Results for 'Islam and civil society'

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  1.  22
    Islam, Democracy and Civil Society.Chandran Kukathas - 2003 - Journal des Economistes Et des Etudes Humaines 13 (2).
    The purpose of this article, more particularly, is to explore the place of Islam in the modern world-a world which contemporary writers increasingly try to understand by invoking the notions of democracy and civil society.For many, then, Islam stands in a relationship of tension with - if not complete antagonism to - democracy and modernity. It is a religion, and a philosophy, which is a throwback to the middle ages, and an obstacle to human progress.The concern (...)
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  2.  35
    Civil Society and Religion: Retrospective Reflections on Catholicism and Prospective Reflections in Islam.Jose Casanova - 2001 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 68.
  3.  9
    Good governance, civil society & Islam.Maszlee Malik - 2015 - Gombak: IIUM Press.
  4.  10
    Civil Society and Government in Islam.John Kelsay - 2001 - In Nancy L. Rosenblum & Robert C. Post (eds.), Civil Society and Government. Princeton University Press. pp. 284-316.
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  5.  32
    The Return of Religious and Historiographic Discourse:Church and Civil Society in Southeastern Europe (19th - 20th centuries). [REVIEW]Stamatopoulos Dimitrios - 2004 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 3 (8):64-75.
    This paper focuses on the revision of the classical thesis concerning secularism the progressive domination of the discussion around the issue of the civil society. These two poles facilitated the development of a series of historiographic approaches that particularly touched on the areas of Eastern and Southeastern Europeís history. Here we are concerned with three central cases of historiographic discourseís production, as indicators of the dominant ìparadigmîís change: the first concerns the role of the Russian church in the (...)
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  6.  30
    RESPONSE TO REPONSES TO: "Cultivating a Liberal Islamic Ethos, Building an Islamic Civil Society".Sohail H. Hashmi - 2007 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 27 (1):29-32.
    MUSLIM STATES HAVE BEEN CHARACTERIZED AS SUFFERING FROM A "democratic deficit." A wide-ranging debate has been taking place for many years on whether Islam is somehow to blame for the troubled history of liberal democracy in the Muslim world. This essay argues that if liberal democratic polities are to develop in Muslim countries, then nurturing civil society is a necessary first step. How can Islamic ethics help or hinder this process?
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  7.  27
    The Islam and Human Rights Nexus: Shifting Dimensions.Ann Elizabeth Mayer - 2007 - Muslim World Journal of Human Rights 4 (1).
    The Islam and human rights nexus is too often viewed as being static. In reality, the relationship is complex and mutable. In an era of unsettling changes to the status quo, perceptions of the Islam and human rights nexus have also proven to be sensitive to shifting political dynamics. In these circumstances, the position that Islam and human rights are inherently in conflict, which assumes two settled entities in a stable relationship, is becoming hard to sustain – (...)
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  8.  31
    Islam and Sport: From Human Experiences to Revelation.Baidruel Hairiel Abd Rahim, Nurazzura Mohamad Diah, Haizuran Mohd Jani & Abdul Sham Ahmad - 2019 - Intellectual Discourse 27 (2):413-430.
    Sport is viewed as a multidimensional phenomenon. Most countries,including Muslim nations, invest heavily in sports to ensure the participationof their citizens both for recreational and competitive purposes. Indeed, theinvolvement of Muslim countries in significant multi-sport events such as theCommonwealth, the Asian, and the Olympic Games are inevitable. Therefore,a proper projection should be given to Muslim athletes as their participationreflects the identity and culture of Muslim civilizations. To date, the issue ofMuslim athlete’s involvement in sports from the notion of Islamization hasyet (...)
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  9.  16
    RESPONSE TO: "Cultivating a Liberal Islamic Ethos, Building an Islamic Civil Society".John Kelsay - 2007 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 27 (1):16-19.
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  10.  24
    RESPONSE TO: "Cultivating a Liberal Islamic Ethos, Building an Islamic Civil Society".Irene Oh - 2007 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 27 (1):26-29.
