- Page 4: PRINCETON STUDIES IN MUSLIM POLITIC
- Page 8: COPYRIGHT © 2002 BY PRINCETON UNIV
- Page 14: ContentsFOREWORD ixACKNOWLEDGMENTSx
- Page 22: FOREWORDhow we understand religious
- Page 34: The Ulama in Contemporary Islam
- Page 40: 2 INTRODUCTIONformative forces of g
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8 INTRODUCTIONthinkers among these
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10 INTRODUCTIONWhile there are vary
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12 INTRODUCTIONhave historically po
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14 INTRODUCTIONThe present study bu
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16 INTRODUCTIONIslamist—trends,an
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18 CHAPTER 1rimeters by adheringto
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20 CHAPTER 1(or Fatawa-i ‘Alamgir
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22 CHAPTER 1it ready made.” 26 Th
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24 CHAPTER 1matters. While it is po
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26 CHAPTER 1judge who was not himse
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28 CHAPTER 1Why were the ‘ulama o
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30 CHAPTER 1have no effect on the m
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32 CHAPTER 1tutions through which t
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34 CHAPTER 1general (political) dim
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36 CHAPTER 1on its “flexibility
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IIConstructions of AuthorityONE OF
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40 CHAPTER 2she tells us little abo
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42 CHAPTER 2treatise, completed in
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44 CHAPTER 2tance in Islamic law of
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46 CHAPTER 2Islam, ‘Uthmani insis
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48 CHAPTER 2Talal Asad’s definiti
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50 CHAPTER 2(d. 1949) Fath al-mulhi
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52 CHAPTER 2of this studycircle is
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54 CHAPTER 2score the ‘ulama’s
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56 CHAPTER 2‘Uthmani—a work tha
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58 CHAPTER 2Karachi wrote for manyy
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IIIThe Rhetoric of Reform andthe Re
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62 CHAPTER 3Sunni Muslim states wer
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64 CHAPTER 3discussion on the refor
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66 CHAPTER 3dates is better than ca
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68 CHAPTER 3their uncertainties abo
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70 CHAPTER 3League, which sought re
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72 CHAPTER 3that they had studied f
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74 CHAPTER 3in terms not dissimilar
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76 CHAPTER 3drasas, continues to pe
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78 CHAPTER 3all aspects of human li
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80 CHAPTER 3That government reform
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82 CHAPTER 3madrasa’s learning bu
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84 CHAPTER 3reared in the English s
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86 CHAPTER 3tutes run by the Azhar
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88 CHAPTER 4The Ambiguities of the
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90 CHAPTER 4Westernized and unfavor
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92 CHAPTER 4the Federal Shari‘at
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94 CHAPTER 4ciples of the Islamic s
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96 CHAPTER 4uncodified form even as
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98 CHAPTER 4implementation to deman
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100 CHAPTER 4In part, this way of l
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102 CHAPTER 4ments of the state on
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104 CHAPTER 4political writings mad
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106 CHAPTER 4that the government wh
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108 CHAPTER 4and portrayed, of cour
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110 CHAPTER 4This striking statemen
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112 CHAPTER 5Aspects of a Sectarian
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114 CHAPTER 5bearing on sectarian,
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116 CHAPTER 5path of drastically re
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118 CHAPTER 5there were dissensions
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120 CHAPTER 5knew nothing of their
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122 CHAPTER 5detect a conscious eff
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124 CHAPTER 5The publications of th
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126 CHAPTER 5TABLE 1Growth of Madra
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128 CHAPTER 5TABLE 2Sectarian Riots
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TABLE 3 cont.Notable Incidences of
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132 CHAPTER 5honed their polemical
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134 CHAPTER 5and Shabbir Ahmad ‘U
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136 CHAPTER 5people, professing som
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138 CHAPTER 5aspiration involved no
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140 CHAPTER 5addition to considerin
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142 CHAPTER 5bin Laden, thirty-thre
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VIReligiopolitical Activism and the
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146 CHAPTER 6have characterized as
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148 CHAPTER 6such powers might, ofc
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150 CHAPTER 6disapproval ofa govern
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152 CHAPTER 6The Saudi ‘UlamaThe
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154 CHAPTER 6sudden surrender witho
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156 CHAPTER 6That the ‘ulama and
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158 CHAPTER 6the real cause ofthis
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160 CHAPTER 6Muslim community, and
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162 CHAPTER 6tation towards the Ara
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164 CHAPTER 6ism threatens not only
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166 CHAPTER 6Islam in India, then i
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168 CHAPTER 6the duration of their
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170 CHAPTER 6gress party in power:
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172 CHAPTER 6claims and prescriptio
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174 CHAPTER 6source ofmuch ofsuch p
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176 CHAPTER 6itselfis run by gradua
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178 CHAPTER 6It is a Shi‘a princi
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180 CHAPTER 6and circumstances, mus
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182 EPILOGUEElsewhere Wahid al-din
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184 EPILOGUEmunity. These interests
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186 EPILOGUEof the Egyptian ruling
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188 EPILOGUEOctober 1999 with the e
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190 EPILOGUElectual sophistication.
