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1

Guenther, Alan M. "Justice Mahmood and English Education in India." South Asia Research 31, no. 1 (2011): 45–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/026272801003100104.

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This article traces the motif of English education in Justice Syed Mahmood’s intellectual history and demonstrates the dialogical nature of knowledge formation in British India. While his own educational experience at Cambridge University had a profound and lasting impact on his own conception of the nature and purpose of education, Mahmood transformed and adapted that experiential knowledge to serve his predominant public concerns. He was increasingly committed to arresting the perceived decline in social standing, political influence and above all educational competence of the Muslim community in India. Seeing government service as the birthright of the ashraf Muslim classes, he encouraged the creation of institutions that would facilitate the training of young men from fine families to become effective bureaucrats in the government machinery of British India. In all these endeavours, Mahmood considered the promotion of English education to be the key to real progress for individuals and for the Muslim community.
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2

Myers, Ramon H. "The Political Economy of Development Policy Change. Gustav Ranis , Syed Mahmood." Economic Development and Cultural Change 43, no. 1 (1994): 209–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/452143.

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3

Siddiqui, Sohaira. "Navigating Colonial Power: Challenging Precedents and the Limitation of Local Elites." Islamic Law and Society 26, no. 3 (2019): 272–312. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15685195-02612a03.

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AbstractIn 1869, the British allowed Muslims to sit as judges on the High Court. This article explores the legal opinions of the first Muslim judge to be appointed to the High Court, Syed Mahmood. Straddling two competing worlds – that of Cambridge University and that of his native India – Justice Mahmood both legitimated and resisted colonial judicial power. In this essay I will demonstrate how British judges interpreted points of Islamic law within an English legal framework, and how these interpretations contradicted their translated texts of Islamic law, yet became the foundation of legal precedents established through the doctrine of stare decisis. Despite participating within the British colonial judiciary, Mahmood challenged these precedents, demonstrating his ability to navigate the paradoxes of colonial power to secure for himself a legitimate platform from which he could argue his juridical interventions. The efficacy of these challenges, however, ultimately was restrained by the institutions and structures of the colonial jural project.
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4

Haggard, Stephan. "The Political Economy of Development Policy Change. By Gustav Ranis and Syed Akhtar Mahmood. Cambridge, Mass.: Blackwell, 1992." Journal of Asian Studies 51, no. 3 (1992): 630–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2057960.

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5

Chaudhry, Faisal. "Rethinking the Nineteenth-Century Domestication of the Sharīʿa: Marriage and Family in the Imaginary of Classical Legal Thought and the Genealogy of (Muslim) Personal Law in Late Colonial India". Law and History Review 35, № 4 (2017): 841–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0738248017000384.

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This article situates the ‘personal law’ in late colonial India in the nineteenth-century genealogy of the idea of ‘family law.’ In doing so, it also looks at a case between Indian Muslim spouses before the judge and Islamic modernist Syed Mahmood. Involving the doctrine of the restitution of conjugal rights, the case was conducted in the shadow of a question about whether marriage was a status or contract that had a much wider resonance in the late nineteenth-century Anglo-common law world. The overall goal of the article is to critically reconsider a common view about legal modernization in the long nineteenth-century Islamicate world as a process of domesticating the Islamicsharīʿatradition to the sphere of family affairs and personal status. Working along a distinct path from other new scholarship that is moving past this thesis, I suggest that domestication should be seen as part of what some have called the globalization of classical legal thought after 1850. Because the era of domestication continued to be an important point of reference for later exponents of political Islam the article also argues that seeing the categories of personal law and family law genealogically has implications for the problem of translation that has often made scholars reticent about striking an equivalence between ‘Islamic law’ andsharīʿa(or beyond the Islamicate world, between ‘modern law’ and Afro-Asian juridical tradition).
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6

Tweeten, Luther. "Syed Nawab Haider Naqvi, Mahmood Hasan Khan and M. Ghaffu Otaudhry (edt.). LaJld Reforms in Pakistan, A Historical Perspective. Islamabad: Pakistan Institute of Development Economics 1987. viii+216 pp.Price: Rs 220 (USS 35) for hardcover; Rs 140.00 (USS 20) for soft-cover." Pakistan Development Review 27, no. 2 (1988): 217–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.30541/v27i2pp.217-218.

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The authors describe how Pakistan has grappled with land reform, surely one of the most intractable and divisive issues facing agriculture anywhere. The land-tenure system at independence in 1947 included a high degree of land ownership concentration, absentee landlordism, insecurity of tenant tenure, and excessive rent. Land reform since 1947 focused on imposition of ceilings on landholding, distribution of land to landless tenants and small owners, and readjustments of contracts to improve the position of the tenant. These reformist measures have removed some but by no means all of the undesirable characteristics of the system. The authors list as well as present a critique of the reports of five official committees and commissions on land reform. The reports highlight the conflicts and ideologies of the reformers. The predominant ideal of the land reformers is a system of peasant proprietorship although some reformers favoured other systems such as communal farming and state ownership of land, and still others favoured cash rents over share rents. More pragmatic reformers recognized that tenancy is likely to be with Pakistan for the foreseeable future and that the batai (sharecropping) arrangement is the most workable system. According to the editors, the batai system can work to the advantage of landlord and tenant if the ceilings on landholding can be sufficiently lowered (and enforced), the security of the tenant is ensured, and the tenant has recourse to the courts for adjudication of disputes with landlords. Many policy-makers in Pakistan have come to accept that position but intervention by the State to realize the ideal has been slow. The editors conclude that" ... the end result of these land reforms is that they have not succeeded in significantly changing the status quo in rural Pakistan" (p. 29).
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7

