Prof. Jasser Auda is a leading contemporary scholar of Islamic thought whose intellectual project seeks to renew the very architecture of Islamic scholarship through a maqāṣid-based vision. As the founder of the Maqasid Institute and holder of the Al-Shatibi Chair for Maqasid Studies, his work advances a systemic methodology that reorients law, ethics, and public life toward the higher objectives of the Qur’an and the Prophetic tradition.
Formed through both classical and modern pathways—having memorised the Qur’an and studied in the circles of Al-Azhar Mosque, and later earning doctorates in the philosophy of Islamic law and systems analysis—his scholarship bridges revelation and complexity, tradition and systems thinking . This rare synthesis defines his intellectual contribution: the articulation of maqāṣid not as static principles, but as a dynamic, interconnected framework for reform.
His academic journey spans institutions across the globe, from Canada and the Middle East to Southeast Asia and beyond, reflecting a truly transnational engagement with Islamic thought. Through more than twenty-five books—many translated into numerous languages—he has shaped contemporary discourse on maqāṣid, governance, and the future of Islamic jurisprudence.
In his work, law is not merely interpreted; it is re-envisioned. Knowledge becomes a living system—one that, when guided by purpose, aspires toward justice, mercy, and the flourishing of human civilisation.