The Empty Fortress or the Poverty of Islamic Public Discourse: The Role of Law in Arab State Failure

Publikation: KonferencebidragKonferenceabstrakt til konferenceForskningfagfællebedømt

The current near collapse of the Arab state system is but the most recent manifestations of an enduring failure to adapt to the exigencies of a externally imposed but inescapable modernisation process. At the heart of that systemic failure is the lack of an effective public law, as Western legal transplants have not worked and an indigenous public law based on religious tradition has proven elusive.

This presentation looks at the development of Islamic law (fiqh) as an essentially private endeavour of pious individuals in terms both of substance, procedure and social actors appealing to the dogmatic triad of Qur’an, sunna, and shari’a (read: fiqh). This body of norms is contrasted with the relatively shallow dogmatic effort to systematise public law under the dogmatic headings of ta’zir, siyasa shar’ia and siyar. This presentation argues that whatever the philosophical value of this century-long struggle over hermeneutics it is unlikely to yield satisfactory explanations, let alone answers to the enduring crisis of governance in virtually all Muslim-majority states.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
Publikationsdato17 jun. 2016
Antal sider2
StatusUnder udarbejdelse - 17 jun. 2016
BegivenhedICON-S Annual Conference: Borders, Otherness and Public Law - Humboldt Universität zu Berlin, Berlin, Tyskland
Varighed: 17 jun. 201619 jun. 2016
https://icon-society.org/previous-conferences/2016-conference/

Konference

KonferenceICON-S Annual Conference: Borders, Otherness and Public Law
LokationHumboldt Universität zu Berlin
LandTyskland
ByBerlin
Periode17/06/201619/06/2016
Internetadresse

ID: 181677267