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Islam in Asia: Changing Political Realities
Hardback

Islam in Asia: Changing Political Realities

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This is a decidedly topical volume by a distinguised cast of regional specialists, it offers a useful survey of the political functions performed by Islam in Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Thailand. – Australian Journal of International Affairs While the collapse of the Soviet Union and the Eastern bloc has contributed to the decline of communism as a revolutionary political force, religious and ethnic issues have now assumed renewed and increased significance in South East Asia. Since the Islamic resurgence of the early 1980s and 1990s, elements of a more radical political Islam have migrated from the Middle East to Asia. If left unchecked these radical elements could aggravate a number of security and political crises in countries weakened by the consequences of the devastating Asian financial crisis. In an increasingly globalized world, it is not only the exchange of tangible goods across borders that is transmitted with multiplying efficiency and speed, but the exchange of ideas across seamless borders, assisted by the ever-improving communications technology of the Internet and electronic mail. Paradoxically, globalization both creates social change that can spark a backlash in the form of Islamic radicalism, and provides improved means for the spread of Islamic ideals.
This critical volume examines the advance and contours of Islamicism and analyzes the potential consequences that such activity poses in South East Asian region. The study tracks the activities of external countries such as Iran, Libya, Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia and highlights the key roles these countries play in East Asian economies, politics, religion, and weapons procurement. It focuses on four locations in South East Asia: Indonesia, Malaysia, the southern Philippines, and southern Thailand. The introduction treats the Islamic resurgence in Asia, its links to Middle Eastern Islam, and its external influences. Chapters 1 and 2 examine Islam and Politics in the New Indonesia and Islam, Society, Politics, and Change in Malaysia ; chapters 3 and 4 discuss in detail Militant Islamic Extremism in the Southern Philippines and Militant Islamic Separatism in Southern Thailand. A conclusion follows with an assessment of religious extremism with its concomitant volatility and unpredictability in the regions discussed and an overview of the extra-regional sources of radicalization and the forums convened to combat such.
Islam in Asia highlights the range of variables-social, religious, economic, and cultural-that stimulate or impede the development of militant Islam in Southeast Asia. It offers through four central case studies an insight into the workings of these factors in producing particular developments with regard to Islam and suggests likely short- and medium-term prognoses for the future.
Jason F. Isaacson is director of the Asia and Pacific Rim Institute of the American Jewish Committee and AJC’s director of Government International Affairs. Colin Rubenstein is executive director of the Australia/Israel & Jewish Affairs Council. He was senior lecturer in the Department of Politics at Monash University, Clayton, Victoria, Australia.
This volume deserves to find a place on the book-shelves of diplomats, journalists, scholars and anyone interested in the resurgence of Islam in Asia. - The Jerusalem Post

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MORE INFO
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Transaction Publishers
Country
United Kingdom
Date
31 May 2001
Pages
241
ISBN
9780765800619

This is a decidedly topical volume by a distinguised cast of regional specialists, it offers a useful survey of the political functions performed by Islam in Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Thailand. – Australian Journal of International Affairs While the collapse of the Soviet Union and the Eastern bloc has contributed to the decline of communism as a revolutionary political force, religious and ethnic issues have now assumed renewed and increased significance in South East Asia. Since the Islamic resurgence of the early 1980s and 1990s, elements of a more radical political Islam have migrated from the Middle East to Asia. If left unchecked these radical elements could aggravate a number of security and political crises in countries weakened by the consequences of the devastating Asian financial crisis. In an increasingly globalized world, it is not only the exchange of tangible goods across borders that is transmitted with multiplying efficiency and speed, but the exchange of ideas across seamless borders, assisted by the ever-improving communications technology of the Internet and electronic mail. Paradoxically, globalization both creates social change that can spark a backlash in the form of Islamic radicalism, and provides improved means for the spread of Islamic ideals.
This critical volume examines the advance and contours of Islamicism and analyzes the potential consequences that such activity poses in South East Asian region. The study tracks the activities of external countries such as Iran, Libya, Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia and highlights the key roles these countries play in East Asian economies, politics, religion, and weapons procurement. It focuses on four locations in South East Asia: Indonesia, Malaysia, the southern Philippines, and southern Thailand. The introduction treats the Islamic resurgence in Asia, its links to Middle Eastern Islam, and its external influences. Chapters 1 and 2 examine Islam and Politics in the New Indonesia and Islam, Society, Politics, and Change in Malaysia ; chapters 3 and 4 discuss in detail Militant Islamic Extremism in the Southern Philippines and Militant Islamic Separatism in Southern Thailand. A conclusion follows with an assessment of religious extremism with its concomitant volatility and unpredictability in the regions discussed and an overview of the extra-regional sources of radicalization and the forums convened to combat such.
Islam in Asia highlights the range of variables-social, religious, economic, and cultural-that stimulate or impede the development of militant Islam in Southeast Asia. It offers through four central case studies an insight into the workings of these factors in producing particular developments with regard to Islam and suggests likely short- and medium-term prognoses for the future.
Jason F. Isaacson is director of the Asia and Pacific Rim Institute of the American Jewish Committee and AJC’s director of Government International Affairs. Colin Rubenstein is executive director of the Australia/Israel & Jewish Affairs Council. He was senior lecturer in the Department of Politics at Monash University, Clayton, Victoria, Australia.
This volume deserves to find a place on the book-shelves of diplomats, journalists, scholars and anyone interested in the resurgence of Islam in Asia. - The Jerusalem Post

Read More
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Transaction Publishers
Country
United Kingdom
Date
31 May 2001
Pages
241
ISBN
9780765800619