States Without Citizens: Understanding the Islamic Crisis
The ideals of civic activism and public service that inspired the Western Renaissance are absent in the Islamic world. Islamic religio-moral ethics aim at salvation; Islamic social ethics aim at clan dominance. Western-inspired solutions to the Islamic crisis are inappropriate to Islamic states, in as much as they are states without citizens. To mitigate the violence engendered by the Islamic crisis, culturally authentic institutions must be created that will instill a civic ethics of common cause and public service. The author recommends this approach for policy makers and development managers and deplores the dangerous vacuity of such drumbeat cliches as the clash of civilizations that have gained currency in the war on terrorism. |
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In more recent times , the West means the advanced societies of both western Europe and certain of its former colonies , the United States most prominent among them . As with the term Islamic , we speak of the Western world and of ...
From distant Western shores these claimants had brought only " those colored empty sea - shells that the tide brings to shore . ” The society had traded its old forms of backwardness for new ones . 2 From Iran Jalal Al - e Ahmad laments ...
Such books would gradually be taken to Western Europe as the climate for scholarship in Constantinople worsened over the decades . Meanwhile , a similar corpus of sources , albeit in Arabic , filtered into Western Europe through ...
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Contents
Cultures in History | 13 |
Contrast in Ethics | 27 |
Critique of Endeavors | 53 |
Copyright | |
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