Mohamed, Yasien. "Applying Ibn Khaldūn: The Recovery of a Lost Tradition in Sociology (by Syed Farid Alatas)." American Journal of Islamic Social Sciences 36, no. 2 (2019): 74–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.35632/ajiss.v36i2.581.

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The intellectual legacy of Ibn Khaldūn is unique among Muslim historians, and yet he is not fully appreciated in the East. Many Muslim scholars—including Muhammad Abdullah Enan, Muhsin Mahdi, and Mahmoud Dhaoudi—have written about Ibn Khaldūn in English. Their treatment of him was either comparative or historical, but none presented his theory as a valid framework for sociological analysis today as Syed Farid Alatas does in his Applying Ibn Khaldūn.
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8

Mohamed, Yasien. "Applying Ibn Khaldūn." American Journal of Islam and Society 36, no. 2 (2019): 74–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.35632/ajis.v36i2.581.

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The intellectual legacy of Ibn Khaldūn is unique among Muslim historians, and yet he is not fully appreciated in the East. Many Muslim scholars—including Muhammad Abdullah Enan, Muhsin Mahdi, and Mahmoud Dhaoudi—have written about Ibn Khaldūn in English. Their treatment of him was either comparative or historical, but none presented his theory as a valid framework for sociological analysis today as Syed Farid Alatas does in his Applying Ibn Khaldūn.
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9

Alam, AHM Zahirul. "Editorial." IIUM Engineering Journal 19, no. 1 (2018): i—iv. http://dx.doi.org/10.31436/iiumej.v19i1.917.

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 Volume 19, Issue 1, June 2018
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 Table of Content
 
 
 
 CHEMICAL AND BIOTECHNOLOGY ENGINEERING
 ADSORPTION OF HEAVY METALS AND RESIDUAL OIL FROM PALM OIL MILL EFFLUENT USING A NOVEL ADSORBENT OF ALGINATE AND MANGROVE COMPOSITE BEADS COATED WITH CHITOSAN IN A PACKED BED COLUMN... 1
 Rana Jaafar Jawad, Mohd Halim Shah Ismail, Shamsul Izhar Siajam
 INVESTIGATION OF BIOFLOCCULANT AS DEWATERING AID IN SLUDGE TREATMENT........................................ 15
 Mohammed Saedi Jami, Maizirwan Mel, Aysha Ralliya Mohd Ariff, Qabas Marwan Abdulazeez HYDROGEN PRODUCTION FROM ETHANOL DRY REFORMING OVER LANTHANIA-PROMOTED CO/AL2O3 CATALYST............................. 24
 Fahim Fayaz, Nguyen Thi Anh Nga, Thong Le Minh Pham, Huong Thi Danh, Bawadi Abdullah, Herma Dina Setiabudi, Dai-Viet Nguyen Vo
 OPTIMIZATION OF RED PIGMENT PRODUCTION BY MONASCUS PURPUREUS FTC 5356 USING RESPONSE SURFACE METHODOLOGY......................................................... 34
 Nor Farhana Hamid And Farhan Mohd Said
 PRODUCTION AND STABILITY OF MYCO-FLOCCULANTS FROM LENTINUS SQUARROSULUS RWF5 AND SIMPLICILLIUM OBCLAVATUM RWF6 FOR REDUCTION OF WATER TURBIDITY.............................................................................. 48
 Nessa Jebun, Md. Zahangir Alam, Abdullah Al-Mamun, Raha Ahmad Raus
 ROLE OF SUBSTRATE BINDING ON THE PROTEIN DYNAMICS OF AN ENDOGLUCANASE FROM FUSARIUM OXYSPORUM AT DIFFERENT TEMPERATURES .............................................................307
 Abdul Aziz Ahmad, Ibrahim Ali Noorbatcha, Hamzah Mohd. Salleh
 
