Renegotiating Indonesian secularism through debates on Ahmadiyya and Shia

Philosophy and Social Criticism 41 (4-5):497-508 (2015)
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Abstract

Commentators have mainly viewed the Ahmadiyya debate in Indonesia either as a controversy over heterodoxy or as an episode raising questions about the human rights of ‘religious minorities’. Instead, I suggest viewing these debates as a field of normative questions of secularism in which the claims of religious are renegotiated in response to the fragmentation of religious and political authority brought on by a diversification of the use of media and a loss of trust in the Indonesian post-Suharto democracy, and between normative questions of secularism

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A Secular Age.Charles Taylor - 2007 - Harvard University Press.

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