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Constitutional Struggles in the Muslim World Universidade de Copenhague Sobre este curso Learn what motivates the restive Muslim youth from Tunis to Tehran, what political positions Islamists from Mali to Chechnya are fighting for, where the seeming obsession with Islamic law comes from, where the secularists have vanished to, and whether it makes sense to speak of an Islamic state. Since 2009 there has been a renewed wave of popular unrest sweeping throughout much of the Muslim world. Secular, but generally repressive and inefficient autocracies have come under pressure or been swept aside entirely. At the same, the various Islamic Republics have not fared much better, but been convulsed by internal unrest, economic and social decline. Throughout the Muslim lands, existing constitutional arrangements are being challenged, often very violently. This course is a survey of the constitutional ideas and institutions that have developed since the mid 19th century throughout predominantly Muslim countries, but its focus will lie on the actors that have dominated this discourse and shaped its outcomes. We will look at the large body of classical writings on the Islamic state only in so far as it is necessary to understand the contemporary debate, but concentrate on the legal and political developments of the 20th and 21st centuries. Three common themes will characterise the course: We privilege the study of the legal and social reality and seek to highlight where it is at odds with dogmatic stipulations, be they religious or constitutional. We seek to illustrate the practical tensions posed by limited administrative capabilities and political legitimacy that resulted from the incomplete reception of modern bureaucratic statehood. We seek to examine how popular dissatisfaction with the practical performance of Muslim governments has fuelled demands for greater accountability under the guise of cultural authenticity. Ultimately, the course aims to equip participants to better understand Muslim contemporary discourse about the res publica, better contextualise the demands for religious law in public life, and to better ascertain the theoretical and practical feasibility of postulated religious alternatives to the still-dominant secular model of governance. Legendas disponíveis em Inglês 8-12 hours/week Professores Dr. Ebrahim Afsah Associate Professor Faculty of Law Programa Semana 1 Overview: Presenting the Course Literature Lesson 1: Welcome and Introduction Lesson 2: Presenting the Region Lesson 3: Early Modern history Lesson 4: Unresolved Challenge of Modernity Lesson 5: Four Models of Adaptation Lesson 6: Indicators of Relative Failure Lesson 7: Role of Religion and Islamic Law Quiz on the Fundamentals of the Course Quiz: End of Week 1 Quiz Semana 2 Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey Literature Lesson 1: People, Place and Patterns Lesson 2: Ottoman History Lesson 3: Ottoman Reform: Tanzimat and Majallah Lesson 4: Creation of the Republic Lesson 5: Kemalism and its Problems Lesson 6: Westernisation and Islamism Quiz on Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey Quiz: End of Week 2 Quiz Semana 3 Egypt and Maghreb Literature Lesson 1: People, Place and Patterns Egypt Lesson 2: People, Places and Patterns Maghreb Lesson 3: Ottoman and Colonial History Lesson 4: Independence Lesson 5: Modernisation and Reform Lesson 6: Nasserism and its Problems Lesson 7: Westernisation and Islamism Quiz on Egypt and Maghreb Quiz: End of Week 3 Quiz Semana 4 Saudi Arabia & The Gulf Literature Lesson 1: People, Place and Patterns Lesson 2: Ottoman and Colonial History Lesson 3: Patrimonialism and Religion Lesson 4: Rentier Economies and Administration Lesson 5: Impact of Rents Lesson 6: Paradoxical Alliance Lesson 7: Unresolved Contradictions Quiz on Saudi Arabia and the Gulf Quiz: End of Week 4 Quiz Semana 5 Iran & The Shiites Literature Lesson 1: People, Place and Patterns Lesson 2: Imperial and Colonial History Lesson 3: Constitutional Revolution and Reaction Lesson 4: Nationalist Revolution and Reaction Lesson 5: Islamic Revolution and Reaction Lesson 6: Khomeini's Theory of Velayat -e Faqih Lesson 7: Unresolved Contradictions IRAN'S BIGGEST PROBLEM Tarefa: IRAN'S BIGGEST PROBLEM Semana 6 The Levant (Jordan, Syria, Lebanon and Iraq) Literature Lesson 1: Taking Stock and Midway Summary Lesson 2: People, Place and Patterns Lesson 3: French Mandates Lesson 4: British Mandates Lesson 5: Order and Fractures Societies Lesson 6: Failure of Arab Socialism Lesson 7: Unresolved Contradictions Quiz on the Levant Quiz: End of Week 6 Quiz Semana 7 Afghanistan, Pakistan and Bangladesh Literature Lesson 1: People, Place and Patterns Lesson 2: Colonial History of British India Lesson 3: Post-Independence: Pakistan and Bangladesh Lesson 4: Afghanistan: Creation of the State and 'Golden Years' Lesson 5: Afghanistan: Social Enigneering and Resistance Lesson 6: Failure of State-Building and Islamisation Lesson 7: Unresolved Contradictions Quiz on Afghanistan, Pakistan and Bangladesh Quiz: End of Week 7 Quiz Semana 8 Malaysia & Indonesia Literature Lesson 1: People, Place and Patterns Lesson 2: Colonial History Malaysia Lesson 3: Colonial History Indonesia Lesson 4: Post-Independence Malaysia Lesson 5: Post-Independence Indonesia Lesson 6: Unresolved Contradictions Quiz on Malaysia and Indonesia Quiz: End of Week 8 Quiz Semana 9 Sub-Saharan Africa Literature Week 9: People, Place and Patterns Lesson 2: Colonial History Muslim Africa Lesson 3: Neo-Colonial Legacies Lesson 4: Weak States and Institutions Lesson 5: Post.Independence Instability Lesson 6: Fractured Constitutional Bargains PERSISTENCE OF PROBLEMS Tarefa: PERSISTENCE OF PROBLEMS Semana 10 Conclusion and Outlook Literature Lesson 1: Commonality and Diversity Lesson 2: Unity and Friction Lesson 3: Minorities Lesson 4: Legal and Social Reality Lesson 5: Practical Tensions Lesson 6: Popular Dissatisfaction Lesson 7: Good Bye Quiz on the Final Week Quiz: End of Week 10 Quiz Related Courses O Terrorismo e o Contraterrorismo: A Relação entre a Teoria e a Prática Universidade de Leiden As Condições para a Guerra e para a Paz Universidade de Tóquio Política Externa Americana no Século 21 Universidade Duke Entenda o Terrorismo e as Ameaças Terrosistas Universidade de Maryland Understanding 9/11: Why Did al Qai’da Attack America? Universidade Duke Inicie a sessão para inscrever-se neste curso Iniciar sessão Financial Aid is available for learners who cannot afford the fee for this course. Learn more and apply. Compartilhar Share on Wechat Email

