Anju Syahrin Marpaung
Unknown Affiliation

Published : 2 Documents Claim Missing Document
Claim Missing Document
Check
Articles

Found 2 Documents
Search

Tinjauan Fiqih Muamalah Terhadap Akad Jual Beli Layanan Go-Food Pada Aplikasi Go-Jek Nur Fitria Habiba; Aulia, Najri; Al Husaini, M.Rifqi; Lubis, Junita; Febriani, Lusi; Anju Syahrin Marpaung
Tabayyanu : Journal Of Islamic Law Vol. 2 No. 01 (2025)
Publisher : Yayasan Dar Arrisyah Indonesia

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar

Abstract

  Currently, buying and selling transactions in Islam are growing rapidly, this is due to the development of the times and technology that has developed so much from time to time until now. From this development comes some of our study material, namely about transactions that are developing, one of which is some services in online applications, among others, Go-food in the Go-jek application. In this problem, of course, it raises challenges for Muslims to examine these developing transactions, whether they are in accordance with Sharia or otherwise. And in the above problems, the researcher raises the title that has been described above to become material for study in order to find out several types of contracts contained in the service application in the online application. In this study, researchers used a qualitative approach in the form of normative juridical, the method used was concept analysis. Research is carried out by looking for reference sources that are relevant to the study of the title to be researched above, reverence materials to be researched, such as from the latest journals, books, magazines, and other reference materials. So it can be concluded that the results of this study, it is found that in the lease agreement occurs between the service provider company, namely go-jek with service providers or ojek drivers. From the problem of this agreement whether it is in accordance with Islamic law or has not fulfilled Islamic law, and this is where the researcher is to study further about some of the contracts that have occurred in this problem. And this research can also help readers about the kinds of transaction contracts that have developed over time, and hopefully it can add insight to the readers about the discussion above.
Regulating Palm Oil Zakat In Indonesia: Islamic Legal Politics, Normative Fragmentation, and the Quest for Legal Certainty Zulkifli Nas; Anju Syahrin Marpaung
Tabayyanu : Journal Of Islamic Law Vol. 2 No. 02 (2025)
Publisher : Yayasan Dar Arrisyah Indonesia

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar

Abstract

Palm oil is one of Indonesia’s most strategic commodities, contributing significantly to national income and sustaining millions of rural livelihoods. Despite its substantial economic value, palm oil has not been systematically regulated as a zakatable asset, resulting in low compliance and limited contribution to national zakat collection. This article examines the regulation of palm oil zakat in Indonesia through the lens of Islamic legal politics by analyzing three normative domains: classical Islamic jurisprudence (fiqh), national zakat legislation, and regional fatwas issued by Islamic legal authorities. Employing normative legal research with statutory, conceptual, comparative fiqh, and Islamic legal politics approaches, this study reveals that palm oil zakat occupies an ambiguous legal position due to the absence of explicit regulation and the coexistence of competing juristic interpretations. While classical fiqh provides divergent doctrinal foundations, Indonesian zakat law adopts a generalized approach, and regional fatwas intensify legal pluralism by issuing conflicting rulings. This normative fragmentation undermines legal certainty, weakens zakat compliance among palm oil producers, and limits zakat’s redistributive potential. The article argues that palm oil zakat should be understood not merely as a doctrinal fiqh issue but as a product of Islamic legal politics requiring normative harmonization. It contributes to the literature by conceptualizing palm oil zakat as a case of regulated Islamic philanthropy shaped by legal and political authority and proposes policy-oriented recommendations for regulatory unification through coordinated roles of the state, zakat institutions, and Islamic scholars