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More copies of this ISBN:This title in other formats:After Jihad: America and the Struggle for Islamic Democracyby Noah Feldman
Synopses & ReviewsPublisher Comments:A lucid and compelling case for a new American stance toward the Islamic world. What comes after jihad? Outside the headlines, believing Muslims are increasingly calling for democratic politics in their undemocratic countries. But can Islam and democracy successfully be combined? Surveying the intellectual and geopolitical terrain of the contemporary Muslim world, Noah Feldman proposes that Islamic democracy is indeed viable and desirable, and that the West, particularly the United States, should work to bring it about, not suppress it. Encouraging democracy among Muslims threatens America's autocratic Muslim allies, and raises the specter of a new security threat to the West if fundamentalists are elected. But in the long term, the greater threat lies in continuing to support repressive regimes that have lost the confidence of their citizens. By siding with Islamic democrats rather than the regimes that repress them, the United States can bind them to the democratic principles they say they support, reducing anti-Americanism and promoting a durable peace in the Middle East. After Jihad gives the context for understanding how the many Muslims who reject religious violence see the world after the globalization of democracy. It is also an argument about how American self-interest can be understood to include a foreign policy consistent with the deeply held democratic values that make America what it is. At a time when the encounter with Islam has become the dominant issue of U.S. foreign policy, After Jihad provides a road map for making democracy work in a region where the need for it is especially urgent. Book News Annotation:Feldman (New York U. School of Law) argues that Islam and democracy
are far from incompatible. He reviews strands of Islamic thinking,
such as those that insist on equality and justice, that are
harmonious with democratic politics and argues that the U.S.
government should support those who promote such thinking within the
Muslim world. He then describes the political and religious players
of the major countries of the Middle East and Central Asia. The
spectrum of "support" for democracy that he recommends ranges from
economic incentives to invasion. What Feldman doesn't discuss is
whether nascent democratic regimes, Islamic or not, will be allowed
to oppose U.S. economic or military hegemony in the name of democracy.
Annotation (c)2003 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com) Review:"[T]he strength of Feldman's work lies in his consistent and simple reminder that the emergence of democracy in some countries will not necessarily bring about Islamist rule, and that suppressing it would itself be downright undemocratic." Publishers Weekly Review:"A sincere plea for the US not to let a Burqa Curtain descend on more Islamic countries, undercut by stolid academese and unduly rosy speculation." Kirkus Reviews Synopsis:Proposing that Islamic democracy is viable and desirable, a scholar of Islamic thought offers a lucid and compelling case for a new American stance toward the Islamic world. Synopsis:Includes bibliographical references (p. [235]-251) and index.
About the AuthorNoah Feldman is a professor at the NYU School of Law. A former Supreme Court clerk, he earned a doctorate in Islamic thought from Oxford, where he was a Rhodes Scholar. He lives in Manhattan and Washington, D.C. Table of ContentsRevolution that wasn't — Islam and democracy in contact — Part I : Idea of Islamic democracy — Islamic democracy, not Islamist democracy ; Islam, the West, and the question of opposition ; Islam and democracy as mobile ideas ; Resilience of Islam ; God's rule and the people's rule ; Islamic equality ; Islamic liberty ; Universality of mobile ideas — Part II : Varieties of Islamic democracy — Democratization and Muslim reality : an overview ; Iran : Islamic democracy in the balance ; Turkey : the outlier ; Islam and democracy in South and Southeast Asia : mobility and possibility ; Pakistan : the Islamic state and the struggle for stability ; Diversity of the Arabs ; Monarchies with oil : the Rentier state in action ; Kings without oil ; Dictators and the Islamists : the puzzle of Egypt ; Regime change and its consequences : dictators with oil ; Big picture : Islam, democracy, and the contact of mobile ideas — Part III : Necessity of Islamic democracy — Why democracy? The pragmatic argument ; Neutralizing anti-Americanism by refuting it ; Doing the right thing ; How to do it ; Democracy's Muslim allies ; Imagining an Islamic democracy ; After Jihad.
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