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  11.  15
    RESPONSE TO: "Cultivating a Liberal Islamic Ethos, Building an Islamic Civil Society".Jonathan E. Brockopp - 2007 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 27 (1):23-26.
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  12. Islam and Democracy in Indonesia: Tolerance Without Liberalism.Jeremy Menchik - 2015 - Cambridge University Press.
    Indonesia's Islamic organizations sustain the country's thriving civil society, democracy, and reputation for tolerance amid diversity. Yet scholars poorly understand how these organizations envision the accommodation of religious difference. What does tolerance mean to the world's largest Islamic organizations? What are the implications for democracy in Indonesia and the broader Muslim world? Jeremy Menchik argues that answering these questions requires decoupling tolerance from liberalism and investigating the historical and political conditions that engender democratic values. Drawing on archival documents, (...)
     
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  13. The influence of freedom on growth of science in arabic-islamic and western civilizations.Mohammed Sanduk - unknown
    The two important factors in science development are the social economy (gross domestic product, GDP) and freedom. In order to follow the development of science for both old Arabic-Islamic and Western civilizations, a statistical method is used to trace the variation of scientists' population with time. The analysis shows that: 1- There is a growth in Arabic-Islamic sciences for a period of three centuries (AD 700-1000). Then it is followed by period of declination. The decay time is about of eight (...)
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  14.  65
    The rights of God: Islam, human rights, and comparative ethics.Irene Oh - 2007 - Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press.
    Their treatment of such human rights political participation, freedom of conscience, and religious toleration demonstrate, Oh says, that Islam should have a ...
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  15. Civil society for sustainable economic development.Nik Mustapha Hj Nik Hassan - 1998 - In Othman Alhabshi & Mustapha bin Hj Nik Hassan (eds.), Islam, knowledge, and ethics: a pertinent culture for managing organisations. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia: Institute of Islamic Understanding Malaysia.
  16.  44
    The Epistle of the Eloquent Clarification concerning the Refutation of Ibn Qutayba by Al-Qāḍī al-Nuʿmān b. Muḥammad . Edited by Avraham Hakim. Islamic History and Civilization, vol. 90. Leiden : Brill, 2012. Pp. xi + 22 + 175 . $129, €94. [REVIEW]Samer Traboulsi - 2021 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 135 (2):393-395.
    The Epistle of the Eloquent Clarification concerning the Refutation of Ibn Qutayba by Al-Qāḍī al-Nuʿmān b. Muḥammad. Edited by Avraham Hakim. Islamic History and Civilization, vol. 90. Leiden: Brill, 2012. Pp. xi + 22 + 175. $129, €94.
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  17.  25
    Crit. Review of Alexander Treiger, Inspired Knowledge in Islamic Thought: Al-Ghazālī’s Theory of Mystical Cognition and Its Avicennian Foundation (Culture and Civilization in the Middle East, 27). London, Routledge, 2012. [REVIEW]Jules Janssens - 2021 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 135 (2):395-399.
    Inspired Knowledge in Islamic Thought: Al-Ghazālī’s Theory of Mystical Cognition and Its Avicennian Foundation. By Alexander Treiger. Culture and Civilization in the Middle East, vol. 27. London: Routledge, 2012. Pp. xi + 183. £75, $125.
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  18.  31
    RESPONSE TO: "Cultivating a Liberal Islamic Ethos, Building an Islamic Civil Society".Dov Nelkin - 2007 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 27 (1):19-22.
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  19.  26
    Revisiting Southeast Asian Civil Islam: Moderate Muslims and Indonesia’s Democracy Paradox.M. Khusna Amal - 2020 - Intellectual Discourse 28 (1):295-318.
    : There has been an intensive scholarly debate about the developmentof Indonesia’s post-New Order democracy. Some scholars have laudedIndonesia’s surprisingly successful transition to democratic consolidation,while others have disputed such a notion, arguing that Indonesia’s democraticprocess tends to be stagnant and even regressive. However, the absence ofa progressive civil society as a result of the increasingly dominant positionof oligarchic political elites in the structure of state power and democraticinstitutions, are a number of important factors that encourage the declineof democracy. (...)
