Islam and Democracy in the Maldives

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A01=Azim Zahir
Author_Azim Zahir
Category=JP
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Global Human Rights Discourse
Human Rights
human rights discourse
institutional religion studies
Islam's Transformations
Islamic Modernism
Islamist Position
Maldivian political system
Maumoon Abdul Gayoom
MDP
modern nation building
Mohamed Nasheed
MSN Chat
Muslim Contexts
Muslim Nation
Muslim Politics
Muslim World
Nation Building
Oppositional Public Sphere
Political Islam
Political Religion
Reformist Discourses
Reformist Islam
reformist Islam political transformation
Reformist Islamic Discourses
Religious Freedom
religious freedom constraints
Separation Regime
South Asian governance
UK's Conservative Party

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032015538
  • Weight: 444g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Nov 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book examines Islam’s relationship to democratization in the Indian Ocean nation of the Maldives. It explores how and why an electoral democracy based in a constitution that has many liberal features but also Islam-based limitations, especially lack of religious freedom, emerged in the country by 2009. In doing so, the book interrogates a major approach to Muslim politics that assumes reformist interpretations of Islam are a positive, and even a necessary, force for liberalization and democratization in Muslim-majority contexts.

This book shows reformist Islam did play certain positive roles in democratization in the Maldives. However, the book suggests reformist Islam may not be an invariably uncontroversial force in the space of politics. It argues that modern nation building in the Maldives shaped by political actors with reformist Islamic orientations, since around the 1930s, has also completely transformed Islam as a modern institutional and discursive political religion. These transformations of Islam as a modern political religion have existed as path-dependent constraints on the depth of democratization, ensuring religion-based limitations and intensifying controversy over religion vis-à-vis the state and individual rights.

An original empirical contribution towards a better understanding of Islam and politics in the Maldives, this book will be of interest to academics and students working on democracy, and Islam in particular, and in the fields of political science and area studies, especially South Asian politics.

Azim Zahir is a Research Fellow at the Centre for Muslim States and Societies, the University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia.

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