This compelling volume introduces the current generation of moderate reformist thinkers and activists within Islam, the intellectual traditions they carry on, and the reasons why reformist movements in some countries and regions have been overshadowed by fundamentalist, revolutionary, and jihadist m
Human Rights and Reformist Islam
β Scribed by Mohsen Kadivar; Mirjam KΓΌnkler; Niki Akhavan
- Publisher
- Edinburgh University Press
- Year
- 2022
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 550
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Published in Association with the Aga Khan University Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations
Translates the influential collection Haqq al-nas, which argues for the compatibility of human rights and Islam
- Written by an original and prolific intellectual of the Iranian reform movement
- Adds an extensive new introduction and annotations throughout the text from Mohsen Kadivar bringing the work up-to-date and placing it in its academic and public contexts
- Includes a preface by Professor Mirjam KΓΌnkler explaining the importance of the translation and the value of its contribution to current scholarly debate
- Critically compares Mohsen Kadivarβs approach to Islam and human rights with those of five leading contemporary scholars: Mahmoud M. Taha, Abdullahi A. an-Naβim, Ann E. Mayer, Mohammad M. Shabestari and Abdulaziz A. Sachedina
- Includes a glossary of key terminology
Human Rights and Reformist Islam critiques traditional Islamic approaches to the question of compatibility between human rights and Islam, and argues instead for their reconciliation from the perspective of a reformist Islam. The book focuses on six controversial case studies: religious discrimination; gender discrimination; slavery; freedom of religion; punishment of apostasy; and arbitrary or harsh punishments.
Explaining the strengths of structural ijtihad, Mohsen Kadivarβs approach is based on the rational classification of Islamic teachings as temporal or permanent on the one hand, and four criteria of being Islamic on the other: reasonableness, justice, morality and efficiency. In the book, all of the verses and Hadith that are problematic in relation to human rights are abrogated rationally according to these criteria. The result is a powerful, solutions-based argument based on reformist Islam β providing a scholarly bridge between modernity and Islamic tradition in relation to human rights.
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