The Islamic System of Governance
In the Name of Allah---the Most Beneficent, the Most Merciful. 1. Introduction The Islamic system of governance is neither a theocracy run by priests nor a secular democracy founded upon popular sovereignty. It is a moral–legal system rooted in the sovereignty of Allah ( ḥākimiyyat-e-Ilāhiyyah ) , where human authority operates as a trust ( amānah) to implement divine law and uphold justice. The Qur’an declares: “The command (ḥukm) belongs to none but Allah.” (Yūsuf 12:40) This verse establishes that ultimate authority to legislate belongs to God alone. The human ruler, called Imām or Khalīfah , is therefore not sovereign in his own right but an executor of the divine will through the Sharī‘ah . 2. The Foundational Principle: Sovereignty of Allah The foundation of the Islamic polity rests on the recognition that Allah alone is the Lawgiver and Sovereign . The Qur’an states: “It is not for a believing man...