HU530188 Seminar

SoSe 22: The crisis of the Islamic world: democracy, human rights, political violence, and economic growth

Ruud Koopmans

Information for students

https://agnes.hu-berlin.de/lupo/rds?state=verpublish&status=init&vmfile=no&publishid=192352&moduleCall=webInfo&publishConfFile=webInfo&publishSubDir=veranstaltung

Comments

Since the 1970s, the gap between Islamic countries and the rest of the world has continuously widened. Whereas elsewhere the share of democratic regimes has strongly increased, in the Islamic world it has decreased and attempts at democratization - most recently during the Arab Spring - have largely failed. Regarding human rights - e.g. gender equality, gay rights and the rights of religious minorities - Islamic countries continue to have a worse track record than other parts of the world. Civil wars and terrorism have increased not only in number and intensity worldwide, but increasingly involve radical Islamist groups and are fought out within and on the edges of the Muslim world. Economically, most countries of the Islamic world have fallen not only further behind the industrialized West but also behind non-Islamic ascending economies in East Asia and Latin America. The crisis of the Islamic world also negatively affects the integration of Muslims in Western immigration countries. We discuss the evidence for this deepening crisis of the Islamic world and explore potential causes, including Western imperialism, the relation between state and religion in Muslim countries, and the rise of religious fundamentalism. close

Suggested reading

Kuru, Ahmet T. 2019. Islam, Authoritarianism and Underdevelopment. A Global and Historical Comparison. Cambridge University Press. Lewis, Bernard. 2002. What Went Wrong? The Clash Between Islam and Modernity in the Middle East. Oxford University Press. Rubin, Jured. 2017. Rulers, Religion, and Riches. Why the West Got Rich and the Middle East Did Not. Cambridge University close

Subjects A - Z