ABSTRACT

This book discusses issues concerning human rights and religion. Is a more integrated approach to human rights desirable - an approach that transcends the individual-centred orientation of civil and political liberties of the dominant centres of power in the West? How can religious thought contribute to an integrated notion of human rights and human dignity? What sort of transformation should religion itself undergo in order to enable it to come to grips with contemporary challenges? Related to this is a larger question: How can universal spiritual and moral values help to shape politics, the economy and society as a whole?

part |99 pages

From Human Rights to Human Dignity

part |155 pages

The Essence of Religion

chapter 7|27 pages

A Spiritual Vision of the Human Being

chapter 8|7 pages

A Worldview for Environmental Salvation

chapter 9|8 pages

The Soviet Union and the Denial of God

chapter 10|22 pages

Religious Conflict in Asia

chapter 12|24 pages

Islam: Justice And Politics

chapter 13|5 pages

Judiciary and Justice

chapter 14|16 pages

Islamic Movements and Social Change

chapter 15|9 pages

Islamisation of State and Society

chapter 16|4 pages

Reflections on the Shariah

chapter 17|6 pages

Hudud: Central to Islam?

chapter 18|17 pages

Iqbal and the Challenge of Reform

part |101 pages

The Challenge of Reform

chapter 20|14 pages

The Economic Crisis

chapter 22|7 pages

Civil Society in Malaysia

chapter 25|1 pages

Conclusion: The Remembrance of God