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Constitutional Struggles in the Muslim World

Universidade de Copenhague

Sobre este curso

Learn what motivates the restive Muslim youth from Tunis to Tehran, what political positions Islamists from Mali to Chechnya are fighting for, where the seeming obsession with Islamic law comes from, where the secularists have vanished to, and whether it makes sense to speak of an Islamic state. Since 2009 there has been a renewed wave of popular unrest sweeping throughout much of the Muslim world. Secular, but generally repressive and inefficient autocracies have come under pressure or been swept aside entirely. At the same, the various Islamic Republics have not fared much better, but been convulsed by internal unrest, economic and social decline. Throughout the Muslim lands, existing constitutional arrangements are being challenged, often very violently. This course is a survey of the constitutional ideas and institutions that have developed since the mid 19th century throughout predominantly Muslim countries, but its focus will lie on the actors that have dominated this discourse and shaped its outcomes. We will look at the large body of classical writings on the Islamic state only in so far as it is necessary to understand the contemporary debate, but concentrate on the legal and political developments of the 20th and 21st centuries. Three common themes will characterise the course:  We privilege the study of the legal and social reality and seek to highlight where it is at odds with dogmatic stipulations, be they religious or constitutional.  We seek to illustrate the practical tensions posed by limited administrative capabilities and political legitimacy that resulted from the incomplete reception of modern bureaucratic statehood.  We seek to examine how popular dissatisfaction with the practical performance of Muslim governments has fuelled demands for greater accountability under the guise of cultural authenticity.  Ultimately, the course aims to equip participants to better understand Muslim contemporary discourse about the res publica, better contextualise the demands for religious law in public life, and to better ascertain the theoretical and practical feasibility of postulated religious alternatives to the still-dominant secular model of governance.
Legendas disponíveis em Inglês
8-12 hours/week

