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Islamic Law And Human Rights The Muslim Brotherhood In Egypt 1st Unabridged Moataz El Fegiery

  • SKU: BELL-5753828
Islamic Law And Human Rights The Muslim Brotherhood In Egypt 1st Unabridged Moataz El Fegiery
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Islamic Law And Human Rights The Muslim Brotherhood In Egypt 1st Unabridged Moataz El Fegiery instant download after payment.

Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.54 MB
Pages: 340
Author: Moataz El Fegiery
ISBN: 9781443894791, 1443894796
Language: English
Year: 2016
Edition: 1st Unabridged

Product desciption

Islamic Law And Human Rights The Muslim Brotherhood In Egypt 1st Unabridged Moataz El Fegiery by Moataz El Fegiery 9781443894791, 1443894796 instant download after payment.

This book explores the development of the Muslim Brotherhoods thinking on Islamic law and human rights, and argues that the Muslim Brotherhood has exacerbated, rather than solved, tensions between the two in Egypt. The organisation and its scholars have drawn on hard-line juristic opinions and reinvented certain concepts from Islamic traditions in ways that limit the scope of various human rights, and advocate for Islamic alternatives to international human rights. The Muslim Brotherhoods practices in opposition and in power have been consistent with its literature. As an opposition party, it embraced human rights language in its struggle against an authoritarian regime, but advocated for broad restrictions on certain rights. However, its recent and short-lived experience in power provides evidence of its inclination to reinforce restrictions on religious freedom, freedom of expression and association, and the rights of religious minorities, and to reverse previous reforms related to womens rights.

The book concludes that the peaceful management of political and religious diversity in society cannot be realised under the Muslim Brotherhoods model of a Sharia state. The study advocates for the drastic reformation of traditional Islamic law and state impartiality towards religion, as an alternative to the development of a Sharia state or exclusionary secularism. This transformation is, however, contingent upon significant long-term political and socio-cultural change, and it is clear that successfully expanding human rights protection in Egypt requires not the exclusion of Islamists, but their transformation. Islamists still have a large constituency and they are not the only actors who are ambivalent about human rights. Meanwhile, Islamic law also appears to

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