The book contributes to the current debate over Islam in a globalizing world by drawing on the contemporary and historical justice discourse within the Islamic traditions, and by examining policies and practices of global powers towards Muslim populations in the global south.
Islam and the Drive to Global Justice: Principles of Justice Beyond Dominant Ethnic and Religious Communities contributes to the current debate over Islam in a globalizing world by drawing on the contemporary and historical justice discourse within the Islamic traditions, and by examining policies and practices of global powers towards Muslim populations in the Global South. The discussions aim at bringing insights from Islamic authoritative sources and scholarly literature, and to enrich the current deliberation on the universality of modern values and the relevance of the Islamic traditions to advancing more inclusive notion of global justice. The book examines in particular several models rooted in the monotheistic traditions, crucial for overcoming three interrelated challenges facing the dispensation of justice in contemporary society: inclusivity, disparity, and selectivity. The book uses the normative framework it outlines to analyze the connection between European powers and the autocratic regimes in the MENA region. Several chapters in the book illustrate how supporting Arab autocracy contributes to the rise of religious extremism and has already produced failed states in Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, and Yemen that undermine both national and global peace and stability.
Introduction
Part I: Reevaluating the Grounds for a Just Global Order
Chapter 1: Islamic Rational Idealism and the Universalization of Justice,
Louay Safi
Chapter 2: Justice in the Quran: Interpretations of a Universal Value in a
Globalizing World, Asma Afsaruddin
Chapter 3: Sensory Aesthetics of Belief and Unbelief in the Qur'an and its
Impact on Interreligious and Intersocietal Relations, Abdulkader Tayob
Chapter 4: The Islamic Inflection of Connective Justice: Between Cosmopolitan
Civility, Institutional Relationality, and Intellectual Reflexivity, Armando
Salvatore
Chapter 5: Sharia and Freedom: A Reassessment, Mustafa Akyol
Chapter 6: Towards a Civilizational Ethos: From the Homo Moralis to the Homo
Ethicus, Mohammed Hashas
Part II: Global Confluence in the Muslim South
Chapter 7: Muslim Intellectuals and Global Justice: A View from Southeast
Asia, Khairudin Aljunied
Chapter 8: Toward a Justice-based Foreign Policy, Farid Senzai
Chapter 9: Religious Diversity in Arab Society: Myth, Conspiracy, and
Reality, Mohammed Abu-Nimer
Chapter 10: Arab Authoritarianism and Western Complacency, Louay Safi
Conclusion
About the Contributors
Louay M. Safi is professor of political science and Islamic philosophy at Hamad Bin Khalifa University (HBKU), Malaysia.