Muhsin Nor Paizin
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Bibliometric Analysis of Zakat Research in Scopus Database Muhsin Nor Paizin; Siti Maziah Ab Rahman; Khalid Abdul Wahid; Mohd Noor Azam Nafi; Suryani Awang; Mariam Setapa
International Journal of Zakat Vol 6 No 1 (2021): International Journal of Zakat
Publisher : Center of Strategic Studies (PUSKAS) BAZNAS

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.37706/ijaz.v6i1.253

Abstract

Scopus research paper on the zakat was systematically analyzed using the VOSviewer bibliometric measurement. A total of 492 citation data was exported from Scopus on the query of Zakat, and from the initial result, twelve journals were selected in the expanded query process. The journals are Journal of Islamic Accounting and Business Research, International Journal of Islamic and Middle Eastern Finance and Management, International Journal of Innovation Creativity and Change, Advanced Science Letters, and Iop Conference Series Earth and Environmental Science were selected in the query expansion and exported for data visualization in VOSviewer. Results from the journal query returned 492 documents specializing in research of zakat payment. Co-word or co-occurrence analysis was used to identify key themes, and potential future research direction was highlighted.
Decentralization in Malaysia’s Zakat Management Organizations: A Comparison of Some States’ Zakat Collection Achievements Muhsin Nor Paizin
International Journal of Zakat Vol 7 No 1 (2022): International Journal of Zakat
Publisher : Center of Strategic Studies (PUSKAS) BAZNAS

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.37706/ijaz.v7i1.333

Abstract

The federal constitution defines Malaysia as a constitutional monarchy. The division of powers between the federal and state governments in the two lists has been explained by referencing the Federal Constitution’s Ninth Schedule. The federal government’s State List-II (aka the Federal List) gives significant control over various Muslim practices, such as zakat, and Malay tradition, to the states. So, therefore, it falls under the jurisdiction of the states to administer zakat. There are state-run zakat management organizations where decentralization has been implemented. This study aims to find out if decentralized zakat management, based on the findings of five Malaysian states: Johor, Perak, Selangor, Penang, and the Federal Territory, has a significant impact on overall zakat collection in the country. A significant benefit of decentralizing zakat collection efforts is that those efforts are more likely to produce better results. Collecting zakat using advanced channels provides a benefit in terms of various aspects of the collection system, and this represents a new stage in zakat collection when compared to economic data.