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  20.  33
    Professional and Organizational Leadership Role in Ethics Management: Avoiding Reliance on Ethical Codification and Nurturing Ethical Culture.Marianne Jennings & Islam H. El-Adaway - 2022 - Science and Engineering Ethics 28 (4):1-30.
    The engineering profession has experienced some ethical cases that were rarely reported, scrutinized, or discussed because: they did not necessarily represent violations of existing codes even if they breached ethical principles; those within the organization were not prepared to take steps to address the issues or impose sanction; an/or some of the personnel associated with these cases resorted to silence to avoid being labeled as trouble-makers in their organizations and, perhaps, more broadly, in society. The goal of this paper (...)
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  21.  1
    (1 other version)Islam: dichotomy between theory and practice.Souran Mardini - 2014 - Istanbul, Turkey: Murat Center.
  22.  42
    Islamism, Castoriadis and Autonomy.Chistopher Houston - 2004 - Thesis Eleven 76 (1):49-69.
    In the context of nationalizing, secularizing or Kemalist states, analyses of Islamist movements are often thrown back on notions of traditionalism or atavism. In a related vein, for certain social theorists writing on modernity, the uniqueness of the West is clarified through an imaginative [mis]interpretation of other cultures or civilizations. Too often, however, the apparent gains in Western self-insight reflect an ‘inability to constitute oneself without excluding the other’ (Cornelius Castoriadis). Ironically Castoriadis himself, in a project we might term an (...)
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  23.  11
    The Legendary Biographies of Tamerlane: Islam and Heroic Apocrypha in Central Asia. By Ron Sela.Anne Broadbridge - 2021 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 133 (4).
    The Legendary Biographies of Tamerlane: Islam and Heroic Apocrypha in Central Asia. By Ron Sela. Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2011. Pp. xvii + 164. $85.
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  24.  43
    Between doubts and certainties: on the place of history of science in Islamic societies within the field of history of science.Sonja Brentjes - 2003 - NTM Zeitschrift für Geschichte der Wissenschaften, Technik und Medizin 11 (2):65-79.
    I discuss my long-term observation that history of science in Islamic societies is marginalized within the general history of science community as well as in the academic world of Islamic studies, Near Eastern language and civilization programs, Middle Eastern history, or the investigation of the modern Muslim world. I ask what the possible causes for this situation are and what can be done to change the bleak situation.
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  25.  25
    Islam, Modernity and a New Millennium: Themes From a Critical Rationalist Reading of Islam.Ali Paya - 2018 - Routledge.
    Introduction -- What and how can we learn from the Quran: a critical rationalist perspective -- A critical rationalist approach to religion -- A critical assessment of the programmes of producing "Islamic science" and "Islamisation of science/knowledge" -- Faqih as engineer: a critical assessment of fiqh's epistemological status -- A critical assessment of the method of interpretation of the Quran by the Quran, in the light of Allameh Tabatabaei's Tafsir al-mizan -- The disenchantment of reason: an anti-rational trend in modern (...)
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  26.  9
    Islamism, Castoriadis and Autonomy.Christoph Houston - 2004 - Thesis Eleven 76 (1):49-69.
    In the context of nationalizing, secularizing or Kemalist states, analyses of Islamist movements are often thrown back on notions of traditionalism or atavism. In a related vein, for certain social theorists writing on modernity, the uniqueness of the West is clarified through an imaginative [mis]interpretation of other cultures or civilizations. Too often, however, the apparent gains in Western self-insight reflect an ‘inability to constitute oneself without excluding the other’ (Cornelius Castoriadis). Ironically Castoriadis himself, in a project we might term an (...)
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  27.  17
    Whither Islamic Civilization?Imam Fu’adi & Ngainun Naim - 2021 - Epistemé: Jurnal Pengembangan Ilmu Keislaman 16 (1):83-103.