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NotesINTRODUCTION1. Non-English wor
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NOTES TO INTRODUCTION 19513. Willia
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NOTES TO INTRODUCTION 197the Age of
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NOTES TO INTRODUCTION 199struggles
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NOTES TO CHAPTER 1 2018. Ibn ‘Abi
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NOTES TO CHAPTER 1 203decisions be
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NOTES TO CHAPTER 1 205Ian Copland,
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NOTES TO CHAPTER 1 20771. Peter Har
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NOTES TO CHAPTER 2 20911. Metcalf,
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NOTES TO CHAPTER 2 21133. ‘Uthman
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NOTES TO CHAPTER 2 21363. Shabbir A
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NOTES TO CHAPTER 2 21591. Al-Rashid
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NOTES TO CHAPTER 3 217collection of
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NOTES TO CHAPTER 3 21938. Cf. Sayyi
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NOTES TO CHAPTER 3 221For observati
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NOTES TO CHAPTER 3 223Special Refer
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NOTES TO CHAPTER 4 225CHAPTER 4. CO
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NOTES TO CHAPTER 4 227ment of the I
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NOTES TO CHAPTER 4 229in particular
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NOTES TO CHAPTER 4 23172. Taqi ‘U
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NOTES TO CHAPTER 5 23317. See Andre
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NOTES TO CHAPTER 5 235population of
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NOTES TO CHAPTER 5 23764. Jhangawi
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NOTES TO CHAPTER 5 23987. Cf. Ander
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NOTES TO CHAPTER 5 241118. Nasr,
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NOTES TO CHAPTER 5 243138. It is wo
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NOTES TO CHAPTER 6 245sion, see Daw
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NOTES TO CHAPTER 6 24723. Cf. the p
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NOTES TO CHAPTER 6 24969. Friedmann
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NOTES TO CHAPTER 6 25198. Cf. Nadwi
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NOTES TO CHAPTER 6 253Maahads shall
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NOTES TO EPILOGUE 255course reminis
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NOTES TO EPILOGUE 257besides other
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260 GLOSSARYHanafi — A school of
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262 GLOSSARYTablighi Jama‘at ofte
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264 BIBLIOGRAPHYGilmartin and Bruce
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266 BIBLIOGRAPHYCarroll, Lucy. “T
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268 BIBLIOGRAPHYFandy, Mamoun. Saud
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270 BIBLIOGRAPHYGrewal, J. S. In th
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272 BIBLIOGRAPHYHussain, Fayyaz.
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274 BIBLIOGRAPHYKhan, Wahid al-din.
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276 BIBLIOGRAPHYMaley, William, ed.
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278 BIBLIOGRAPHYMustafa, Hala. Al-N
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280 BIBLIOGRAPHYRahman, Fazlur. Isl
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282 BIBLIOGRAPHYCalled ‘Constitut
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284 BIBLIOGRAPHY‘Uthmani, Muhamma
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286 BIBLIOGRAPHYAl-Faruq (Karachi)T
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288 INDEXEgypt (cont) nial rule, 26
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290 INDEXmadrasas, reform of (cont)
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292 INDEXSami‘ al-Haqq (cont)Shi