Islam and Politics in the Middle East
183 pages
English

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183 pages
English

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Description

Carnegie Middle East Governance and Islam Dataset, 1988-2011 Read an excerpt from the book


Some of the most pressing questions in the Middle East and North Africa today revolve around the proper place of Islamic institutions and authorities in governance and political affairs. Drawing on data from 42 surveys carried out in fifteen countries between 1988 and 2011, representing the opinions of more than 60,000 men and women, this study investigates the reasons that some individuals support a central role for Islam in government while others favor a separation of religion and politics. Utilizing his newly constructed Carnegie Middle East Governance and Islam Dataset, which has been placed in the public domain for use by other researchers, Mark Tessler formulates and tests hypotheses about the views held by ordinary citizens, offering insights into the individual and country-level factors that shape attitudes toward political Islam.


A Note on the Carnegie Middle East Governance and Islam Dataset

Introduction: The Decline and Resurgence of Islam in the Twentieth Century
1. A Two-Level Study of Attitudes Toward Political Islam: Data and Methods
2. Islam in the Lives of Ordinary Muslims
3. Why Individuals Hold Different Views about Islam's Political Role
4. How and Why Explanations Vary across Countries
Conclusion: What We Know and What Comes Next

Notes
Bibliography
Index

Sujets

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 22 juin 2015
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9780253016577
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 3 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0500€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

