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Islam, Justice, and Democracy: Islam, Justice, and Democracy

Islam, Justice, and Democracy
Islam, Justice, and Democracy
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table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright
  4. Dedication
  5. Contents
  6. List of Illustrations
  7. Acknowledgments
  8. 1. Introduction
  9. 2. Islam and Democracy: A Never-Ending Debate
  10. 3. Historical and Conceptual Foundations of Justice Discourses in Islam
  11. 4. Islamist Justice Theory
  12. 5. Between Order and Freedom: Islamism and Justice Discourses
  13. 6. New Islamist Movements, Justice, and Democracy
  14. 7. Distributive Preferences, Individualism, and Support for Democracy
  15. 8. Constitutionalist Movements, Arab Spring, and Justice
  16. 9. Conclusion
  17. Appendix A
  18. Appendix B
  19. Notes
  20. Bibliography
  21. Index
  22. About the Author

Illustrations

Figures

1.1Trajectories of Islamic justice discourses and Muslim political preferences

5.1Evolution of justice discourses in Islamist journals (1960–2010)

7.1Religiosity and support for democracy: Mediating mechanisms

7.2Support for democracy and authoritarianism in the Muslim world

7.3Religiosity in the Muslim world

7.4Distributive preferences and individualistic orientations in the Muslim world

7.5Religiosity and religious outlooks in the Muslim world

8.1Perceptions of political injustice in the Arab world

8.2Perceptions of social injustice in the Arab world

8.3Protest participation in the Arab world

8.4Religion, perceptions of injustice, and protest behavior

8.5Determinants of protest participation

Tables

5.1Prevalence of Islamic Justice Discourses in Turkish Islamist Journals (1960–2010)

7.1Seemingly Unrelated Regression Estimates of Justice Values and Support for Democracy

7.2Direct and Indirect Effects of Religiosity on Support for Democracy

7.3Seemingly Unrelated Regression Estimates of Justice Values and Support for Procedural Democracy and Authoritarianism

7.4Seemingly Unrelated Regression Estimates of Religious Outlooks, Justice Orientations, and Support for Democracy

8.1Most Important Challenges Facing the Nation

8.2Logistic Regression Estimates of Protest Participation in the Arab World

A5.1 List of Journals Archived in İLEM (1960–2010)

A6.1 Characteristics of the Interviewees

A7.1 Fixed Effects for Table 7.1

A7.2 Full Results for Table 7.3 (Model 1)

A7.3 Full Results for Table 7.3 (Model 2)

A7.4 Full Estimation Results for Table 7.4 (Model 1)

A7.5 Full Estimation Results for Table 7.4 (Model 2)

A8.1 Survey Indicators of Political and Social Justice

A8.2 Descriptive Statistics of the Variables in the Models

A8.3 Fixed Effects for Table 8.2

A8.4 Interaction Effects (Logistic Regression)

A8.5 Logistic Regression Estimates for Protest Participation (Egypt and Tunisia)

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