    Traditionally dated from the 8th to the 14th century, historians generally agree on the period of the golden age of Islamic civilization. They count that the keys to this civilizational achievement laid on the flourishing educational institutions, scientific findings, and the births of influential Muslim scholars. This article tries to reframe the significance of education in the creation of Islamic golden age and offer a brief reminder to the importance of education for contemporary Muslim societies. It is a bibliographical study (...)
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  28.  12
    State phobia and civil society: the political legacy of Michel Foucault.Mitchell Dean - 2016 - Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. Edited by Kaspar Villadsen.
    State and civil society -- Empire without state -- Politics of life -- Saint Foucault -- Blood-dried codes -- The state of immanence -- Virtual state-making -- When society prevails -- Political and economic theology -- Foucault's apologia of neoliberalism.
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  29. Enriching knowledge culture towards developing a civil society.Nik Mustapha Hj Nik Hassan - 1998 - In Othman Alhabshi & Mustapha bin Hj Nik Hassan (eds.), Islam, knowledge, and ethics: a pertinent culture for managing organisations. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia: Institute of Islamic Understanding Malaysia.
  30.  14
    Literature and the Islamic Court: Cultural Life under al-Ṣāḥib Ibn ʿAbbād. By Erez Naaman.Jocelyn Sharlet - 2022 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 139 (4).
    Literature and the Islamic Court: Cultural Life under al-Ṣāḥib Ibn ʿAbbād. By Erez Naaman. Culture and Civilization in the Middle East, vol. 52. London: Routledge, 2016. Pp. xv + 315. $155, £115.
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  31.  5
    Strategi membangun spiritualitas masyarakat dalam otonomi daerah.Nurcholish Majid & H. R. Syaukani (eds.) - 2001 - Jakarta: Nuansa Madani.
    Lectures on a spiritual, civil society in Indonesia based on Islamic ethics in the framework of regional autonomy.
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  32.  17
    The Sharia Debate in Ontario: Gender, Islam, and Representations of Muslim Women's Agency.Anna C. Korteweg - 2008 - Gender and Society 22 (4):434-454.
    In late 2003, the Canadian media reported that the Islamic Institute of Civil Justice would start offering arbitration in family disputes in accordance with both Islamic legal principles and Ontario's Arbitration Act of 1991. A vociferous two-year debate ensued on the introduction of “Sharia law” in Ontario. This article analyzes representations of Muslim women's agency that came to the fore in this debate by examining reports in three Canadian newspapers. The debate demonstrated two notions of agency. The predominant perspective (...)
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  33. Islamfiche Readings From Primary Sources.William A. Graham, Miryam Rozen, Marilyn Robinson Waldman & American Council of Learned Societies - 1983 - Inter Documentation Clearwater Distributor].
     
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  34.  16
    Order, Justice and Global Islam.James Piscatori - 2003 - In Rosemary Foot, John Lewis Gaddis & Andrew Hurrell (eds.), Order and justice in international relations. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 262--286.
    This chapter examines some of the conceptions of order and justice that are present in the Islamic world. It argues that many Islamic states have been willing to accommodate themselves to an international society based on the idea of sovereign equality. However, one of the impacts of globalization has been to shift the allegiances of some members of these states from territorially based political communities to those based on religious or cultural identity. Some of the radical Islamist groupings that (...)
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  35.  9
    Christianity and Civil Society: Catholic and Neo-Calvinist Perspectives.Jeanne Heffernan Schindler (ed.) - 2008 - Lexington Books.
    A work of contemporary Christian political thought, this volume addresses the crisis of modern democracy evident in the decline of the institutions of civil society and their theoretical justification. Drawing upon a rich store of social and political reflection found in the Catholic and Neo-Calvinist traditions, the essays mount a robust defense of the irreducible identity and value of the social institutions_family, neighborhood, church, civic association_that serve as the connective tissue of a political community.
