March 28, 2024

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Qatar QNRF funds GU-Q research on medical tech

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Qatar National Research Fund (QNRF) recently announced the awards for the 8th cycle of the National Priorities Research Program (NPRP), awarding Georgetown University in Qatar (GU-Q) faculty member Ayman Shabana (bottom left) with a 3-year grant to support his research on how medical technology is changing paternity and maternity conceptions of  and what the implications of these changes are for Islamic law and practice.

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Titled “Structure of the Nuclear Family in the Wake of Genetic and Reproductive Technologies,” the project aims to shed light on how new genetic and reproductive technologies pose considerable challenges to the established structure of Islamic regulations concerning the nuclear family, which covers the marital connection and lineage regulations.

More particularly, the research study will look at how these technologies raise questions about traditional definitions of both paternity and maternity and the extent to which these two concepts should remain tied to marriage.

This project is another addition to the larger Islamic Bioethics Project which started in 2009 with a 3-year QNRF-funded project by GU-Q in cooperation with the Kennedy Institute of Ethics at Georgetown University – main campus in Washington D.C., to develop an information resource for Islamic Medical and Scientific Ethics (IMSE).

The IMSE project aimed to identify, collect, catalogue, and index relevant multi-lingual and multi-format resources and facilitate access to these resources by creating comprehensive bibliographic records within an integrated information retrieval system. Following the success of this first project, in 2012 another 3-year project to develop an Encyclopedia of Islamic Bioethics was proposed and granted funding also from QNRF.

“Georgetown-Qatar’s research programs and initiatives address issues that are of critical importance not only to Qatar but to the entire dynamic region,” said Dr. John Crist, the Director of Research at GU-Q. “Our researchers conduct original studies which in the long term create tangible value for Qatar at home and abroad,” he added.

Commenting on the significance of the study, Prof. Shabana said, “The research component of the new project is important not only for contributing towards deeper understanding of Islamic family law in the modern period but also for tracing the methodological strategies that govern change and continuity within the extended Islamic normative tradition. The bibliographic component utilizes and expands the valuable resources that have been developed over the past few years through two successful QNRF-funded projects.”

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Prof. Shabana further highlighted that this achievement is the result of dedication and hard work of the entire team of the Islamic Bioethics Project acknowledging his collaborators for their outstanding collective efforts.

Prior to joining GU-Q, Prof. Shabana taught at several institutions including the University of California-Los Angeles, the University of Tennessee-Knoxville, and Florida International University. He teaches and writes on several topics including Islamic legal history, Islamic law and ethics, human rights, and bioethics.

He is the recipient of the Research Excellence Award at the 2012 Qatar Foundation Annual Research Forum. During the academic year 2013-2014 he was a visiting research fellow at the Islamic Legal Studies Program at Harvard Law School.

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