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Original Essays | November 5, 2009

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For more than 60 years, Los Angeles's origins, its underbelly, and (yes) its blondes have fueled the imagination of writers and directors from... Continue »
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The Fall and Rise of the Islamic State (Council on Foreign Relations Book)

by Noah Feldman

The Fall and Rise of the Islamic State (Council on Foreign Relations Book) Cover

ISBN13: 9780691120454
ISBN10: 0691120455
Condition: Standard
Dustjacket: Standard
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Synopses & Reviews

Review:

For more than 20 years, Islamists in Lebanon, Palestine, Egypt and other Muslim countries have campaigned for popular support by presenting sharia, or Islamic law, as the antidote to authoritarian rule, injustice and repression.

Westerners often wonder how Muslims possibly can believe such claims. We recall the Taliban blowing up ancient statues and preventing girls from going to... Washington Post Book Review (read the entire Washington Post review)

Review:

[A] concise and thoughtful history of the evolution of the Islamic legal system from the time of the first caliphs (the successors to the prophet Muhammad) to our own....Feldman thinks that the restoration of the authority of sharia in modern Muslim-majority nations might be the only way for them to move beyond their current democracy deficits....Feldman is not so naive as to give them a free pass. Nor does he ignore the democratic deficiencies of the two nations, Iran and Saudi Arabia, that have sharia as the law of the land. While saying that principles of sharia will have to become part of the constitutional fabric of modern Islamic states, he adds that this will work only if Islamists find new institutions to give life to sharia.

Review:

Noah Feldman has raised a central discussion in Islam about the nature of the Islamic state that is too often missed or misunderstood. Regardless of ideological or religious affiliation, the reader needs to engage with Feldman's clear and sympathetic arguments in order to make sense of what is happening in the Muslim world today.

Review:

Feldman can be an illuminating analyst . . . on the subject of the marginalization of legal scholars and its consequences for the development of despotisms with an Islamic face.

Review:

Praise for Noah Feldman's : "Powerful and important.

Review:

In a short but masterful exposition, , Noah Feldman seeks to answer a question that puzzles most Western observers: Why do so many Muslims demand the 'restoration' of a legal system that most Occidentals associate with 'medieval' punishments such as amputation for theft and stoning for sexual transgressions?

Review:

Feldman argues that legislators seeking implementation of a sharia-based rule of law can play the role of earlier scholars in taming executive autocracy. . . . [Offers] wide-ranging discussions and nuanced reasoning.

Review:

Scholarly and sophisticated yet highly accessible, this book makes an extremely important contribution to contemporary discussions of both Muslim politics and Islamic law. Feldman's work provides a historical depth that has often been lacking in studies of law and constitutionalism in modern Muslim societies.

Review:

Feldman condemns the autocracies in many Muslim countries but argues that sharia is not to blame. On the contrary, he says, in the traditional Sunni constitutional order, sharia was interpreted by an independent class of scholars who served as a check on tyrrany, preventing rulers from exploiting religion to justify their political positions.

Synopsis:

In this penetrating book, Feldman explores the increasingly popular call for the establishment of the shari'a--the law of the traditional Islamic state--in the modern Muslim world and what that could mean for Muslims and Westerners alike.

About the Author

Noah Feldman is professor at Harvard Law School. He is a contributing writer for the "New York Times Magazine" and an adjunct senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations. He is the author of "Divided by God, What We Owe Iraq" (Princeton), and "After Jihad".

Table of Contents

Introduction 1

PART I: What Went Right? 17

PART II: Decline and Fall 57

PART III: The Rise of the New Islamic State 103

Conclusion 147

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 153

NOTES 155

INDEX 177

Product Details

ISBN:
9780691120454
Author:
Feldman, Noah
Publisher:
Princeton University Press
Location:
Princeton
Subject:
Islam and state
Subject:
Islamic law
Subject:
Islam - Law
Subject:
Middle East - General
Subject:
Political
Subject:
Middle East
Subject:
Political Science and International Relations
Subject:
Middle Eastern Studies
Subject:
Law
Subject:
Islamic countries Politics and government.
Copyright:
Series:
Council on Foreign Relations Book
Publication Date:
April 2008
Binding:
Hardcover
Grade Level:
College/higher education:
Language:
English
Pages:
189
Dimensions:
8.5 x 5.5 in

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