Islam, Standards, and Technoscience

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A01=Johan Fischer
Author_Johan Fischer
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Global Halal
global halal certification processes
Global Halal Market
Halal Certification
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Halal Certifying Bodies
Halal Exhibition
Halal Logos
Halal Network
Halal Products
Halal Requirements
Halal Team
Halal Training
Halal Zones
Islamic Science University
laboratory standards assessment
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Malaysian Halal
Millennial Capitalism
MUI
multisited ethnography
muslim
Muslim Consumers
Non-halal Food
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NTUC FairPrice
Pork DNA
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Proper Islamic Consumption
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Product details

  • ISBN 9781138954182
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Dec 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Halal (literally, "permissible" or "lawful") production, trade, and standards have become essential to state-regulated Islam and to companies in contemporary Malaysia and Singapore, giving these two countries a special position in the rapidly expanding global market for halal products: in these nations state bodies certify halal products as well as spaces (shops, factories, and restaurants) and work processes, and so consumers can find state halal-certified products from Malaysia and Singapore in shops around the world. Building on ethnographic material from Malaysia, Singapore, and Europe, this book provides an exploration of the role of halal production, trade, and standards. Fischer explains how the global markets for halal comprise divergent zones in which Islam, markets, regulatory institutions, and technoscience interact and diverge. Focusing on the "bigger institutional picture" that frames everyday halal consumption, Fischer provides a multisited ethnography of the overlapping technologies and techniques of production, trade, and standards that together warrant a product as "halal," and thereby help to format the market. Exploring global halal in networks, training, laboratories, activism, companies, shops and restaurants, this book will be an essential resource to scholars and students of social science interested in the global interface zones between religion, standards, and technoscience.

Johan Fischer is Associate Professor in the Department of Society and Globalisation at Roskilde University.

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