Format:
Lit.Hinw. S. 500-503
ISSN:
0129-797X
Content:
The issue of the Islamic state has been at the forefront of Malaysian public discourse, but even more so since the announcement by Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad in September 2001 that Malaysia was already an Islamic state. The issue has evoked consternation and debate that is not reflected in the mainstream media, and which is symptomatic of the disjuncture between perceptions in public discourse and realities on the ground. This article examines this disjuncture through the symbiosis of the Islamic state issue with its context the state of Islam in Malaysia. It also provides an analysis of the government's text outlining why its administration qualifies as an Islamic state, against one of the main sources used, which is the Shafi'i jurist Al-Mawardi's A-ahkam as-sultaniyya. (Contemp Southeast Asia/DÜI)
In:
Contemporary Southeast Asia, Singapore : ISEAS Publishing, 1979, 23(2001), 3, Seite 474-503, 0129-797X
In:
volume:23
In:
year:2001
In:
number:3
In:
pages:474-503
Language:
English