Secular state, religious lives: Islam and the state in Malaysia

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Abstract

Debates on secularism in Malaysia often revolve around the legal, especially the constitutional, framework. To this end several NGOs organised a road show in 2006 to debate issues surrounding freedom of religion. Not only were these events mobbed by angry crowds, but also the state intervened and shut down these and future discussions on the topic of religion, deeming such debates sensitive. This article addresses the particularities of secularism in Malaysia vis-à-vis Olivier Roy's thesis in 'Secularism Confronts Islam' that sees religious space and secular space as discernable yet not antithetical and Charles Taylor's thesis in the 'Secular Age', where he points to a new definition of secularism as a pluralist and transcendent notion of belief. In Malaysia both variants are present, with the state playing a dangerous game situating itself between reactionary Muslim forces and a moderate majority. © 2013 Copyright Taylor and Francis Group, LLC.

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APA

Hoffstaedter, G. (2013). Secular state, religious lives: Islam and the state in Malaysia. Asian Ethnicity, 14(4), 475–489. https://doi.org/10.1080/14631369.2013.759763

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