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El. knyga: Islamic Studies in European Higher Education: Navigating Academic and Confessional Approaches

  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 22-Mar-2023
  • Leidėjas: Edinburgh University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781399510875
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 22-Mar-2023
  • Leidėjas: Edinburgh University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781399510875

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Examines the integration and reform of Islamic studies in universities across Germany, the UK, Turkey, Poland and Belgium

Explores the interaction between conventional university Islamic studies and the growing impact of confessional Islamic studies in European states Provides accounts of recent developments in Islamic studies in Germany, the UK, Turkey, Poland and Belgium Shows the impact of European states' policies concerning integration and countering extremism upon the consolidation of Islamic studies programmes Critically reviews the concepts used to distinguish between confessional and nonconfessional approaches, and assesses their adequacy in light of recent changes

Across Europe there are numerous examples of recent linkages between universities and Islamic seminaries. In Germany the federal 'top-down' experiment, now over ten years old, of establishing departments of Islamic theology in five universities has now recruited over 2000 students, many of whom will end up teaching confessional Islam RE in schools. In the UK, local partnerships have been developed at under- and postgraduate level between e.g. Warwick, Birmingham and Middlesex universities and Islamic seminaries representing a range of Islamic traditions. Similar experiences are being developed on a smaller scale in other countries. These developments, which have taken place against a backdrop of state pressure to 'integrate' Islam and address 'radicalisation', challenge university traditions of 'scientific' approaches to the study of Islam as well as the confessional expectations of faith-based Islamic theological training. By looking more closely at the developing experience in Germany and Britain and selected other countries this volume explores how the two approaches are finding ways of creative cooperation.

Recenzijos

"This volume provides a timely challenge to the allegedly settled boundaries between confessional" and "non-confessional" in Islamic Studies. They equally suggest various pathways of how Islamic theological perspectives can be successfully included in European higher education settings."" -Oliver Scharbrodt, Lund University

Notes on the Contributors vii
Preface xii
1 Introduction: Incorporating Islam in European Higher Education
1(13)
Stephen H. Jones
2 Islamic Studies in University and Seminary: Contest or Constructive Mutuality?
14(18)
Jørgen S. Niehen
3 (Re)habilitating the Insider: Negotiations of Epistemic Legitimacy in Islamic Theology and Newer Social Justice Mobilisation
32(21)
Birgitte Schepelern Johansen
4 What do the Terms `Confessional' and `Non-confessional' Mean, and are they Helpful? Some Social Scientific Musings
53(16)
Sophie Gilliat-Ray
5 A Decade of Islamic Theological Studies at German Universities: Expectations, Outcomes and Future Perspectives
69(23)
Bekim Agai
Jan Felix Engelhardt
6 Islamic Theology in a Muslim-minority Environment: Distinctions of Religion within a New Academic Discipline
92(18)
Lena Dreier
7 The Taalib as a Bricoleur: Transitioning from Madrasah to University in Modern Britain
110(19)
Haroon Sidat
8 Why would Muslims Study Theology to Obtain an Academic Qualification?
129(22)
Mohammad Mesbahi
9 Navigating alongside the Limits of Mutual Interdependence: Flemish Islamic Religious Education
151(27)
Ndima Lafrarchi
10 The Need for Teaching against Islamophobia in a Culturally Homogeneous Context: The Case of Poland
178(24)
Anna Piela
Katarzyna Gorak-Sosnouiska
Beata Abdallah-Krzepkowska
11 Theology Faculties in Turkey: Between State, Religion and Politics
202(21)
Abdurrahman Hendek
12 Closing Reflections: Going Beyond Secular-Religious and Confessional-Academic Dichotomies in European Islamic Studies
223(14)
Sariya Cheruvallil-Contractor
Index 237
J rgen S. Nielsen is Emeritus Professor of Contemporary European Islam, University of Birmingham, and Affiliate Professor of Islamic Studies at the University of Copenhagen. He studied Arabic and Middle East studies at SOAS, London, and did his PhD in Arab history at the American University of Beirut. Since 1978 he has researched Islam in Europe at Selly Oak Colleges and the University of Birmingham. He was director of the Danish Institute in Damascus 2005-7 and then spent six years as Danish National Research Foundation professor at the Faculty of Theology, Copenhagen University. He is the author of Muslims in Western Europe (Edinburgh, 1st ed. 1993, 4th edition with Jonas Otterbeck 2016) and is involved in editing several book series for Brill (Leiden) as well as the Journal of Muslims in Europe.Stephen H. Jones is Lecturer in the Department of Theology and Religion, University of Birmingham. He is a sociologist of religion whose main areas of expertise are in Islam and Muslims in the UK and religious and non-religious publics' perceptions of science. He is author of Islam and the Liberal State (IB Tauris, 2021) and presently Principal Investigator of a research project, 'Science and the Transmission of Islamic Knowledge in Britain', which examines views of Islam and science among students and teachers in UK Islamic educational institutions.