 CIVIL AND ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING
 DIMINISHING SEISMIC EFFECT ON BUILDINGS USING BEARING ISOLATION....................................................... 59
 A. B. M. Saiful Islam
 ELECTRICAL, COMPUTER AND COMMUNICATIONS ENGINEERING
 A DISTRIBUTED ENERGY EFFICIENT CLUSTERING ALGORITHM FOR DATA AGGREGATION IN WIRELESS SENSOR NETWORKS.................................................................................. 72
 Seyed Mohammad Bagher Musavi Shirazi, Maryam Sabet, Mohammad Reza Pajoohan
 POWER QUALITY IMPROVEMENT WITH CASCADED MULTILEVEL CONVERTER BASED STATCOM................. 91
 Mahdi Heidari, Abdonnabi Kovsarian, S. Ghodratollah Seifossadat
 THE EFFECTS OF CABLE CHARACTERISTICS ON MAXIMUM OVERVOLTAGE IN COMBINED
 OVERHEAD/CABLE LINES PROTECTED BY SURGE ARRESTERS.............................................................................. 104
 Reza Alizadeh, Mohammad Mirzaie
 SMART PORTABLE CRYOTHERAPY SYSTEM REPHRASED I.E. WITH CONTROLLED THERMOELECTRIC
 COOLING MODULES FOR MEDICAL APPLICATIONS................................................................................................ 117
 Abbas Rahmani, Reza Hassanzadeh Pack Rezaee, Naser Kordani
 STATIC PIPELINE NETWORK PERFORMANCE OPTIMISATION USING DUAL INTERLEAVE ROUTING ALGORITHM 129
 Siva Kumar Subramaniam1, Shariq Mahmood Khan, Anhar Titik, Rajagopal Nilavalan
 A MODIFIED MODEL BASED ON FLOWER POLLINATION ALGORITHM AND K-NEAREST NEIGHBOR FOR DIAGNOSING DISEASES........................................................................ 144
 Mehdi Zekriyapanah Gashti
 A SINGLE LC TANK BASED ACTIVE VOLTAGE BALANCING CIRCUIT FOR BATTERY MANAGEMENT SYSTEM .158
 A K M Ahasan Habib, S. M. A. Motakabber, Muhammad Ibn. Ibrahimy, A. H. M. Zahirul Alam
 ENGINEERING MATHEMATICS AND APPLIED SCIENCE
 ON THE CONTROL OF HEAT CONDUCTION.......................................... 168
 Fayziev Yusuf Ergashevich
 MATERIALS AND MANUFACTURING ENGINEERING
 GREEN SYNTHESIS OF SILVER NANOPARTICLES USING SAGO (METROXYLON SAGU) VIA AUTOCLAVING METHOD......178
 Aliyah Jamaludin, Che Ku Mohammad Faizal
 
 EFFECT OF ALKALINE TREATMENT ON PROPERTIES OF RATTAN WASTE AND FABRICATED BINDERLESS PARTICLEBOARD....185
 Zuraida Ahmad, Maisarah Tajuddin, Nurul Farhana Fatin Salim, Zahurin Halim
 AMORPHOUS STRUCTURE IN CU-ZN-V-AL OXIDE COMPOSITE CATALYST FOR METHANOL REFORMING..... 197
 Mohd Sabri Mahmud, Zahira Yaakob, Abu Bakar Mohamad, Wan Ramli Wan Daud, Vo Nguyen Dai Viet
 PERFORMANCE OF ELECTRICAL DISCHARGE MACHINING (EDM) WITH NICKEL ADDED DIELECTRIC FLUID....215
 Ahsan Ali Khan, Muataz Hazza Faizi Al Hazza, A K M Mohiuddin, Nurfatihah Abdul Fattah, Mohd Radzi Che Daud
 ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION OF DURIAN SKIN NANOFIBRE BIOCOMPOSITE.......................................... 233
 Siti Nur E’zzati Mohd Apandi, Hazleen Anuar, Siti Munirah Salimah Abdul Rashid
 MECHANICAL AND AEROSPACE ENGINEERING
 A REVIEW ON RHEOLOGY OF NON-NEWTONIAN PROPERTIES OF BLOOD....................................................... 237
 Esmaeel Fatahian, Naser Kordani, Hossein Fatahian
 NUMERICAL STUDY OF THERMAL CHARACTERISTICS OF FUEL OIL-ALUMINA AND WATER-.......................... 250
 Hossein Fatahian, Hesamoddin Salarian, Majid Eshagh Nimvari, Esmaeel Fatahian
 A PARAMETRIC STUDY ON CONTROL OF FLOW SEPARATION OVER AN AIRFOIL IN INCOMPRESSIBLE REGIME....270
 Lakshmanan Prabhu, Jonnalagadda Srinivas
 OPTIMIZATION OF BOX TYPE GIRDER WITH AND WITHOUT INDUSTRIAL CONSTRAINTS................................ 289
 Muhammad Abid, Shahbaz Mahmood Khan, Hafiz Abdul Wajid
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10

Husnain, Syed K., Sabir H. Hussain, Muhammad Atiq, Nasir A. Rajput, Waseem Abbas, and Muhammad Mohsin. "SCREENING OF PEAS (PISUM SATIVUM) VARIETIES/ LINES AGAINST FUSARIUM WILT (FUSARIUM OXYSPORUM .SP.PICI) AND IN VITRO EVALUATION OF FUNGICIDES AGAINST MYCELIAL GROWTH OF PATHOGEN." Pakistan Journal of Phytopathology 31, no. 1 (2019): 89–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.33866/phytopathol.031.01.0492.

