The Politics of Religion in South and Southeast Asia

Forside
Ishtiaq Ahmed
Taylor & Francis, 4. mai 2011 - 288 sider

The notion of a ‘politics of religion’ refers to the increasing role that religion plays in the politics of the contemporary world. This book presents comparative country case studies on the politics of religion in South and South Asia, including India, Pakistan and Indonesia. The politics of religion calls into question the relevance of modernist notions of secularism and democracy, with the emphasis instead on going back to indigenous roots in search of authentic ideologies and models of state and nation building. Within the context of the individual countries, chapters focus on the consequences that politics of religion has on inclusive nation-building, democracy and the rights of individuals, minorities and women.

The book makes a contribution to both the theoretical and conceptual literature on the politics of religion as well as shed light on the implications and ramifications of the politics of religion on contemporary South Asian and South East Asian countries. It is of interest to students and scholars of South and South East Asian Studies, as well as Comparative Politics.

 

Innhold

1 The politics of religion in South and Southeast Asia
1
2 Religion as a political ideologyin South Asia
13
A case study of Bangladesh
26
Dalit Adivasi Muslim and Christian experiences in India
45
5 Sikh politics and the IndoPak relationship
66
Constitutional and legal bases of discrimination
81
7 Women under Islamic Law in Pakistan
102
8 Religion as a political ideology in Southeast Asia
120
9 Political Islam in Indonesia
136
10 Religion and politics in the Philippines
157
Undermining minority and womens rights
174
Managed pluralism and the regulatory state in Singapore
195
Negotiating Hindutva in the diaspora
225
Religious discourses cyber technology and Pakistani women
242
Index
261
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Om forfatteren (2011)

Ishtiaq Ahmed is a Visiting Research Professor at the Institute of South Asian Studies (ISAS), National University of Singapore and a Professor of Political Science at Stockholm University, Sweden. His previous publications include ‘The Concept of an Islamic State: An Analysis of the Ideological Controversy in Pakistan’ (1987) and ‘State Nation and Ethnicity in Contemporary South Asia’ (1996).

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