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  36.  16
    Universalism and Cosmopolitanism in Islam: The Idea of the Caliphate.Massimo Campanini - 2021 - In Mohammed Hashas (ed.), Pluralism in Islamic Contexts - Ethics, Politics and Modern Challenges. Springer Verlag. pp. 115-128.
    While universalism is rooted in the very ideology of Islam and is grounded in the Qur’an, especially through the concepts of fiṭra, amr and rūḥ, cosmopolitanism is an essential characteristic of classical Muslim empires: both the Caliphate-Imamate and empires, like the Ottoman or the Mughal ones, were a melting pot of races, languages and customs. The Caliphate-Imamate was by nature supranational and for centuries there was no idea of the nation in Islam. Contemporary nationalism, local or global, have (...)
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  37.  16
    ‘Safeguarding Islam’ in modern times: Politics, piety and Hefazat-e-Islami ‘ulama in Bangladesh.Muhammad Abdur Raqib - 2020 - Critical Research on Religion 8 (3):235-256.
    Within Muslim communities, the ‘ulama are considered the most crucial corporate social agency that drives the ideological and spiritual energy to the members of the society who find religious teachings necessary for their individual and social, if not always political, lives. However, when the ‘ulama of Bangladesh gathered under the umbrella platform of Hefazat-e-Islam in 2010, agitated by the numerous upheavals of the government’s policies, scholars and members of the civil society often dubbed them as regressive, (...)
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  38.  24
    Nigeria Beyond Secularism and Islamism: Fashioning a Reconsidered Rights Paradigm for a Democratic Multicultural Society.Hameed Agberemi - 2005 - Muslim World Journal of Human Rights 2 (1).
    Political ideologies devoted either to the elimination or exclusion of religion from, or to its imposition on, the public sphere, and which are prepared in either case to capture State Power to achieve their vision for Society, must inexorably deny to citizens fundamental human rights and civil liberties – in a globalizing world where sustainable societies must become more culturally heterogeneous and where the continuing rise of religion is inevitable, so argues the author in this article. What is (...)
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  39. Power and civil society: Foucault vs. Habermas.Yves Sintomer - 1992 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 18 (3-4):357-378.
  40.  69
    Class and Civil Society. The Limits of Marxian Critical Theory.José Casanova - 1984 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1984 (59):187-196.
    Marxian class theory has been unable to account for the most significant historical developments of the 20th century. The rise of fascism not only belied the hopes put in the revolutionary proletariat, it also brought into the center of the political stage those social strata which the class theory had relegated to, at best, secondary supporting roles. The triumph of the Bolshevik, revolution and the institutionalization and expansion of Soviet socialism has not only failed to issue into the anticipated free, (...)
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  41.  45
    Sovereignty, the Nation State, and Islam.Gerrit Steunebrink - 2008 - Ethical Perspectives 15 (1):7-47.
    In this article we try to show how revolutionary the idea of sovereignty was and is in the Islamic world, preceding all nationalism. Sovereignty marks the very transition from empire to the central state that the nation state presupposes.Sovereignty made its entrance in the nineteenth century in the Ottoman Empire. It functioned in the centralization policy of the sultan, who needed this central position to realize a top down process of modernization. This policy took apart the Empire’s traditional system of (...)
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  42.  10
    Christianity and Civil Society: Catholic and Neo-Calvinist Perspectives.Stanley Carlson-Thies, Jonathan Chaplin, Jean Bethke Elshtain, Kenneth L. Grasso, Russell Hittinger, Timothy Sherratt & James W. Skillen (eds.) - 2008 - Lexington Books.
    A work of contemporary Christian political thought, this volume addresses the crisis of modern democracy evident in the decline of the institutions of civil society and their theoretical justification. Drawing upon a rich store of social and political reflection found in the Catholic and Neo-Calvinist traditions, the essays mount a robust defense of the irreducible identity and value of the social institutions_family, neighborhood, church, civic association_that serve as the connective tissue of a political community.
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  43. The political consequences of Islam’s economic legacy.Timur Kuran - 2013 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 39 (4-5):395-405.
