The Management of Islamic Activism: Salafis, the Muslim Brotherhood, and State Power in JordanState University of New York Press, 2000 M10 19 - 212 pages The Management of Islamic Activism examines the relationship between the changing nature of state power and patterns of Islamic activism in Jordan. Using extensive fieldwork, the author demonstrates how regimes continue to constrain the organization of Islamic opposition even after the advent of political liberalization. In the case of the Jordanian regime, control has been maintained through the "management of collective action"—the regulation of opposition through a complex array of bureaucratic and legal mechanisms. More specifically, laws governing civil society organizations are manipulated to encourage the formation of moderate Islamic groups while disempowering more radical activists. As a result, the radical activists have formed informal social networks that operate outside the state's control. Composed of like-minded Islamists, these networks evade attempts to manage Islamic activism through a loose web of personal relationships, small group interactions, and informal meetings. A comparison of the Salafis and the Muslim Brotherhood in Jordan demonstrates how state management strategies shape these patterns of social movement mobilization. |
Contents
The Management of Collective Action | 19 |
State Power and the Regulation of Islam | 45 |
Islamic Social Movement Organizations and the Muslim | 83 |
An Overview 84 The Muslim | 109 |
The Salafi Movement and Informal Networks | 111 |
Salafi Ideology 113 The Salafi Challenge 120 Organizational Experience 128 Informal Networks and Salafi Activism | 133 |
Other editions - View all
The Management of Islamic Activism: Salafis, the Muslim Brotherhood, and ... Quintan Wiktorowicz No preview available - 2000 |
Common terms and phrases
administrative al-Bani al-Halabi Amman Arab World argue challenge charitable civil society collective action cultural societies democracy Democratization discourse Doug McAdam Egypt Esposito fatwa formal organizations grassroots GUVS hadiths Hashemite ideology imams individuals informal networks institutions interview by author Irbid Islamic Action Front Islamic activism Islamic Center Islamic groups Islamic movement Islamic NGOs Islamists issues jihadi John Esposito Jordan Jordanian khutba King Hussein kingdom lamic Laurie Brand leader lessons mathhabs ment Middle East Ministry of Awqaf mobilize Modern Islamic World Mohammed mosques mukhabarat Muslim Brotherhood opposition organizational Oxford Encyclopedia Palestinian participation perspective policies political liberalization political parties practices preachers Qur'an and Sunna Ramadan regime regime's regulative relationship religion repression Salafi movement Salafi scholars Salafi thought Sanduq al-Zakat Saudi social control social networks structure Studies Sunna surveillance Takfir tawhid tion Union of Voluntary University Press Voluntary Societies zakat zakat committees Zarqa