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Twenty Peas (Pisum sativum L.) varieties/ lines were evaluated against Fusarium wilt caused by Fusarium oxysporum .Sp.pici by sowing them in sick plot during the year of 2016-17 at the Plant Pathology Research Institute, Faisalabad. Each cultivar/line was planted in a single row of three meter length, with plant to plant and row to row distances of 15cm and 30 cm respectively and replicated thrice by following Randomized Complete Block Design (RCBD). Out of these twenty varieties/ lines 13 including check variety Olympia were found highly susceptible ranging from 53.2 to 83.5% plant mortality. Six varieties/lines were susceptible ranging from 30.3 to 44.1 % plant mortality. Only a single variety Garrow performed as moderately resistant by showing 21% plant mortality in the field. Efficacy of five fungicides against Fusarium oxysporum .Sp.pici, at various concentrations was evaluated in-vitro and significant variations among treatments was observed. In general there was a significant decrease in mycelial growth of the fungus with an increase in concentration of fungicides. Tilt (Propiconazol),( Daconil (Chlorothalonil) and Crest (Carbendazim) were the most effective fungicides in inhibiting the growth of the fungus in descending order. The Tilt almost 90% inhibited the growth @ 50µg/ml concentration, Daconil and Crest exhibited intermediate effectiveness. Topsin-M (Thiophanate-methyl) and Score (Difenoconazole) were the least effective fungicides.Ahmad, M. A., S. M. Iqbal, N. Ayub, Y. Ahmad and A. Akram. 2010. Identification of resistant sources in chickpea against Fusarium wilt. Pak. J. Bot, 42: 417-426.Borum, D. E. and J. Sinclair. 1968. Evidence for systemic protection against Rhizoctonia solani with vitavax in cotton seedlings. Phytopathology, 58: 976-&.Davies, D., G. Berry, M. Heath and T. Dawkins. 1985. Pea (Pisum sativum L.). Grain Legume Crops. Collins, London, UK: 147-198.Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. 2011Hagedorn, D. 1984. Compendium of pea diseases. 57 p. Am. Phytopathol. Soc., St. Paul, Minnesota, USA.Hannan, A., S. T. Sahi, I. Ahmed and A. A. Choudhry. 2014. Differential impact of Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. pisi on resistance source of pea genotypes and its chemical management. Pakistan Journal of Phytopathology, 26: 91-96.Haware, M. P. 1978. Eradication of Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. ciceri Transmitted in Chickpea Seed. Phytopathology, 68: 1364.Haware, M.P. and Nene, Y.L., 1982. Races of Fusarium oxysporum f.sp. ciceri. Plant disease, 66 (9), pp.809-810.Hulse, J. H. 1994. Nature, composition, and utilization of food legumes. Expanding the Production and Use of Cool Season Food Legumes. Springer Netherlands, pp. 77-97.Ilyas, M., M. Iqbal and K. Iftikhar. 1992. Evaluation of some fungicides against Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. ciceris and chickpea wilt. Pakistan Journal of Phaytopahtology, 4: 5-8.Iqbal, S. M. 2005. Screening of chickpea genotypes for resistance against Fusarium wilt. Mycopath (Pakistan).Javaid, I. A., A. Ghafoorm and R. Anwar. 2002. Evaluation of local and exotic pea Pisum sativum germplasm for vegetable and dry grain straits. Pak. J. Bot, 34: 419-427.Khan, I., S. Alam and A. Jabbar. 2002. Selection for resistance to Fusarium wilt and its relationship with phenols in chickpea.Khan, S. A., A. Awais, N. Javed, K. Javaid, A. Moosa, I. U. Haq, N. A. Khan, M. U. Chattha and A. Safdar. 2016. Screening of pea germplasm against Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. pisi and invitro management through chemicals. Pakistan Journal of Phytopathology, 28: 127-131.Khokhar, M. 2014. Production status of major vegetables in Pakistan, their problems and suggestions. Agric. Corner, 9.Kraft, J. M. 1994. Fusarium wilt of peas (a review). Agronomie, 14: 561-567.Maitlo, S., R. Syed, M. Rustamani, R. Khuhro and A. Lodhi. 2014. Comparative efficacy of different fungicides against fusarium wilt of chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.). Pakistan Journal of Botany, 46: 2305-2312.McPhee, K. 2003. Dry pea production and breeding. Food, Agri Environ, 1: 64-69.Nawab, N. N., G. M. Subhani, K. Mahmood, Q. Shakil and A. Saeed. 2008. Genetic variability, correlation and path analysis studies in garden pea (Pisum sativum L.). J. Agric. Res, 46: 333-340.Nene, Y., M. Haware and M. Reddy. 1981. Chickpea diseases: resistance-screening techniques.Pande, S., J. N. Rao and M. Sharma. 2007. Establishment of the Chickpea Wilt Pathogen Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. ciceris in the Soil through Seed Transmission. The Plant Pathology Journal, 23: 3-6.Persson, L., L. Bødker and M. Larsson-Wikström. 1997. Prevalence and pathogenicity of foot and root rot pathogens of pea in Southern Scandinavia. Plant Disease, 81: 171-174.Steel, R. G. D. and J. H. Torrie. 1980. Principles and procedures of statistics, a biometrical approach. McGraw-Hill Kogakusha, Ltd.Sundar, A. R., N. Das and D. Krishnaveni. 1995. In-vitro antagonism of Trichoderma spp. against two fungal pathogens of Castor. Indian Journal of Plant Protection, 23: 152-155.Vyas, S. C. 1984. Systemic fungicides. Systemic fungicides.
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11

Anwar, Muhammad. "The Seminar on Islamic Economics." American Journal of Islam and Society 4, no. 1 (1987): 147–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.35632/ajis.v4i1.2745.

