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This edited book investigates how life is affected by the
increasingly authoritarian regime in Bangladesh.Earlier a flawed
but real electoral democracy, over the last several years
Bangladesh has been characterised as a 'hybrid regime' in The
Economist's Democracy Index. Today it is a country in which law
still rules and leaders are still chosen - but only on paper. The
uniqueness of this book is not in defining regime type or
investigating trajectories. It is in its efforts to study how these
changes affect everyday life. All chapters are based on intimate
knowledge of a field, on first-hand experience, and on interviews
and ethnography. This book will interest political scientists and
scholars of Bangladesh, the Islamic world and beyond, with findings
of broad relevance to hybrid regimes.
This book conceptualizes the politics of Bangladesh through an
Islamic concept called ummah or the global brotherhood of Muslims.
It demonstrates that, against the backdrop of geopolitics,
capitalism and free flow of ideas, localization of this global
religious concept at individual level, institutional level, major
party platforms and state has cemented the current political
condition in Bangladesh in which religiosity, religious
intolerance, Islamization and extremism take place. By exploring
the effects of ummah in Bangladeshi politics, this book shows how
major political parties have mainstreamed political Islam in the
country. The book rejects the long standing scholarly claim of
religious-secular distinction in Bangladeshi politics and argues
that with most Muslim-dominated states, there are no major secular
parties in Bangladesh. There are only Islamic parties, which are
more or less Islamic. The purely 'rational' domain of politics in
Bangladesh is long lost, and political Islam sets the framework for
politics in the country. The reason behind this logic of
Bangladeshi politics is formed, contained and expanded by ummah.
This edited book investigates how life is affected by the
increasingly authoritarian regime in Bangladesh.Earlier a flawed
but real electoral democracy, over the last several years
Bangladesh has been characterised as a 'hybrid regime' in The
Economist's Democracy Index. Today it is a country in which law
still rules and leaders are still chosen - but only on paper. The
uniqueness of this book is not in defining regime type or
investigating trajectories. It is in its efforts to study how these
changes affect everyday life. All chapters are based on intimate
knowledge of a field, on first-hand experience, and on interviews
and ethnography. This book will interest political scientists and
scholars of Bangladesh, the Islamic world and beyond, with findings
of broad relevance to hybrid regimes.
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