Journal Title : Antmind Review: Journal of Sharia and Legal Ethics
Print ISSN : 3063-3885
Online ISSN : 3063-3699
DOI Prefix : 10.63077
Frequency : 2 Issues per year (June, December)
Editor in-Chief : Misbahul Munir Makka, M.H.
Indexed: : Google Scgolar
Journal Cover

Antmind Review: Journal of Sharia and Legal Ethics is published by Antmind Youth Empower Foundation.

Antmind Review is an international, peer-reviewed academic journal focusing on interdisciplinary and comparative studies of Islamic law (Sharia) and legal ethics in both contemporary and classical contexts.

The journal publishes high-quality research on family and inheritance law, criminal justice, religious mediation, legal pluralism, digital ethics, economic regulation, gender justice, and environmental responsibility from Islamic and ethical perspectives.

Antmind Review aims to:

  • Promote theoretical innovation and contextual analysis in Islamic legal studies.
  • Advance understanding of legal ethics in pluralistic societies.
  • Foster academic dialogue among scholars, practitioners, and policymakers.

Published biannually, the journal welcomes submissions in English and Bahasa Indonesia that meet international academic standards.

Indexed:

EuroPub

CC BY All publications by Antmind Review: Journal of Sharia and Legal Ethics are licensed under CC-BY 4.0.

Current Issue

Vol. 2 No. 2 (2025): Antmind Review: Journal of Sharia and Legal Ethics
					View Vol. 2 No. 2 (2025): Antmind Review: Journal of Sharia and Legal Ethics

This issue has been available online since December 31, 2025, for the regular issue of December 2025. All articles in this issue (number of original research articles not stated) were authored/co-authored by 15 authors from 3 countries (Indonesia, Malaysia, and Egypt).

This issue of Antmind Review: Journal of Sharia and Legal Ethics presents a rich collection of interdisciplinary studies that critically engage with contemporary transformations in Islamic family law, legal ethics, and judicial practice in Indonesia and beyond. Several contributions examine the evolving legal status of interfaith families, highlighting the complex interplay between Islamic law, national legal policy, and human rights discourse in the aftermath of recent judicial developments, including Supreme Court Circular Number 2 of 2023, and illustrating how courts and families negotiate normative tensions between religious doctrine, constitutional principles, and plural social realities. Other articles extend the discussion by addressing institutional and technological innovation in Islamic family law governance, such as the use of artificial intelligence–based premarital counselling as a forward-looking strategy for strengthening sakinah families, alongside empirical analyses of court-annexed mediation and mobile court services that demonstrate how judicial institutions operationalize Islamic legal ethics through transformative mediation practices and access-to-justice initiatives, particularly in remote and peripheral regions. Taken together, the articles underscore the dynamic relationship between Sharia principles, legal institutions, and social change, inviting scholars, judges, policymakers, and practitioners to reconsider Islamic legal ethics not as a static doctrinal framework, but as a living system responsive to pluralism, technological change, and the demands of justice in contemporary societies.

Published: 2025-12-02

Articles

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