ISLAMIC SCHOOLS, OR MADRASAS, HAVE BEEN ACCUSED OF RADICALIZING
MUSLIMS AND PARTICIPATING, EITHER ACTIVELY OR PASSIVELY, IN TERRORIST
NETWORKS SINCE THE EVENTS OF 9/11. In Pakistan, the 2007 siege by
government forces of Islamabad's Red Mosque and its madrasa complex,
whose imam and students staged an armed resistance against the state
for its support of the "war on terror," reinforced concerns about
madrasas' role in regional and global jihad. By 2006 madrasas
registered with Pakistan's five regulatory boards for religious
schools enrolled over one million male and 200,000 female students. In
The Rational Believer, Masooda Bano draws on rich interview,
ethnographic, and survey data, as well as fieldwork conducted in
madrasas throughout the country to explore the network of Pakistani
madrasas. She maps the choices and decisions confronted by students,
teachers, parents, and clerics and explains why available choices make
participation in jihad appear at times a viable course of action.
Bano's work shows that beliefs are rational and that religious
believers look to maximize utility in ways not captured by classical
rational choice. She applies analytical tools from the New
Institutional Economics to explain apparent contradictions in the
madrasa system—for example, how thousands of young Pakistani women
now demand the national adoption of traditional sharia law, despite
its highly restrictive limits on female agency, and do so from their
location in Islamic schools for girls that were founded only a
generation ago.
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Choices and Decisions in the Madrasas of Pakistan
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780801464331
Publisert
2017
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Cornell University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter