Human Rights in Islamic Societies

£41.99

Human Rights in Islamic Societies

Muslims and the Western Conception of Rights

Regional / International studies Sociology Human rights, civil rights Public international law: human rights Social and political philosophy Religious ethics Religion and politics Islam Islamic life and practice Theology

Author: Ahmed E. Souaiaia

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Collection: Routledge Studies in Islam and Human Rights

Language: English

Published by: Routledge

Published on: 10th May 2021

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 2 Mb

ISBN: 9781000389661


This book compares Islamic and Western ideas of human rights in order to ascertain which human rights, if any, can be considered universal. This is a profound topic with a rich history that is highly relevant within global politics and society today.

The arguments in this book are formed by bringing William Talbott’s Which Rights Should Be Universal? (2005) and Abdulaziz Sachedina’s Islam and the Challenge of Human Rights (2014) into conversation. By bridging the gap between cultural relativists and moral universalists, this book seeks to offer a new model for the understanding of human rights. It contends that human rights abuses are outcomes of complex systems by design and/or by default. Therefore, it proposes that a rigorous systems-thinking approach will contribute to addressing the challenge of human rights.

Engaging with Islamic and Western, historical and contemporary, and relativist and universalist thought

This book is a fresh take on a perennially important issue. As such, it will be a first-rate resource for any scholars working in religious studies, Islamic studies, Middle East studies, ethics, sociology, and law and religion.

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