Programa

Semana 1
Overview: Presenting the Course
  1. Literature
  2. Lesson 1: Welcome and Introduction
  3. Lesson 2: Presenting the Region
  4. Lesson 3: Early Modern history
  5. Lesson 4: Unresolved Challenge of Modernity
  6. Lesson 5: Four Models of Adaptation
  7. Lesson 6: Indicators of Relative Failure
  8. Lesson 7: Role of Religion and Islamic Law
  9. Quiz on the Fundamentals of the Course
  1. Quiz: End of Week 1 Quiz
Semana 2
Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey
  1. Literature
  2. Lesson 1: People, Place and Patterns
  3. Lesson 2: Ottoman History
  4. Lesson 3: Ottoman Reform: Tanzimat and Majallah
  5. Lesson 4: Creation of the Republic
  6. Lesson 5: Kemalism and its Problems
  7. Lesson 6: Westernisation and Islamism
  8. Quiz on Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey
  1. Quiz: End of Week 2 Quiz
Semana 3
Egypt and Maghreb
  1. Literature
  2. Lesson 1: People, Place and Patterns Egypt
  3. Lesson 2: People, Places and Patterns Maghreb
  4. Lesson 3: Ottoman and Colonial History
  5. Lesson 4: Independence
  6. Lesson 5: Modernisation and Reform
  7. Lesson 6: Nasserism and its Problems
  8. Lesson 7: Westernisation and Islamism
  9. Quiz on Egypt and Maghreb
  1. Quiz: End of Week 3 Quiz
Semana 4
Saudi Arabia & The Gulf
  1. Literature
  2. Lesson 1: People, Place and Patterns
  3. Lesson 2: Ottoman and Colonial History
  4. Lesson 3: Patrimonialism and Religion
  5. Lesson 4: Rentier Economies and Administration
  6. Lesson 5: Impact of Rents
  7. Lesson 6: Paradoxical Alliance
  8. Lesson 7: Unresolved Contradictions
  9. Quiz on Saudi Arabia and the Gulf
  1. Quiz: End of Week 4 Quiz
Semana 5
Iran & The Shiites
  1. Literature
  2. Lesson 1: People, Place and Patterns
  3. Lesson 2: Imperial and Colonial History
  4. Lesson 3: Constitutional Revolution and Reaction
  5. Lesson 4: Nationalist Revolution and Reaction
  6. Lesson 5: Islamic Revolution and Reaction
  7. Lesson 6: Khomeini's Theory of Velayat -e Faqih
  8. Lesson 7: Unresolved Contradictions
  9. IRAN'S BIGGEST PROBLEM
  1. Tarefa: IRAN'S BIGGEST PROBLEM
Semana 6
The Levant (Jordan, Syria, Lebanon and Iraq)
  1. Literature
  2. Lesson 1: Taking Stock and Midway Summary
  3. Lesson 2: People, Place and Patterns
  4. Lesson 3: French Mandates
  5. Lesson 4: British Mandates
  6. Lesson 5: Order and Fractures Societies
  7. Lesson 6: Failure of Arab Socialism
  8. Lesson 7: Unresolved Contradictions
  9. Quiz on the Levant
  1. Quiz: End of Week 6 Quiz
Semana 7
Afghanistan, Pakistan and Bangladesh
  1. Literature
  2. Lesson 1: People, Place and Patterns
  3. Lesson 2: Colonial History of British India
  4. Lesson 3: Post-Independence: Pakistan and Bangladesh
  5. Lesson 4: Afghanistan: Creation of the State and 'Golden Years'
  6. Lesson 5: Afghanistan: Social Enigneering and Resistance
  7. Lesson 6: Failure of State-Building and Islamisation
  8. Lesson 7: Unresolved Contradictions
  9. Quiz on Afghanistan, Pakistan and Bangladesh
  1. Quiz: End of Week 7 Quiz
Semana 8
Malaysia & Indonesia
  1. Literature
  2. Lesson 1: People, Place and Patterns
  3. Lesson 2: Colonial History Malaysia
  4. Lesson 3: Colonial History Indonesia
  5. Lesson 4: Post-Independence Malaysia
  6. Lesson 5: Post-Independence Indonesia
  7. Lesson 6: Unresolved Contradictions
  8. Quiz on Malaysia and Indonesia
  1. Quiz: End of Week 8 Quiz
Semana 9
Sub-Saharan Africa
  1. Literature
  2. Week 9: People, Place and Patterns
  3. Lesson 2: Colonial History Muslim Africa
  4. Lesson 3: Neo-Colonial Legacies
  5. Lesson 4: Weak States and Institutions
  6. Lesson 5: Post.Independence Instability
  7. Lesson 6: Fractured Constitutional Bargains
  8. PERSISTENCE OF PROBLEMS
  1. Tarefa: PERSISTENCE OF PROBLEMS
Semana 10
Conclusion and Outlook
  1. Literature
  2. Lesson 1: Commonality and Diversity
  3. Lesson 2: Unity and Friction
  4. Lesson 3: Minorities
  5. Lesson 4: Legal and Social Reality
  6. Lesson 5: Practical Tensions
  7. Lesson 6: Popular Dissatisfaction
  8. Lesson 7: Good Bye
  9. Quiz on the Final Week
  1. Quiz: End of Week 10 Quiz