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The International Institute of Islamic Thought sponsored a major seminaron “Islamic Economics” in North America on March 28-29, 1987 at itsWashington D.C. area headquatters in Herndon, Virginia. The seminar wascoordinated by Dr. Muhammad Anwar, secretary of the Economic DisciplineCouncil of the Association of Muslim Social Scientists. Although there wasgreat interest expressed by numerous professors and graduate students ofeconomics, the registration was limited to seventy participants due to sometemporary physical constraints.The program began with recitations of the Qur‘an followed by addresses ofDr. Taha Jabir Al-‘Alwani, President of the International Institute of IslamicThought; Dr. ‘AbdulHamid ’Abu Sulayman, President of the Association ofMuslim Social Scientists; and Dr. Raquibuz Zaman, Chairman of theEconomic Discipline Council. A total of nine sessions, including a businesssession and a special session for Ph.D. candidates from various universities inthe United States, were held during the two-day seminar which concludedwith a farewell dinner on the final day. Among the highlights were sessions onMethodology of Islamic Economics, Islamization of Knowledge, ModelingMacroeconomics, Micmconomics, and Financial Accounting and ComparativeEconomics. Eighteen speakers delivered their research papers.First session on Methodology of Islamic Economics was chaired by Dr.Abbas Mirakhor of the International Monetary Fund. Dr. Anwar, also of theInternational Institute of Islamic Thought, Dr. Salim Rashid of the Universityof Illinois, and the famous Islamic economist Dr. Mahmud Abu Sauddelivered their papers on “Methodology of Islamic Economics,” IslamicEconomics: An Historic-Inductive Approach,” and “Research Methodologyfor Islamic Economics”, respectively during the session.Lectures on Islamization of Knowledge were delivered by Dr. Al-‘Alwani,Dr. ’AbuSulayman, and Dr. Jamal Baninji in the second session.The third session on Modeling Macroeconomics was chaired by Dr.Mohsin Khan of the International Monetary Fund. In this session, Dr. Syed ...
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12

Parray, Tauseef Ahmad. "Debates on Civilization in the Muslim World." American Journal of Islam and Society 34, no. 4 (2017): 102–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.35632/ajis.v34i4.805.

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“Civilization,” which plays a significant role in today’s world, is a termthat has been discussed and debated through the ages and remains so today.In the broader context, and at different levels and contexts (e.g., historical,cultural, and political), it is used to describe “the entirety of collective90human values”; “consequential behavior against barbarism” (or simply “theidea of being civilized”); as a “vision of existence and order”; and, aboveall, as “being an abstraction of modernity and secularism.” One of the mostoft-debated concepts in the social sciences, it has largely been framed byWestern assumptions and concerns; although there are non-Western perspectiveson it as well. A recent addition to the multi-faceted debate on civilizationand modernization vis-à-vis the Muslim world is editor LutfiSunar’s Debates on Civilization in the Muslim World. Sunar is a Turkishsociologist who teaches at Istanbul University.This collective endeavor of (predominantly young) Muslim scholarsseeks to evaluate Muslim views on civilization by challenging the “embeddedprejudices within the social theory” and offering “alternative viewpoints”(p. vii). It presents “a complex assessment of key ideas in themodernist discourse from non-ethnocentric perspectives and offers a newunderstanding of civilization” (p. viii).To achieve this objective, the book has been divided into three mainparts. Part 1, “Defining and Discussing Civilization,” consists of threechapters, by Anthony Pagden, Lutfi Sunar, and Mustafa Demirici, respectively,that review, analyze, and discuss definitions of civilization andmodernity and their “Eurocentric” understandings. Part 2, “Debates on theCivilization in the Contemporary Muslim World,” examines non-Westerncivilizations, efforts to resist against being assimilated in Western perspectivesand dominance. These chapters are contributed by Vahdettin Isik,Cemil Aydin, Necmettin Dogan, Halil Ibrahim Yenigun, Seyed Javad Miri,Mahmud Hakki Akin, and Driss Habti, respectively. Part 3, “Modernization,Globalization, and the Future of Civilization Debate,” features chaptersby Syed Farid Alatas, Yunus Kaya, Murat Cemrek, and KhosrowBagheri Noaparast, respectively. The volume’s overall theme is designed“to expose complex issues for further discussion pertaining to modernization,globalization, (de)colonization, and multiculturalism” (p. vii). As it isdifficult to focus on all the chapters, I provide a brief assessment of someselected ones below ...
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SPIE. "Tanveer Syeda-Mahmood plenary talk: The Role of Machine Learning in Clinical Decision Support." SPIE Newsroom, March 10, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/2.3201503.29.

