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Johns Hopkins UniversityEst. 1876

America’s First Research University

Book Talk: The Paradox of Islamic Finance

Oct 3, 2025
12:30 - 2pm EDT
Registration is required
This event is free

Who can attend?

  • General public
  • Faculty
  • Staff
  • Students

Description

Join the Reischauer Center and SAIS Middle East for a book talk with Ryan Calder, author of The Paradox of Islamic Finance, who will discuss his work with SAIS' Narges Bajoghli. Halal lunch will be provided.

About the book:

In the 1960s, Islamic finance began as a utopian experiment in interest-free banking to serve pious peasants, operated from a Volkswagen van in Egypt's Nile Delta. Today, Islamic finance is a $4 trillion industry present in over 100 countries and thoroughly intertwined with the global financial system. It is larger than the entire financial sector of South America, Eastern Europe (excluding Russia), or India. It offers Islamic analogues of most financial products, from auto finance and credit cards to bonds and derivatives. Instead of charging or receiving interest, which many Muslims consider sinful, Islamic products rely on complex legal justifications and baroque infrastructures to simulate the economic effects of interest.

So how did Islamic finance get so big in just half a century? I address this question in three parts. First, how do Islamic financial institutions make money without charging interest? Second, why is there a $4 trillion Islamic-finance industry, but no other "religious-finance industry" of comparable prominence? Even among the many comminglings of religion and modern rational capitalism, this industry's sheer size and scope stand out. And third, why do hundreds of millions of Muslims patronize Islamic finance when it overtly simulates interest? I challenge Max Weber's thesis that religious authority cannot regulate modern rational capitalism, showing how hyper-empowered shariah experts adapt classical Islamic law to the conditions of 21st-century finance. Belying media tropes of shariah as atavistic and irrational, the rise of Islamic finance demonstrates how contemporary shariah can be made consonant with neoliberal economic modernity. Along the way, Islamic finance has even spawned new ways of being a pious and ethical subject in a financial age.

Who can attend?

  • General public
  • Faculty
  • Staff
  • Students

Registration

Registration is required

Please register in advance