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Islam and International Relations: Fractured Worlds reframes and
radically disrupts perceived understanding of the nature and
location of Islamic impulses in international relations. This
collection of innovative essays written by Mustapha Kamal Pasha
presents an alternative reading of contestation and entanglement
between Islam and modernity. Wide-ranging in scope, the volume
illustrates the limits of Western political imagination, especially
its liberal construction of presumed divergence between Islam and
the West. Split into three parts, Pasha's articles cover Islamic
exceptionalism, challenges and responses, and also look beyond
Western international relations. This volume will be of great
interest to graduates and scholars of international relations,
Islam, religion and politics, and political ideologies,
globalization and democracy.
Globalization, Difference, and Human Security seeks to advance
critical human security studies by re-framing the concept of human
security in terms of the thematic of difference. Drawing together a
wide range of contributors, the volume is framed, among others,
around the following key questions: What are the silences and
erasures of advancing a critical human security alternative without
making recognition of difference its central plank?How do we
rethink the complex interplay of human security and difference in
distinct and varied spatial and cultural settings produced by
global forces? What is the nexus between human security and the
broader field of global development? What new challenges to Human
Security and International Relations are produced with the rise of
the 'post-liberal' or 'post-secular' subject? In what ways
releasing human security from identification with the territorial
state helps reconceptualize culture? How does Human Security serve
as a subspecies of modern humanitarian thought or the latter
reinforce imperial imaginaries and the structures of order and
morality? Is the pursuit of indigenous rights fundamentally
counterpoised to the pursuit of human security? What difference it
might make to take the 'doings and beings' of
communities-of-subsistence rather than basic-needs/wealth-seeking
individuals as a point of departure in critical human security
studies? How does reconstruction bind post-war and post-disaster
states and societies into the global capitalist-democratic
political structure?
Globalization, Difference, and Human Security seeks to advance
critical human security studies by re-framing the concept of human
security in terms of the thematic of difference. Drawing together a
wide range of contributors, the volume is framed, among others,
around the following key questions: What are the silences and
erasures of advancing a critical human security alternative without
making recognition of difference its central plank?How do we
rethink the complex interplay of human security and difference in
distinct and varied spatial and cultural settings produced by
global forces? What is the nexus between human security and the
broader field of global development? What new challenges to Human
Security and International Relations are produced with the rise of
the 'post-liberal' or 'post-secular' subject? In what ways
releasing human security from identification with the territorial
state helps reconceptualize culture? How does Human Security serve
as a subspecies of modern humanitarian thought or the latter
reinforce imperial imaginaries and the structures of order and
morality? Is the pursuit of indigenous rights fundamentally
counterpoised to the pursuit of human security? What difference it
might make to take the 'doings and beings' of
communities-of-subsistence rather than basic-needs/wealth-seeking
individuals as a point of departure in critical human security
studies? How does reconstruction bind post-war and post-disaster
states and societies into the global capitalist-democratic
political structure?
Development may be best understood in terms of the interplay among
capital accumulation, the state, and class. Subject to globalizing
structures, classes, in turn, are examined in light of their
interactions with culture, especially gender and religion as well
as ecology. Case-studies - Brazil, the Asian newly industrializing
countries, China, and Mozambique - reveal three possibilities for
overcoming underdevelopment: joining, leaving, or weaving through
global capitalism. The conclusions do not fail to present specific
principles upon which policies can be based.
'This is a very timely updating of the very useful 1988 edition. It takes account of major intervening changes in world political economy, notably the collapse of 'real socialism' and the dominance of neoliberal economic policy, despite which Mittelman and Pasha provide reasoned and plausible assurance that there can be alternative paths to development. Pasha's collaboration reinforces Mittelman's disposition to view the problems from the social and cultural perspectives of the subjects of development and to analyse these problems in terms of the contest of social forces that lies behind the often obscuring screens of ethnicity and religion. A clear and accessible writing style makes this book, like its predecessor, ideal for teaching and for the concerned reader.' - Robert W. Cox;Development may be best understood in terms of the interplay among capital accumulation, the state, and class. Subject to globalizing structures, classes, in turn, are examined in light of their interactions with culture, especially gender and religion as well as ecology. Case-studies - Brazil, the Asian newly industrializing countries, China, and Mozambique - reveal three possibilities for overcoming underdevelopment: joining, leaving, or weaving through global capitalism. The conclusions do not fail to present specific principles upon which policies can be based.
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Talk of Darkness (Paperback)
Fatna El Bouih; Translated by Mustapha Kamal, Susan Slyomovics
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R534
Discovery Miles 5 340
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Fatna El Bouih was first arrested in Casablanca as an 18-year-old
student leader with connections to the Marxist movement. Over the
next decade she was rearrested, forcibly disappeared, tortured, and
transferred between multiple prisons. While imprisoned, she helped
organize a hunger strike, completed her undergraduate degree in
sociology, and began work on a Master x2019;s degree. Beginning
with the harrowing account of her kidnapping during the heightened
political tension of the 1970s, Talk of Darkness tells the true
story of one woman x2019;s struggle to secure political prisoners
x2019; rights and defend herself against an unjust imprisonment.
Poetically rendered from Arabic into English by Mustapha Kamal and
Susan Slyomovics, Fatna El Bouih x2019;s memoir exposes the
techniques of state-instigated x201C;disappearance x201D; in
Morocco and condemns the lack of laws to protect prisoners x2019;
basic human rights.
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