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Hukum Keluarga /Ahwal Shakhsiyyah (Islamic Family Law) Hukum Pidana Islam /Jinayah Siyasah (Criminal Law & Islamic State Structure) Hukum Ekonomi Syari`ah/Muamalat (Islamic Economics) Ilmu Falak (Islamic Astronomy) Ilmu Hukum (Law) Fakultas Ekonomi dan Bisnis Islam (Faculty of Islamic Economics and Business) Perbankan Syari'ah (Islamic Banking)
BUMDes-run convenience store in Kebumen Regency. A village-owned enterprise (Indonesian: Badan Usaha Milik Desa), often shortened to BUMDes or BUM Desa, is a type of company that is managed and established by an Indonesian village.
Name of bank Founded Majority owner Notes Main state-owned banks ; Bank Mandiri: 2 October 1998 Government of Indonesia: Foreign exchange bank Bank Negara Indonesia (BNI) : 5 July 1946
PT Bank CIMB Niaga Tbk is Indonesia's sixth largest bank by assets, established in 1955. CIMB Niaga, which is majority-owned by CIMB Group, is the largest payment bank in terms of transaction value under the Indonesian Central Securities Depository.
Diploma in Islamic Banking (Diploma III Perbankan Syariah) was originally managed by Faculty Shariah and Law until the FEBI was established in 2014. The three other programs were created by the administration of newly established faculty, FEBI.
The Philippines has a comprehensive banking system encompassing various types of banks, from large universal banks to small rural banks and even non-banks.As of September 30, 2022, [1] there were 45 universal and commercial banks, [2] 44 savings banks, [3] 400 rural and cooperative banks, [4] 40 credit unions and 6,267 non-banks with quasi-banking functions, all licensed by the Bangko Sentral ...
A copy of Undang-Undang Melaka displayed in the Royal Museum, Kuala Lumpur.. Undang-Undang Melaka (Malay for 'Law of Melaka', Jawi: اوندڠ٢ ملاک ), also known as Hukum Kanun Melaka, Undang-Undang Darat Melaka and Risalah Hukum Kanun, [1] was the legal code of Melaka Sultanate (1400–1511).
Law of Indonesia is based on a civil law system, intermixed with local customary law and Dutch law.Before European presence and colonization began in the sixteenth century, indigenous kingdoms ruled the archipelago independently with their own custom laws, known as adat (unwritten, traditional rules still observed in the Indonesian society). [1]