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Research Areas Middle East in the Contemporary World MECW 1 MECW 2 MECW 3 MECW 4 Europe's 'Other' Youth: Mapping the Phenomenon of Young Muslim Radicalization EIRG Continuity or change? The West and the nuclear program of Iran from the 1970s to the present Iran Working Group A Comparison of the Turkish and Nordic Experiences Projects with external financial support Expertise Publications Middle East Critique CMES Research Initiation and Collaboration Grants PrintPrint Middle East in the Contemporary World Annual Reports CMES/MECW Annual Report 2011 (PDF 2.5 MB) CMES/MECW Annual Report 2012 (PDF 1.3 MB) CMES/MECW Annual Report 2013 (PDF 530 kB) The majority of our research projects are situated within a larger ‘umbrella’ project called “The Middle East in the Contemporary World” or MECW. This project, funded by the Swedish Research Council, is the foundation for research efforts organized by the center with the aim of coordinating, redirecting, and expandin g research at Lund University. MECW includes the following research domains: Contemporary Interpretations of Islam and Muslim Cultures (MECW 1) Hydropolitics, Security, and International Law (MECW 2) Migration and Spatial Mobility (MECW 3) The Middle East in Sweden (MECW 4) Women for Sustainable Growth(MECW 5) Content manager: Anna.Hellgren@cme.lu.se | May. 5, 2015 CENTRAL MANAGEMENT AND ADMINISTRATION University Management University Board University Administration CAMPUS HELSINGBORG Campus Helsingborg website SCHOOL OF ECONOMICS AND MANAGEMENT Department of Economic History Research Policy Institute Department of Business Administration Department of Business Law Department of Informatics (Information Systems – ndlr) Department of Economics Department of Statistics JOINT FACULTIES OF HUMANITIES AND THEOLOGY Department of Archaeology and Ancient History Department of Philosophy Department of History Department of Communication and Media Department of Arts and Cultural Sciences, Centre for Languages and Literature Centre for Theology and Religious Studies Department of Educational Sciences FACULTY OF LAW Department of Law FACULTY OF FINE AND PERFORMING ARTS Malmö Art Academy Malmö Academy of Music Malmö Theatre Academy FACULTY OF ENGINEERING | LTH Department of Architecture and the Built Environment / Architectural Conservation andRestoration Department of Construction Sciences Department of Computer Science Department of Design Sciences Department of Electrical and Information Technology Department of Energy Sciences Department of Physics Department of Immunotechnology Department of Chemistry Department of Chemical Engineering Department of Food Technology, Engineering and Nutrition LTH School of Engineering at Campus Helsingborg Department of Mechanical Engineering Centre for Mathematical Sciences Department of Measurement Technology and Industrial Electrical Engineering Department of Automatic Control Department of Technology and Society Department of Industrial Management and Logistics School of Aviation FACULTY OF MEDICINE Department of Experimental Medical Science Department of Health Sciences Department of Clinical Sciences, Lund Department of Clinical Sciences, Malmö Department of Laboratory Medicine, Lund Department of Laboratory Medicine, Malmö FACULTY OF SCIENCE Department of Astronomy and Theoretical Physics Department of Biology Department of Physics Department of Geology Department of Chemistry Centre for Mathematical Sciences Division of Medical Radiation Physics Centre for Environmental and Climate Research Department of Physical Geography and Ecosystem Science FACULTY OF SOCIAL SCIENCES Department of Gender Studies Department of Communication and Media Department of Human Geography Department of Psychology Department of Sociology of Law Department of Service Management and Service Studies School of Social Work Department of Sociology Department of Political Science Department of Strategic Communication CULTURAL AND PUBLIC CENTRES Botanical Garden Folklife Archives Historical Museum Church History Archives Odeum Observatory Museum of Public Art University Library, UB Vattenhallen Science Centre LTH SPECIALISED CENTRES Centre for Societal Resilience Centre for Work, Technology and Social Change (WTS) Centre for the Study of Denmark Center for Middle Eastern Studies PlantLink Centre for East and South-East Asian Studies CIRCLE, Centre for Innovation, Research and Competence in the Learning Economy FFSC, Functional Food Science Centre IIIEE, International Institute for Industrial Environmental Economics at Lund University LUCSUS, Lund University Centre for Sustainability Studies MAX IV Laboratory Pufendorf Institute SASNET – Swedish South Asian Studies Network SEARCH FOR OTHER UNITS Search for other units at Lund University TYPO3 LOGIN Center for Middle Eastern Studies Lund University Box 201, SE-221 00 Lund, Sweden Phone: +46 (0)46 222 00 00 (pbx) Anna.Hellgren@cme.lu.se About this site LERU U21

https://www.amgasparin.wordpress.com

Middle East in the Contemporary World

Annual Reports

The majority of our research projects are situated within a larger ‘umbrella’
project called “The Middle East in the Contemporary World” or MECW.
This project, funded by the Swedish Research Council, is the foundation
for research efforts organized by the center with the aim of coordinating,
redirecting, and expandin g research at Lund University. MECW includes the following research domains:
Women for Sustainable Growth(MECW 5)