Description This book provides an original account detailing the origins and components of a faith-based Accounting system that was founded around 629 CE.
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He holds a Ph D degree from Aston University Business School.
About the Author Samir Alamad is a senior professional and expert in the Islamic banking and Finance industry, an economist and a published author.
The book provides a clear and concise guide to Accounting in Islamic economics and Finance and how Islamic Financial institutions could meet the applicable faith-based rules in their Accounting practices.
It marries rigorous academic research and theories with practical industry experiences.
This book is not merely an academic work, nor is it a pure practitioner guide; rather, it is a robust work that combines both.
Also featured is the concept of paper money within the theory of money and how it is enacted in a faith-based legal framework by identifying two core concepts of today\'s Fiat money as being a single genus or multi-genera money.
This is an important foundation to explain Islamic Accounting and includes how this outcome would shape the faith-based view regarding the new phenomenon of digital currency (DC).
Through which the concept of money and digital currency within the theory of money and how it is enacted in a faith-based context, amid differences of opinions among its actors, is examined.
This book explores the way in which religious rules act as a directive for Accounting and auditing practices in IFIs.
It provides important theoretical and practical contributions by explaining Accounting as a value-based science rather than a value-free object or abstract.
By examining the historical development that the Accounting systems underwent within the context of faith-based rules and values, the book explains what is meant by the term "faith-based accounting", together with a discussion of its characteristics in relation to various product structures and the underlying Islamic Finance principles.
Description This book provides an original account detailing the origins and components of a faith-based Accounting system that was founded around 629 CE