Expressing Islam: Religious Life and Politics in IndonesiaGreg Fealy, Sally White Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 2008 - 295 من الصفحات As the forces of globalisation and modernisation buffet Islam and other world religions, Indonesias 200 million Muslims are expressing their faith in ever more complex ways. Celebrity television preachers, internet fatwa services, mass religious rallies in soccer stadiums, glossy jihadist magazines, Islamic medical treatments, alms giving via mobile phone and electronic sharia banking services are just some of the manifestations of a more consumer-oriented approach to Islam which interact with and sometimes replace other, more traditional expressions of the faith.
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... Islamist groups, including violent paramilitary groups such as Laskar Jihad and Laskar Jundullah and vigilante groups such as the Islamic Defenders Front (FPI), also proliferated from 1998. These developments prompted the American ...
... Islamist political trends, intellectual activity and social discourse, except in so far as these can be interpreted as decreasing or increasing the 'Islamic threat'. Thus, much of the recent literature and commentary on Islam has been ...
... Islamist parties and organisations, the implementation of sharia-based bylaws at the provincial and district levels, and the introduction of more restrictive regulations on women's movements and dress are cited as proof of illiberal ...
... Islamist political agenda. Bush demonstrates that such a view is an oversimplification. First, she examines in greater detail the types of regulations that have been issued and when this occurred. By doing so, she is able to demonstrate ...
... Islamist, Text Publishing, Melbourne. Hefner, Robert W. (2000), Ci il Islam: Muslims and Democratization in Indonesia, Princeton University Press, Princeton and Oxford. Rabasa, Angel M. (2003), Political Islam in Southeast Asia ...