ISLAM AND POLITICS IN THE MIDDLE EAST
INDIANA SERIES IN MIDDLE EAST STUDIES Mark Tessler, general editor
ISLAM AND POLITICS IN THE MIDDLE EAST
Explaining the Views of Ordinary Citizens
Mark Tessler
This book is a publication of
Indiana University Press Office of Scholarly Publishing Herman B Wells Library 350 1320 E. 10th Street Bloomington, IN 47405-3907
iupress.indiana.edu
Telephone orders 800-842-6796 Fax orders 812-855-7931
2015 by Mark Tessler
All rights reserved
No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. The Association of American University Presses Resolution on Permissions constitutes the only exception to this prohibition.
The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of the American National Standard for Information Sciences-Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48-1992.
Manufactured in the United States of America
Cataloging information is available from the Library of Congress.
ISBN 978-0-253-01643-0 (cloth) ISBN 978-0-253-01657-7 (ebook)
1 2 3 4 5 20 19 18 17 16 15
To Pat
Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
A Note on the Carnegie Middle East Governance and Islam Dataset
Introduction: The Decline and Resurgence of Islam in the Twentieth Century
1 A Two-Level Study of Attitudes toward Political Islam: Data and Methods
2 Islam in the Lives of Ordinary Muslims
3 Why Individuals Hold Different Views about Islam s Political Role
4 How and Why Explanations Vary across Countries
Conclusion: What We Know and What Comes Next
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Preface
I WAS INTRODUCED to questions about Islam and its place in Muslim society and political affairs when studying, many years ago, at the University of Tunis. The curriculum in the year-long program leading to a certificat in Sociologie Maghr bine et Islamique included courses with prominent Tunisian professors and a chance to interact in a classroom setting, and on campus, with Tunisian university students. One of my courses, the title of which was something like Islam in Theory and Society, was taught by Professor Abdelwahab Bouhdiba and focused on many of the topics that Bouhdiba would later explore in his writings. Among these were Islam and social change, sexuality in Islam, and Islam and criminality.
My experience in Tunisia beyond the university also deepened my early interest in Islam. Under the leadership of its charismatic and determinedly modernist president, Habib Bourguiba, Tunisia was carrying out a bold program of reform that had implications for the place Islam would occupy in public life. Reforms included the promulgation of a personal status code that challenged traditional interpretations of Islamic law in family affairs and gave men and women equal rights in a number of areas. This was, and remains today, the most progressive body of family law of any Arab country.
Bourguiba s government also challenged the way that Islamic endowments and trusts were administered; and in one of his most notable and controversial actions, he called for Tunisians to refrain from fasting during Ramadan if this would reduce their effectiveness at work. Bourguiba argued that the country was in a war against underdevelopment and that Islam exempts warriors from fasting when in battle. Among Bourguiba s many speeches dealing with Islamic themes was one, made during the time I was in Tunisia, in which he told his countrymen, Faith and spiritual values are only effective to the extent they are based on reason.
But Bourguiba s was not the only Tunisian voice speaking about Islam at the time; and although there were many other Tunisian advocates of reform during this period, there were also those who opposed the president s modernist project in the name of fidelity to a proper understanding of Islam and its place in a Muslim society. These individuals called the president s message misguided and harmful, however well intended it might be. Some also charged that Bourguiba s actions were politically calculated and that their true purpose was to reduce the influence of institutions that might challenge his authority and the dominant position of the political party he led.
This first year in Tunisia was spent while I was a doctoral student in political science at Northwestern University. I had completed my first year of study at Northwestern when the opportunity to spend a year at the University of Tunis unexpectedly presented itself. Like my experience in Tunisia, the graduate program at Northwestern introduced me to things with which I had previously been unfamiliar and that were soon to become part of my continuing scholarly interest. When I told my undergraduate advisor that I had accepted an NDEA fellowship from Northwestern and would be studying political science there, he replied that I had chosen a very behavioral department. This is a term with which I was completely unfamiliar at the time, but I soon learned that it referenced an approach to scholarly inquiry that included an emphasis on formulating and testing hypotheses that seek to account for variance and on the collection and analysis of quantitative (and other) data. Northwestern had one of a small number of departments that were in the forefront of the behavioral revolution in political science in the 1960s.
Survey research and the study of public opinion were an important part of the training I received at Northwestern, and with this began a lifelong professional interest in the attitudes and behavior of ordinary men and women. My first-year paper at Northwestern was based on a survey; and during my second year, spent in Tunisia, it was perhaps natural that I would seek to supplement my coursework and travel around the country by conducting a survey of Tunisian students. Items on my questionnaire asked respondents to indicate the extent to which, using a 10-point scale, they agreed or disagreed with statements like It is necessary for contemporary Islam to take steps to modernize further.
Some of the questions I asked in the student survey seem na ve in retrospect. But these were formative experiences that reflected a coming together of my interest in questions about the proper role of Islam in present-day Muslim society and in the way that ordinary citizens were processing and evaluating different and often conflicting messages about these questions. Thus, after returning to Northwestern for another year of study, I returned to Tunisia for dissertation research. Over the course of the next year, I conducted face-to-face interviews with a large stratified sample of men and women in Tunis and three small towns in different parts of the countries. Questions about Islam s place in public life occupied an important place on my interview schedule, along with questions about women s status and other political and social issues. My findings were later published in my book Tradition and Identity in Changing Africa ., coauthored with William O Barr and David Spain (1973).
Fast forward to the present and it is clear that these questions about Islam and its place of political and social affairs have never gone away. They are on the agenda today; and with many ups and downs, many of which are described in the present volume s introductory chapter, this has been the case in the Middle East and North Africa for half a century or more. Thus, as reported in a May 2012 New York Times article entitled Egyptian Campaign Focuses on Islam s Role in Public Life, published on the eve of presidential elections in Egypt, debates among contenders returned repeatedly to questions about the meaning of Islamic law, its place in Egypt, and the role of Islamist groups like the Muslim Brotherhood. 1 Or, in the case of Tunisia, as the Washington Post observed in a June 2013 article entitled Tunisia Faces Political Struggle over Islam, the role of religion and political organization touches on the main challenges facing reformers across North Africa and the Middle East. 2 The days of Bourguiba and other advocates of radical reform, or sometimes even secularism, seem very far away. And a lot has also happened in Tunisia and Egypt and other countries touched by the events of the Arab Spring since the heady and hopeful days of 2011. But between my first years in Tunisia and the present, public discourse, and disagreement, about Islam s role in public life has for the most part been a constant, with considerable variation in the views of ordinary citizens not only across the Muslim-majority countries of the Middle East and North Africa but also, and even more, within these same countries. Although the data on which the research in this book is based only go back about a decade and half, they show, as do those from my earlier surveys in Tunisia and a few other countries, that questions about the proper relationship between Islam and politics are contested, with division more common than consensus on many of the relevant issues.
It is against the background of both the region s recent history and my own long-standing scholarly interests that I have undertaken to construct and analyze a new dataset with which to explore what ordinary men and women think about Islam s political role-and not only to discern and report what they think but also to identify some of the drivers and dynamics that shape their differing judgments. Composed of data from forty-four surveys conducted one or more times in fifteen different countries, the dataset will make it possible to present a more comprehensive picture of individual-level attitudes and values relating to Islam t

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