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NON-MUSLIM MINORITIES (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   163463


Ethnocultural nationalism and Turkey’s non-Muslim minorities during the early republican period / Eligür, Banu   Journal Article
Eligür, Banu Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract his article analyses the Turkish nationalist elite’s economic and demographic Turkification policies toward the non-Muslim minorities in the 1920s and 1930s, and argues that the nationalist elite pursued ethnocultural nationalism toward the country’s non-Muslim citizens, while applying civic-territorial nationalism toward Muslim Turks. The article maintains that the nationalist elite, like the Young Turk regime, aimed at forming a national Turkish Muslim businessmen class at the expense of the non-Muslim minorities by pursuing economic and demographic Turkification policies.
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2
ID:   134220


One nation under God: Yusuf al-Qaradawi's changing Fiqh of citizenship in the light of the Islamic legal tradition / Warren, David H; Gilmore, Christine   Journal Article
Warren, David H Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract In the wake of the Arab Revolutions of 2011, countries in the Middle East are grappling with how Islamists might be included within a regime of democratic political pluralism and how their aspirations for an "Islamic state" could affect the citizenship status of non-Muslims. While Islamic jurisprudence on this issue has traditionally classified non-Muslims in Islamic society as protected peoples or dhimma, endowed with what the authors term "minority citizenship", this article will examine how the transnational intellectual Wasa?iyya or Centrist movement, of which Sheikh Yusuf al-Qaradawi is the figurehead, have sought to develop a new fiqh of citizenship in which Muslims and non-Muslims have equal civil and political rights. This article will focus on Yusuf al-Qaradawi on the basis that his very recent shift in 2010 on the issue is yet to be studied in depth, as well as in view of the fact that the dilemma faced by reformist Islamic scholars-how to integrate modern concepts into a legal tradition while simultaneously arguing for that tradition's continuing relevance and authority-is for him rendered particularly acute, given that this tradition is itself the very source of his own authority and relevance. It will therefore be argued that the legacy of the Islamic legal tradition structures his discourse in a very specific way, thereby having the potential to render it more persuasive to his audience, and worthy of a more detailed examination.
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3
ID:   098362


Perception of the army by Armenian minorities living in Turkey / Ors, H Birsen   Journal Article
Ors, H Birsen Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
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