Source Notes
How to Read Halal Across Islamic Cultural Spheres: Source Notes
An intermediate note for organizing research material, evidence links, issue structure, and inclusion decisions before the reader-facing article is written.
How to Read Halal Across Islamic Cultural Spheres: Source Notes
Source Map
Normative and Religious Sources
- Quran.com 2:168: Used for the pairing of lawful and good food.
- Quran.com 2:173: Used for prohibited foods and necessity.
- Quran.com 5:3: Used for prohibited foods and slaughter conditions.
- Quran.com 5:5: Used for the food of the People of the Book.
- Sahih al-Bukhari 2051: Used for the lawful, unlawful, and doubtful matters distinction.
International Standards and State Systems
- Codex CXG 24-1997: Used as the baseline international guideline for halal food labeling.
- FAO Codex halal guideline HTML: Used to verify slaughter-related language.
- SMIIC Standards: Used to map food, certification, accreditation, logistics, pharmaceutical, and inspection standards.
- MYeHALAL Malaysia Halal Management System 2020: Used as a Malaysian management-system example.
- MUIS Singapore Halal Certification process: Used as an example from a minority-Muslim urban state.
- BPJPH 2024 mandatory certification announcement: Used to verify Indonesia’s mandatory certification phase.
Markets, Industries, and Everyday Practice
- Pew Research Center 2025: Used for Muslim population share and growth.
- Salaam Gateway SGIE 2025/26: Used as market-context evidence.
- DinarStandard SGIE 2024/25: Used for sector estimates across halal food, finance, and travel.
- IFSB Stability Report 2025 press release: Used for Islamic finance asset context.
- Mastercard-CrescentRating GMTI 2026 release: Used for current Muslim travel figures and digital-trust framing.
- JNTO Muslim Travelers: Used for Japan’s tourist-facing Muslim-friendly information.
Evidence Notes
- Halal functions as a framework for permission, prohibition, doubt, and necessity across daily life, not only as a food category.
- Codex treats halal as a food-labeling guideline, while OIC/SMIIC extends the field into certification, accreditation, logistics, and pharmaceuticals.
- Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore show different forms of state involvement, institutional scope, and minority-setting practice.
- Tayyib connects easily to hygiene, safety, animal welfare, and sustainability, but religious requirements and desirable ethics should not be collapsed.
- Medicines and vaccines require necessity, alternatives, and public health to be considered alongside ingredient status.
- In Japan, halal-certified, Muslim-friendly, non-pork and non-alcohol, and vegetarian claims should be separated clearly.
Information De-emphasized
- Private consultancy forecasts for country-specific halal markets were treated cautiously because methods are often not transparent.
- Promotional material from individual certifiers was not used when official standards or public institutions could support the same point.
- Social media religious opinions were excluded as evidence.
- Strong advocacy pieces on slaughter were replaced with animal-welfare authorities and standards documents.
Open Questions
- How certifiers will handle cultivated meat, precision fermentation, cell-culture media, and synthetic biology.
- How Indonesia’s mandatory system will affect importers, small firms, cosmetics, and pharmaceuticals.
- How far halal and tayyib should be connected to labor rights, environmental care, and animal welfare.
- How Japan can standardize clear Muslim-friendly information without claiming full certification where it does not exist.