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Atiq, Muhammad Zubair, Muhammad Arslan, Zahid Baig, et al. "Dam Site Identification Using Remote Sensing and GIS (A case study Diamer Basha Dam Site)." International Journal of Agriculture & Sustainable Development, September 18, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.33411/ijist/2019010412.

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Selection of suitable sites for construction of dam is the most important phase because a number of factors are required to consider that include topography, geology, tectonic settlements and the slope. We selected Diamer Basha dam site to analyze it feasibility considering real-time field data. Geologically the study site is a part of Chilas Mafic Igneous Complex which is not ophiolite. Matic complex is a block which is 40km in depth and 300km in length. These rocks are comparatively hard in nature and are considered good for construction of dam. Tectonically, we observed that the area under investigation was highly active tectonically. Surface deformation rates of the study site are highest throughout the world because this area is comprised of multiple fault lines that include Main Mantle Thurst (MMT), Main Karakoram Thrurst (MKT), Main Boundary Thurst (MBT) and many others. This area has become a hot cake for the geologist worldwide due to it’s very high surface deformation rates.Tectonically active regions are considered worst for construction sites, e.g., for dam sites. The dam site is actcually laying on the MKT which is not favorable for construction of Diamir Basha dam. A low-level earthquake may generate small cracks in concrete structure and any leakage of water may produce big holes with passage of time which are not remidable. A big level earthquake may vanish the dam site completely. Therefore, the current site is not favorable for construction of dam. 1, 2,3, 4, Muhammad Usman Tanveer1, Azeem Akhtar1, Azam Sohail1, Kashif Naeem1 and Syed Amer Mahmood1. 1 Department of Space Science, University of the Punjab Lahore, Punjab Pakistan. 2 University of the Central Punjab Lahore. 3 Punjab University, College of Information and Technology. 4 Punjab University, Centre for Geographic Information System.
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Azharuddin, Sk. "Journal Vol – 13 No -4, October 2018 Journal > Journal Vol – 13 No -4, October 2018 Approximate Solution of Strongly Forced Nonlinear Vibrating Systems Which Vary With Time admin October 24, 2018 Based on the combined work of extended Krylov-Bogoliubov-Mitropolskii method and harmonic balance (HB) method an analytical technique is presented to determine approximate solutions of nonlinear differential systems whose coefficients change slowly and periodically with time. Furthermore, a non-autonomous case also… READ MORE https://doi.org/10.26782/jmcms.2018.10.00001 Author(s): Pinakee dey, Nasir Uddin, Md Asaduzzaman, Sanjay kumar saha, M. A. Sattar Please Login To View Or Download the Paper Journal Vol – 13 No -4, October 2018 Design and Comparison of PI and Back-Stepping Control for Single Phase Two-Stage Grid Connected PV System admin October 24, 2018 In grid connected two stage PV system some Control technique are applied to get maximum power point, voltage adjustment of boost converter , inverter voltage , DC link voltage control, grid current control, power factor improvement and reduction in total… READ MORE https://doi.org/10.26782/jmcms.2018.10.00002 Author(s): Syed Qaiser Ahmad Shah, Khalid Mahmood, Syed Shafiq Ahmad Shah, Mehr-e-Munir, Muhammad Aamir Aman Please Login To View Or Download the Paper Journal Vol – 13 No -4, October 2018 On the Suitability of Peak Shape Method for the Analysis of Thermoluminescence in Different Models." JOURNAL OF MECHANICS OF CONTINUA AND MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES 13, no. 5 (2018). http://dx.doi.org/10.26782/jmcms.2018.10.00003.

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16

Alam, AHM Zahirul. "Editorial Page." IIUM Engineering Journal 20, no. 1 (2019). http://dx.doi.org/10.31436/iiumej.v20i1.1164.

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 CHIEF EDITOR
 Ahmad Faris Ismail, IIUM, Malaysia
 EXECUTIVE EDITOR
 AHM Zahirul Alam, IIUM, Malaysia
 ASSOCIATE EDITOR
 Anis Nurashikin Nordin, IIUM, Malaysia
 LANGUAGE EDITOR
 Lynn Mason, Malaysia
 COPY EDITOR
 Hamzah Mohd. Salleh, IIUM, Malaysia
 EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS
 Abdullah Al-Mamun, IIUM, Malaysia
 Abdumalik Rakhimov, IIUM, Malaysia
 Amir Akramin Shafie, IIUM, Malaysia
 Erry Yulian Triblas Adesta, IIUM, Malaysia
 Erwin Sulaeman, IIUM, Malaysia
 Hanafy Omar, Saudi Arabia
 Hazleen Anuar, IIUM, Malaysia
 Konstantin Khanin, University of Toronto, Canada
 Ma'an Al-Khatib, IIUM, Malaysia
 Md Zahangir Alam, IIUM, Malaysia
 Meftah Hrairi, IIUM, Malaysia
 Mohamed B. Trabia, United States
 Mohammad S. Alam, Texas A&M University-Kingsville, United States
 Muataz Hazza Faizi Al Hazza, IIUM, Malaysia
 Mustafizur Rahman, National University Singapore, Singapore
 Nor Farahidah Binti Za'bah, IIUM, Malaysia
 Ossama Abdulkhalik, Michigan Technological University, United States
 Rosminazuin AB. Rahim, IIUM, Malaysia
 Waqar Asrar, IIUM, Malaysia
 
 INTERNATIONAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE
 Anwar, United States
 Abdul Latif Bin Ahmad, Malaysia
 Farzad Ismail, USM, Pulau Pinang, Malaysia
 Hanafy Omar, Saudi Arabia
 Hany Ammar, United States
 Idris Mohammed Bugaje, Nigeria
 K.B. Ramachandran, India
 Kunzu Abdella, Canada
 Luis Le Moyne, ISAT, University of Burgundy, France
 M Mujtaba, United Kingdom
 Mohamed AI-Rubei, Ireland
 Mohamed B Trabia, United States
 Mohammad S. Alam, Texas A&M University-Kingsville, United States
 Nazmul Karim
 Ossama Abdulkhalik, Michigan Technological University, United States
 Razi Nalim, IUPUI, Indianapolis, Indiana, United States
 Syed Kamrul Islam, United States
 Tibor Czigany, Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Hungary
 Yiu-Wing Mai, The University of Sydney, Australia.
 AIMS & SCOPE OF IIUMENGINEERING JOURNAL
 The IIUM Engineering Journal, published biannually, is a carefully refereed international publication of International Islamic University Malaysia (IIUM). Contributions of high technical merit within the span of engineering disciplines; covering the main areas of engineering: Electrical and Computer Engineering; Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering; Automation and Mechatronics Engineering; Material and Chemical Engineering; Environmental and Civil Engineering; Biotechnology and Bioengineering; Engineering Mathematics and Physics; and Computer Science and Information Technology are considered for publication in this journal. Contributions from other areas of Engineering and Applied Science are also welcomed. The IIUM Engineering Journal publishes contributions under Regular papers, Invited review papers, Short communications, Technical notes, and Letters to the editor (with publication charge).
 REFEREES’ NETWORK
 All papers submitted to IIUM Engineering Journal will be subjected to a rigorous reviewing process through a worldwide network of specialized and competent referees. Each accepted paper should have at least two positive referees’ assessments.
 
 SUBMISSION OF A MANUSCRIPT
 A manuscript should be submitted online to the IIUM-Engineering Journal website:
 https://journals.iium.edu.my/ejournal. Further correspondence on the status of the paper could be done through the journal website and the e-mail addresses of the Executive Editor: zahirulalam@iium.edu.my Faculty of Engineering, International Islamic University Malaysia (IIUM), Jan Gombak, 53100, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
 Phone: (603) 6196 4529, Fax:(603) 6196 4488.
 
 Published by
 
 International Islamic University Malaysia
 Jalan Gombak, 53100 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
 Phone (+603) 6196-5018, Fax: (+603) 6196-6298
 Website: http://www.iium.edu.my/office/iiumpress
 Whilst every effort is made by the publisher and editorial board to see that no inaccurate or misleading data, opinion or statement appears in this Journal, they wish to make it clear that the data and opinions appearing in the articles and advertisement herein are the responsibility of the contributor or advertiser concerned. Accordingly, the publisher and the editorial committee accept no liability whatsoever for the consequence of any such inaccurate or misleading data, opinion or statement.
 IIUM ENGINEERING JOURNAL
 ISSN: 1511-788X E-ISSN: 2289-7860
 Volume 20, Issue 1, June 2019
 Table of Content
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Editorial Page
 
 COVER PAGE
 
 
 
 
 
 
 CHEMICAL AND BIOTECHNOLOGY ENGINEERING
 
 
 
 COMPARATIVE METAGENOMICS ANALYSIS OF PALM OIL MILL EFFLUENT (POME) USING THREE DIFFERENT BIOINFORMATICS PIPELINES
 
 Adibah parmen, MOHD NOOR MAT ISA, FARAH FADWA BENBELGACEM, Hamzah Mohd Salleh, Ibrahim Ali Noorbatcha
 1 - 11
 
 
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 LIPASE IMMOBILIZATION ON FIBERS GRAFTED WITH POLYGLYCIDYL METHACHRYLATE
 
 Maan Alkhatib, Nik Adlin Bahrudin, HAMZAH M. SALLEH, Teo M. Ting
 12 - 23
 
 
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 COLONY COMPOSITION AND BIOMASS OF MACROTERMES GILVUS HAGEN (BLATTODEA: TERMITIDAE) IN INDONESIA
 
 NIKEN SUBEKTI, Priyantini Widiyaningrum, Dodi Nandika, Dedy Duryadi Solihin
 24 - 28
 
 
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 CIVIL AND ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING
 
 
 
 A SURVEY OF MATLAB EFFICIENCY IN DAMAGE DETECTION OF CONCRETE GRAVITY IN CONCRETE GRAVITY DAMS
 
 Sajad Esmaielzadeh, Hassan Ahmadi, Seyed Abbas Hosseini
 29 - 48
 
 
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 IMPLEMENTATION OF GOVERNMENT ASSET MANAGEMENT USING TERRESTRIAL LASER SCANNER (TLS) AS PART OF BUILDING INFORMATION MODELLING (BIM)
 
