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CENTER
FOR THE STUDY OF ISLAM AND DEMOCRACY
Call
for Paper Proposals
DEMOCRACY
AND DEVELOPMENT:
Challenges for the Islamic World
CSID’s 6th Annual Conference
April
22-23, 2005 - Washington DC
The discourse
on democracy often takes place in a historical and contextual
vacuum. Critical issues of economic and political development
are frequently inadequately engaged and their relevance to
democratic governance is poorly realized. Economic development
may be defined as the transition from a subsistence/agricultural
to a market-based and/or industrialized economy accompanied
by a rise in per capita income while political development
has to do with the emergence of the modern state and processes
of democratization. Are we facing a chicken-or-egg situation
here so that one kind of development is understood to necessarily
precede the other for a successful transition to democracy?
A full appreciation of these developmental issues coupled
with a sound knowledge of the inner resources of Islamic thought
which are deemed to be supportive of democratic trends are
essential in any proper discussion of the challenges of democratization
facing Muslim countries today.
The sixth
annual conference of the Center for the Study of Islam and
Democracy (CSID), therefore, will focus on the inter-relatedness
between democracy and development in the Islamic world. Paper
proposals are invited from prospective participants on the
following four broad topics. Possible topics are by no means
restricted to the ones that follow but proposals must show
the relevance of their topic in general to the issues of democracy
and development in Islamic societies. Both broad theoretical
approaches and specific case studies are welcome.
1. INTERNAL
RESOURCES AND THEIR RELEVANCE
What are the resources within Islamic thought and historical
practices which may be understood to foster the establishment
of democratic political development within the modern state?
For example, do the classical concepts of shura and ijma‘
lend themselves to the further development of democratic institutions
and a civil society in the modern sense? Is secularism a pre-condition
for political development in the democratic mode or can religious
values and practices be accommodated?
2. PARADIGMS
FOR ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
Is there such a thing as specifically Islamic economic development
as opposed to or complementary to modern Western notions of
development? Are notions of Islamic finance and banking as
current in certain circles conducive to a more just and ethical
economic development for Muslim countries? Can Islamic values
help to fight corruption, promote investment, create jobs,
encourage innovation, or eliminate poverty?
3. THE
IMPACT OF GLOBALIZATION ON DEVELOPMENT
Development – both economic and political –no
longer takes place in isolation in any one society or country,
since each is embedded in a complex network of global relations,
concerning which poor countries have very little say. How
does increasing economic globalization, therefore, affect
the processes of development within Muslim countries?
4. WOMEN AND POLITICAL-ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
How do traditional views on women and gender roles affect
women’s participation in the political and economic
spheres? How are Islamic and Islamizing discourses being deployed
to empower women in these spheres in some cases and disenfranchise
them in others? What are the consequences for development
with women’s entry into the labor force in increasing
numbers?
5. BARRIERS
TO DEVELOPMENT
What are the common barriers to development? Are inadequate
access to technology, political instability, weak educational
infrastructures, and authoritarian modes of governance, for
example, the common denominators of underdeveloped countries?
What other factors need to be identified and addressed to
ensure proper economic and political development?
Paper
proposals (no more than 400 words) are due by
December 31, 2004 and should be sent to:
Prof.
Asma Afsaruddin, Chair, Conference Program Committee,
2121 K Street, NW, Suite 700, Washington, D.C. 20037. Tel.:
(202) 942-2183. Fax: (202) 628-8189. E-mail: conference@islam-democracy.org;
and afsaruddin@islam-democracy.org
Authors
of accepted proposals will be notified by January 30, 2005
and final papers must be submitted by March 15, 2005.
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