    Several of the Middle East’s traditional economic institutions hampered its political development by limiting checks on executive power, preventing the formation of organized and durable opposition movements, and keeping civil society weak. They include Islam’s original tax system, which failed to protect property rights; the waqf, whose rigidity hampered the development of civil society; and private commercial enterprises, whose small scales and short lives blocked the development of private coalitions able to bargain with the state. (...)
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  44.  19
    Food and Foodways of Medieval Cairenes: Aspects of Life in an Islamic Metropolis of the Eastern Mediterranean. By Paulina B. Lewicka. [REVIEW]Nicolas Trépanier - 2021 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 134 (2):355-357.
    Food and Foodways of Medieval Cairenes: Aspects of Life in an Islamic Metropolis of the Eastern Mediterranean. By Paulina B. Lewicka. Islamic History and Civilization, vol. 88. Leiden: Brill, 2011. Pp. xxi + 626, maps. $268.
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  45.  16
    Islamıc Socıety Accordıng to Roger Garaudy Cıvılızatıon and Causes of Collapse.Mehmet Sulhan - 2023 - Tasavvur - Tekirdag Theology Journal 9 (1):483-501.
    The basic resources of the Islamic Society are generally the Qur'an, the Sunnah, the mind, science and culture. The Islamic society that emerged with the migration of Muhammad from Mecca to Medina in 622 was the beginning of a new civilization. This civilization has created a society based on the unity of belief, which goes beyond the principles of language, color, race, geography, blood ties and nationality. According to the French-born Muslim philosopher Roger Garaudy, this society (...)
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  46.  22
    Transmission and Dynamics of the Textual Sources of Islam: Essays in Honour of Harald Motzki. Edited by Nicolet Boekhoffvan dEr Voort, Kees Versteegh, and Joas Wagemakers. [REVIEW]Scott C. Lucas - 2021 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 134 (4):725-728.
    The Transmission and Dynamics of the Textual Sources of Islam: Essays in Honour of Harald Motzki. Edited by Nicolet Boekhoffvan dEr Voort, Kees Versteegh, and Joas Wagemakers. Islamic History and Civilization, vol. 89. Leiden: Brill, 2011. Pp. xvi + 494. $221.
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  47.  5
    Islamske teme i perspektive.Fikret Karčić - 2009 - Sarajevo: El-Kalem.
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  48.  34
    Making Good Citizens: Education and Civil Society.Diane Ravitch & Joseph P. Viteritti (eds.) - 2001 - Yale University Press.
    Americans have reason to be concerned about the condition of American democracy at the start of the twenty-first century. Surveys show that civic participation has declined, cynicism about government has increased, and young people have a weak grasp of the principles that underlie our constitutional system. Crucial questions must be answered: How serious is the situation? What role do schools play in shaping civic behavior? Are current education reform initiatives—such as multiculturalism and school choice—counterproductive? How can schools contribute toward reversing (...)
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  49.  13
    Unity and Harmony, Compassion and Love in Global Times.George F. McLean - 2008 - Council for Research in Values and Philosophy.
    Totemic unity as key to community in thought and action -- Myth : the emergence of diversity within unity -- The individual in the Greek polis -- The synthesis of personal uniqueness and social unity in Christian and Islamic thought -- Modern alienation of individuals and society -- Opening a new paradigm for civil society and social harmony : a contemporary metaphysics of freedom -- The diversified unity of a global whole.
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  50.  12
    Dissent and Civil Society in Poland.Kazimierz Z. Sowa - 2006 - Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies 18 (1-2):57-74.
    This essay explores social forces which contributed to regaining independence by the Polish people and sovereignty by the Polish state after 45 years of Soviet domination There were four major factors or forces of historical change: workers' resistance (big-industry working class); intellectual opposition (dissidents); grass-roots movement (families, households and their microeconmuc activity); and the Catholic Church (in the late phase of the Polish People's Republic). The preliminary thesis is that Poland succeeded in transcending communism and Soviet domination as quickly as (...)
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