimensions of media jurisprudence in this exclusive article.

Hujjat al-Islam wal-Muslemin Mohammad Sadeq Liravi in an Exclusive Interview with Contemporary Jurisprudence:

Principle of media jurisprudence/20

Hujjat al-Islam
Mohammad Sadeq Liravi has been engaged in media research for many years. He served for years as the director of the Fundamental Research Office at the Center for Islamic Media Studies and has been the head of this center for several years now. We discussed the challenges of media jurisprudence with him. He believes that the issues raised as challenges in media jurisprudence can be resolved through precise subject analysis. The full text of Contemporary Jurisprudence’s exclusive interview with the head of the Center for Islamic Media Studies is presented below:

Hujjat al-Islam wal-Muslemin Seyed Mohammad Mahdi Rafi’pour Tehrani in an Exclusive Interview with Contemporary Jurisprudence:

Principle of media jurisprudence/19

Hujjat al-Islam Seyed Mohammad Mahdi Rafi’pour Tehrani has been teaching advanced lessons in media jurisprudence at the Tehran Seminary for several years. Having studied for many years at the Qom Seminary under scholars such as Ayatollahs Tabrizi, Vahid Khorasani, Shubayri Zanjani, and Ha’eri, he returned to the Tehran Seminary. In addition to his seminary education, he pursued university studies up to the doctoral level. On the occasion of his teaching advanced lessons in media jurisprudence, we asked him about the nature of media jurisprudence. According to the author of An Introduction to Media Jurisprudence, due to its nascent nature, media jurisprudence has not yet reached a consensus among jurists regarding its definition and scope of issues. Therefore, we must wait a few years for this emerging jurisprudential discipline to achieve relative stability. The full text of Contemporary Jurisprudence’s exclusive interview with this professor and researcher of media jurisprudence is as follows:

Hujjat al-Islam Seyed Hamid Mirkhandan in an Exclusive Interview with Contemporary Jurisprudence:

Principle of media jurisprudence/18

Hujjat al-Islam Seyed Hamid Mirkhandan is among the scholars who have completed advanced studies in jurisprudence at the Qom Seminary and earned a doctorate in media jurisprudence from a university. This background makes him one of the most qualified individuals to discuss media jurisprudence and its nature. As a faculty member of the IRIB University, in this exclusive interview with Contemporary Jurisprudence, he explores the essence of media jurisprudence. According to him, although a clear distinction has been made between art and media, such a distinction between art jurisprudence and media jurisprudence has not been established and may not even be feasible. The full text of Contemporary Jurisprudence’s exclusive interview with a member of the academic council of the Department of Jurisprudence of Culture, Art, and Media at the Research Institute for Contemporary Jurisprudential Studies follows:

Hujjat al-Islam wal-Muslimeen Dr. Seyed Hassan Vahdati Shabiri, in an Exclusive Interview with Contemporary Fiqh:

Judicial Practical Principles/3

Hujjat al-Islam wal-Muslimeen Dr. Seyed Hassan Vahdati Shabiri, in addition to his expertise in fiqh and uṣūl al-fiqh, is well-versed in the field of law, particularly civil law. As a faculty member of the Private Law Department at the University of Qom, he has, for decades, integrated principles, fiqh, and law in his research and teaching in both the seminary and university settings. Regarding practical principles in fiqh and civil law, he believes that there are fundamentally no practical principles exclusive to civil law or civil fiqh. However, there are principles that are more frequently applied and thus more prevalent in fiqh and civil law compared to other practical principles. The president of the Faqāhat School of the Family of the Prophet (PBUH), in this exclusive interview, also discussed the difference between acts of worship and social rulings in terms of the extent to which practical principles are applied.
View the full text of this exclusive interview: