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Exploring a new approach to interfaith/interreligious
communication, the contributors to this collection seek to interact
from the perspective of their own tradition or academic discipline
with Ernest Becker's theory on the relationship between religion,
culture and the human awareness of death and mortality. While much
interfaith/interreligious dialogue focuses on beliefs and
practices, thus delineating areas of disagreement as a starting
point, these chapters foster interactive communication rooted in
areas of the universal human experience. Thus by demonstration
these authors argue for the integrity and efficacy of this approach
for pursuing intercultural and interdisciplinary communication.
Development analysts often focus on the role of "the state" in
making the right rules by which to govern society, assuming that
governance is exclusively or mainly the work of the central
government authority. The reality in many developing countries,
particularly those with weak central government authorities, is
that governance happens through diverse rules and in many centers
of decision-making, in ways that are formal and informal, official
and unofficial. This real-world polycentricity can be dysfunctional
or productive, depending in part on shared understandings between
decision-making entities about how to relate to each other. Those
shared understandings come from cultural backgrounds, historical
interactions, and other sources. Political economist Anas Malik
argues that well-functioning polycentricity in developing countries
depends in part on the shared understandings between official
government entities and unofficial units that provide collective
choice in particular arenas. In Muslim-majority contexts, the
Islamic tradition - contrary to the image of a top-down,
single-voiced religious law- provides ample resources supporting
shared understandings that accommodate diverse rules and collective
choice units. Pakistan, the largest Muslim-majority country at its
founding, provides an important case. After building on the
development literature to suggest a typology of collective choice
units in developing countries, Malik explores resources in the
Islamic tradition that support polycentric governance. The book
then examines major deliberations in Pakistan's history,
particularly through documented inquiries into serious political
crises such as sectarian religious agitation and civil war, and
through a selective survey of types of jurisdictions and collective
choice units. Malik argues that there are significant polycentric
understandings in Pakistan's historical lineage, but that these are
heavily contested. While there is potential for polycentric
development in Pakistan, the viability of polycentric order is
constrained by countering forces and contextual factors.
The work of Elinor and Vincent Ostrom represents a distinctive
contribution to the study of political economy, public policy and
administration, collective action, and governance theory. Efforts
to present a comprehensive overview of the Bloomington School that
grew around the Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis
(now renamed the Ostrom Workshop), which they founded more than 40
years ago, received new impetus with the award of the Nobel
Memorial Prize in Economic Science to Elinor Ostrom in 2009. Since
then, renewed attempts have been made to map the Ostroms'
contributions to theories of polycentric governance and collective
action, and to multi-methods and comparative institutional analysis
of ways of managing social and ecological systems, common pool
resources, public economies, and metropolitan reform. The
open-ended and multiform nature of the Ostroms' research program
defies a single comprehensive overview; yet, it is a stimulus
towards both creativity and disciplinary cross-fertilization in
social science research. What sets this volume apart is that it
brings together theory and practice, models and work on the ground,
design and creativity, empirics and norms, to outline the
significance of the Ostroms' research program for the future. Each
contribution to the volume takes the Ostromian perspective as the
point of departure, amplifies it and explores the ground for future
work by engaging with other approaches and areas of research with
which the Bloomington School has some affinities. This way of
testing and extending the ideas and methods of the Ostroms is
particularly appropriate since their research program, initiated
and nurtured through the Workshop, has always been in-between
different fields and sub-fields in the social sciences (political
science, economics, public administration, law, history,
anthropology), cultivating a strong interdisciplinary way of doing
research and exploiting the virtuous circle between theory,
analysis, model building, and empirical research. Engaging in a
creative dialogue with ideas and methods of other research programs
is a way of sharpening one's analytic tools, while renovating one's
own vision of social research. This volume is a way of thinking
through and beyond the Bloomington School.
Countries, governments, and organizations devise constitutions to
reflect their visions of governance and rules for their leaders.
They vary considerably in both formats and consequences. Disputes
over constitutions can lead to fights, contests, debates, and more.
Vincent Ostrom is one of America's leading scholars on
constitutions and has spent a lifetime researching, analyzing, and
writing about constitutions in America and overseas. He provides
methods to judge and to implement constitutions as citizens
struggle with their formulation. In this book, scholars from around
the world add to this intellectual quest of massive scholarly and
practical importance. Using the research and methodology pioneered
by Ostrom, they identify and analyze the criteria for successful
constitutions in both theory and practice.
Countries, governments, and organizations devise constitutions to
reflect their visions of governance and rules for their leaders.
They vary considerably in both formats and consequences. Disputes
over constitutions can lead to fights, contests, debates, and more.
Vincent Ostrom is one of America's leading scholars on
constitutions and has spent a lifetime researching, analyzing, and
writing about constitutions in America and overseas. He provides
methods to judge and to implement constitutions as citizens
struggle with their formulation. In this book, scholars from around
the world add to this intellectual quest of massive scholarly and
practical importance. Using the research and methodology pioneered
by Ostrom, they identify and analyze the criteria for successful
constitutions in both theory and practice.
Presenting a framework that incorporates macro-level forces into
micro-level strategic calculations, this book explains key
political choices by leaders and challengers in Pakistan through
the political survival mechanism. It offers an explanation for
continuing polity weakness in the country, and describes how
political survival shapes the choices made by the leaders and
challengers. Using a unique analysis that synthesizes theories of
weak states, quasi-states and political survival, the book extends
beyond rationalist accounts and the application of
choice-theoretical approaches to developing countries. It
challenges the focus on ideology and suggests that diverse,
religiously and ethnically-defined affinity groups have interests
that are represented in particular ways in weak state
circumstances. Extensive interviews with decision-makers and
polity-participants, combined with narrative accounts, allow the
author to examine decision-making by leaders in a state
bureaucratic machinery context as well as the complex mechanisms by
which dissident affinity groups may support 'quasi-state' options.
This study can be used for comparisons in Islamic contexts, and
presents an interesting contribution to studies on South Asia as
well as Political Development.
This introductory textbook provides students with a fundamental
understanding of the social, political, and economic institutions
of six South Asian countries: Afghanistan, Bangladesh, India,
Nepal, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka. It adopts a broad theoretical
framework and evaluates the opportunities and constraints facing
South Asia's states within the context of democracy. Key features
include: An introduction to the region. The history and political
development of these South Asian states, including evaluations of
their democratic trajectories. The management of conflict, economic
development, and extremist threats. A comparative analysis of the
states. Projections concerning democracy taking into consideration
the opportunities and constraints facing these countries. This
textbook will be an indispensable teaching tool for courses on
South Asia. It includes pedagogical features such as political
chronologies, political party descriptions, text boxes, a glossary,
and suggestions for further reading. Written in an accessible style
and by experts on South Asian politics, it offers students of South
Asian politics a valuable introduction to an exceedingly diverse
region.
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