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Islam, law and the state in Southeast Asia

Part of the Islam and the Law in Southeast Asia series
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Southeast Asia has the world's largest Muslim population - Indonesia alone is home to more Muslims than the entire Middle East - yet nowhere in the region has a theocratic government emerged.

Instead, Southeast Asian Islam is characterised by heterodox local traditions.

Muslim societies today are torn between radical Islamist reformers calling for Shari'ah law and secular governments using law to contain and co-opt it.

The result is a tension between state laws and institutions and Islamic alternatives.

These three volumes provide an up-to-date, expert account of this complex contest across contemporary Indonesia, Singapore, Malaysia and Brunei in a comprehensive form not attempted for decades, including coverage on a range of areas including legal doctrine, substantive laws, judicial decision-making, the administration of religion, intellectual debate and state policy developments.

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Product Details
I.B.Tauris
1848850689 / 9781848850682
Laminated
30/10/2012
United Kingdom
English
1248 p.
24 cm
Professional & Vocational/Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly/Undergraduate Learn More