Acknowledgements, Note on References, The Contributors, Introduction, Part II: Globalization, 1. SOUTH-EAST ASIAN ISLAM AND THE GLOBALIZATION PROCESS, 2. GLOBALIZATION OF INDONESIAN MUSLIM DISCOURSE, 3. THE INDONESIAN ARCHIPELAGO FROM 1913 TO 2013, 4. ISLAM IN BRUNEI DARUSSALAM AND GLOBAL ISLAM, 5. FATWAS AS A UNIFYING FACTOR IN INDONESIAN HISTORY, Part II: Modernization, 6. MODERNITY AND THE DISENCHANTMENT OF LIFE, 7. PAKISTAN, 8. MUSLIM FEMINISTS IN WESTERN ACADEMIA, 9. IS ISLAM A HELP OR HINDRANCE TO WOMEN'S DEVELOPMENT?, 10. MUSLIM VIEWS ON POPULATION, Part III: Identity, 11. THE MULLA AND THE STATE, 12. RELIGIOUS IDENTITY AND MASS EDUCATION, 13. SEEKING KNOWLEDGE UNTO CHINA, 14. THE INSTITUT AGAMA ISLAM NEGERI AT THE CROSSROADS, 15. THE INTERACTION OF RELIGION AND STATE IN INDONESIA, 16. THE 'ULMA', THE GOVERNMENT, AND SOCIETY IN MODERN INDONESIA, 17. CONTEMPORARY SOUTH-EAST ASIAN MUSLIM INTELLECTUALS, 18. BETWEEN UMMAH AND HOME COUNTRY, Glossary, Bibliography, Index
Johan Meuleman^n is a lecturer at the University of Leiden, a research fellow of the Leiden-based International Institute of Asian Studies, a professor by special appointment of Islamic History at IAIN Syarif Hidayatullah, Jakarta and the president of the Islamic University of Europe Foundation int he Netherlands.
'The book will draw the attention of specialists students of
Islamic Studies, social sciences, and the humanities as well as the
general educated public interested in subjects so diverse as
development, modernization, globalization, intercultural contacts,
intellectual discourse, gender, religious education, or religious
authority.' - IIAS Newsletter 2002, Kuang Mei
'On the whole, this book provides an interesting insight into the
diverse ways in which Muslim communities in different parts of the
world are reacting to the challenges of Globalization.' - Noor
Muhammad, The Muslim World Book Review'It would make a valuable
addition to academic libraries seving Islamic studies.' - Islam and
Christian-Muslim Relations
'It is a significant contribution to the debate on the
compatibility and relationship of Islam with the topoi of
globalization, modernity, and identity, and it is a necessary item
in the shelf of any library and indeed for all those interested in
informed discourse on how religion continues to defy the thesis of
modern secularism which predicts the recession of religion to the
background or the private sphere in an increasingly globalized
world.' - Amidu Olalekan Sanni; Journal of Oriental and African
Studies, Volume 19, 2010, pp. 397-400.
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