ABSTRACT

Set against the backdrop of the Arab Spring, The Sharia State examines the Islamist concept of political order. This order is based on a new interpretation of sharia and has been dubbed "the Islamic state" by Islamists. The concept of "the Islamic state," has been elevated to a political agenda and it is this agenda that is examined here.

In contrast to the prevailing view which sees the Arab Spring as a revolution, this book argues that the phenomenon has been neither a Spring, nor a revolution. The term 'Arab Spring,' connotes a just rebellion that led to toppling dictators and authoritarian rulers, yet in The Sharia State, Bassam Tibi challenges the unchecked assumption that the seizure of leadership by Islamists is a part of the democratization of the Middle East.

Providing a new perspective on the relationship between the Arab Spring and democratization, this book is an essential read for students and scholars of Middle Eastern Studies, Islamic Studies and Politics.

 

chapter |25 pages

Introduction

Will the shari'a state be the outcome? The Arab Spring and the hope for democratization

chapter |24 pages

The shari'a state and Western scholarship

The reality of the Islamist shari'atization of politics that seeks a name

chapter |25 pages

The shari'a state is not the faith of Islam

Shari'a and politics

chapter |37 pages

The challenge of the Islamist shari'a state to international order

Torn between the Westphalian synthesis, Pax Americana and Pax Islamica

chapter |52 pages

Shari'a and Islamism in the ‘Arab Spring'

From the promise of a blossoming spring to a frosty and lethal winter

chapter |29 pages

Torn between combating prejudice and the accusation of Islamophobia

The shari'a state and policing speech in the debate ‘Whither Islamic civilization?’