Terrorist attacks on America and its allies and persistent
violence in the Islamic world point to a crisis in Islamic society,
which "States without Citizens" attributes to an unfulfilled quest
for an Islamic renaissance. The Islamic states, whose borders were
arbitrarily imposed by Western states, are beset by pervasive
socioeconomic problems--authoritarian rule, economic inequities,
educational shortcomings, development project failures, sexual
frustration--that are being exploited by radical Islamists. Native
attempts to modernize Islamic society by adopting Western ways have
repeatedly foundered because they have sought to replicate the
trappings of state power while neglecting their foundation in civic
ethics. To mitigate the violence engendered by the Islamic crisis,
the author recommends that culturally authentic institutions must
be created that will instill a civic ethics of common cause and
public service.
The ideals of civic activism and public service that inspired
the Western Renaissance are absent in the Islamic world. Islamic
religio-moral ethics aim at salvation; Islamic social ethics aim at
clan dominance. Western-inspired solutions to the Islamic crisis
are inappropriate to Islamic states, in as much as they are states
without citizens. To mitigate the violence engendered by the
Islamic crisis, culturally authentic institutions must be created
that will instill a civic ethics of common cause and public
service. The author recommends this approach for policy makers and
development managers and deplores the dangerous vacuity of such
drumbeat cliches as the clash of civilizations that have gained
currency in the war on terrorism.
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