 Asep Yusup Saptari, S. Hendriatiningsih, Dony Bagaskara, Levana Apriani
 49 - 69
 
 
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 THE ANALYSIS OF LIQUEFACTION PHENOMENON OF THE FLEXIBLE PAVEMENT USING SEISMIC MONITORING EQUIPMENT
 
 RINI KUSUMAWARDANI, Untoro Nugroho, Sri Handayani, Mareta Aspirilia Fananda
 70 - 78
 
 
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 ELECTRICAL, COMPUTER AND COMMUNICATIONS ENGINEERING
 
 
 
 PSG DYNAMIC CHANGES IN METHAMPHETAMINE ABUSE USING RECURRENCE QUANTIFICATION ANALYSIS
 
 Sayyed Majid Mazinani, GHASEM SADEGHI BAJESTANI
 79 - 89
 
 
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 FINITE ELEMENT SIMULATION OF MEMS PIEZOELECTRIC ENERGY SCAVENGER BASED ON PZT THIN FILM
 
 Aliza Aini Md Ralib, Nur Wafa Asyiqin Zulfakher, Rosminazuin Ab Rahim, Nor Farahidah Za'bah, Noor Hazrin Hany Mohamad Hanif
 90 - 99
 
 
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 Evaluation on the Effectiveness of Visual Learning Environment on Programming Course From Students’ Perspectives
 
 Nasa Zata Dina, Eto Wuryanto, Rachman Sinatriya Marjianto
 100 - 107
 
 
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 TOWARDS AN EFFICIENT TRAFFIC CONGESTION PREDICTION METHOD BASED ON NEURAL NETWORKS AND BIG GPS DATA
 
 Wiam Elleuch, Ali Wali, Adel M. Alimi
 108 - 118
 
 
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 AUGMENTATIVE AND ALTERNATIVE COMMUNICATION METHOD BASED ON TONGUE CLICKING FOR MUTE DISABILITIES
 
 NIK NUR WAHIDAH NIK HASHIM, MUHAMMAD AMIRUL AMIN AZMI, HAZLINA MD. YUSOF
 119 - 128
 
 
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 A COMBINED DEEP LEARNING MODEL FOR PERSIAN SENTIMENT ANALYSIS
 
 Zahra Bokaee Nezhad, Mohammad Ali Deihimi
 129 - 139
 
 
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 MODIFIED CAPACITOR ASSISTED EXTENDED BOOST QUASI Z-SOURCE INVERTER FOR THE GRID-CONNECTED PV SYSTEM
 
 N Hemalatha, Seyezhai Ramalingam
 140 - 157
 
 
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 A NOVEL USER PROFILE-BASED FUZZY APPROACH FOR EVALUATING TRUST IN SEMANTIC WEB
 
 SOMAYEH ASHTARI, MALIHE DANESH, hossein shirgahi
 158 - 176
 
 
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 PLL-BASED 3?; INVERTER CIRCUIT FOR MICROGRID SYSTEM OPERATED BY ELECTROSTATIC GENERATOR
 
 S.M.A Motakabber, Tawfikur Rahman, Muhammad I. Ibrahimy, A. H. M. Zahirul Alam
 177 - 193
 
 
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 INTELLIGENT CONTROL SYSTEM OF A WHEELCHAIR FOR PEOPLE WITH QUADRIPLEGIA PARALYSIS
 
 hayder Fadhil; Saif Hussam; Yasseen Sadoon
 194 - 201
 
 
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 MATERIALS AND MANUFACTURING ENGINEERING
 
 
 
 Adsorptive removal of Pb (II) using exfoliated graphite adsorbent:influence of experimental conditions and magnetic CoFe2O4 decoration
 
 Thi Thuong Nguyen, Thi Ngoc Thu Nguyen, Long Giang Bach, Duy Trinh Nguyen, Thi Phuong Quynh Bui
 202 - 215
 
 
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 Grease Quality Issues on Middle Voltage Switchgear: Corrosivity, Resistivity, Safety and Ageing
 
 Mohd Sabri Mahmud, Sanuri Ishak, Mohd Najib Razali, Mohd Aizudin Abdul Aziz, Musfafikri Musa
 216 - 228
 
 
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 MECHANICAL AND AEROSPACE ENGINEERING
 
 
 
 A RANS K-? SIMULATION OF 2D TURBULENT NATURAL CONVECTION IN AN ENCLOSURE WITH HEATING SOURCES
 
 mehdi ahmadi, Seyed Ali Agha Mirjalily, Seyed Amir Abbas Oloomi
 240 - 255
 
 
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 MECHATRONICS AND AUTOMATION ENGINEERING
 
 
 
 MAGNETICALLY INDUCED PIEZOELECTRIC ENERGY HARVESTER VIA HYBRID KINETIC MOTION
 
 Huda Azam, Noor Hazrin Hany Mohamad Hanif, Aliza Aini Md Ralib
 256 - 268
 
 
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