Democracy, human rights and law in Islamic thought

By: Al Jabri, Mohammed AbedContributor(s): Centre for Arab Unity StudiesMaterial type: BookBookSeries: Contemporary Arab scholarship in the social sciences ; v. 1Publication details: London I.B. Tauris Publishers 2009Description: v, 258 p. Includes indexISBN: 9781780766508Subject(s): Democracy -- Arab countries | Human rights -- Arab countries | Equality -- Religious aspects -- Islam | Islam and state | Arab countries -- Politics and governmentDDC classification: 909.0974927 Summary: Mohammad Abed al-Jabri is one of the most influential political philosophers in the contemporary Middle East. A critical rationalist in the tradition of Avincenna and Averroes, he emphasizes the distinctive political and cultural heritage of the Arab world whilst rejecting the philosophical discourses that have been used to obscure its democratic deficit. This volume introduces an English-language audience for the first time to writings that have had a major impact on Arab political thought. Wide-ranging in scope yet focused in detail, these essays interrogate concepts such as democracy, law, and human rights, looking at how they have been applied in the history of the Arab world, and show that they are determined by political and social context, not by Islamic doctrine. Jabri argues that in order to develop democratic societies in which human rights are respected, the Arab world cannot simply rely on old texts and traditions. Nor can it import democratic models from the West. Instead, he says, a new tradition will have to be forged by today's Arabs themselves, on their own terms. http://www.ibtauris.com/Books/Humanities/Religion--beliefs/Islam/Democracy-Human-Rights-and-Law-in-Islamic-Thought
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Rack 44-A / Slot 2487 (3rd Floor, East Wing) Non-fiction 909.0974927 A5D3 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 196280

Mohammad Abed al-Jabri is one of the most influential political philosophers in the contemporary Middle East. A critical rationalist in the tradition of Avincenna and Averroes, he emphasizes the distinctive political and cultural heritage of the Arab world whilst rejecting the philosophical discourses that have been used to obscure its democratic deficit. This volume introduces an English-language audience for the first time to writings that have had a major impact on Arab political thought. Wide-ranging in scope yet focused in detail, these essays interrogate concepts such as democracy, law, and human rights, looking at how they have been applied in the history of the Arab world, and show that they are determined by political and social context, not by Islamic doctrine. Jabri argues that in order to develop democratic societies in which human rights are respected, the Arab world cannot simply rely on old texts and traditions. Nor can it import democratic models from the West. Instead, he says, a new tradition will have to be forged by today's Arabs themselves, on their own terms.

http://www.ibtauris.com/Books/Humanities/Religion--beliefs/Islam/Democracy-Human-Rights-and-Law-in-Islamic-Thought

Translated from the Arabic.

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