
Muslim societies are largely absent from the study of religion and politics in the social sciences, despite the fact that scholarly literature often presumes that religion exercises a colossal influence on social, political, and economic outcomes in predominantly Muslim countries. This volume utilizes real world events and newly available data to more fully integrate the study of politics in Muslim societies into mainstream comparative analytical frameworks. Moreover, it explores the extent to which theories about core topics of inquiry in political science apply to Muslim societies. The aim is to interrogate rather than presume both whether and how Islam and Muslims are distinct from other religions and religious communities.Through 40 chapters by leading specialists, the Oxford Handbook of Politics in Muslim Societies examines a wide range of topics concerning regimes and regime change, electoral politics, political attitudes and behavior beyond voting, social mobilization, economic performance and development outcomes, and social welfare and governance. The Handbook shifts focus away from the Arab world as the barometer of politics in the Muslim world, recognizing that the Islamic world spans several regions including Africa, Southeast Asia, South Asia, and Central Asia. This expanded geography enables a thorough investigation of which relationships, if any, hold across Muslim majority states in different regions of the world.
This volume investigates the extent to which religion influences social, political, and economic outcomes in Muslim-majority societies by integrating these regions into mainstream comparative political science frameworks. Editors Melani Cammett and Pauline Jones curate contributions from forty leading specialists who utilize empirical data and real-world events to challenge existing assumptions. The text moves beyond traditional regional focus areas to evaluate whether theories of political behavior and governance apply universally or require modification when applied to Muslim societies.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this volume as a comprehensive reference that successfully bridges the gap between area studies and general political science theory. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which serves as a rigorous resource for scholars and advanced students of comparative politics.
Page Count:
912
Publication Date:
2022-04-05
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190931051
ISBN-13:
9780190931056
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