This article examines how state-linked religious actors negotiate religious demands in a secular authoritarian state. There is a prevalent assumption that such religious actors lack the agency to affect state decisions. I do not seek to challenge that proposition, rather to qualify it by identifying the scope and extent of their authority. Taking the state as an autonomous actor, I examine fatwas or official religious edicts in Singapore through the lens of ‘policy feedback’, which analyses how the bureaucratisation of religious institution created new legal and bureaucratic channels that shape state policies. This paper aims to primarily answer the following question: What role do fatwas play in shaping statist interpretation of religion? ...
Scholars use the term 'religious economy' to describe situations where religion is treated as a mark...
This study analyses the state involvement in religious life in modern Indonesia. It will focus on ho...
There are some questions on the relationship between Islam and state that can be traced from the ear...
This article examines how state-linked religious actors negotiate religious demands in a secular aut...
This article examines how state-linked religious actors negotiate religious demands in a secular aut...
My thesis examines state-religious relationship in secular authoritarian Singapore by analysing fatw...
This article examines the Singaporean model of “secularism” and its impact on the relations between ...
My previous research on Pandalungan Kiai as a mediatized world shows a complicated case of negotiati...
The article attempts to understand the relationship between Muslim religious scholars and the govern...
The Islamic Religious Council of Singapore (Muis), is a statutory board, or a semi- official governm...
Singapore embraces a form of secularism that provides the state with the authority to unilaterally d...
The relationship between religion and the state in Muslim countries has become a much debated and di...
The paper explores an Islamic institution in contemporary Malaysia. It studies the roles of the Muft...
Malaysia ranks sixth out of 175 countries worldwide in the degree of state regulation of religion. T...
The Singapore state’s relationship with religion has been one of pragmatism, rooted in the realities...
Scholars use the term 'religious economy' to describe situations where religion is treated as a mark...
This study analyses the state involvement in religious life in modern Indonesia. It will focus on ho...
There are some questions on the relationship between Islam and state that can be traced from the ear...
This article examines how state-linked religious actors negotiate religious demands in a secular aut...
This article examines how state-linked religious actors negotiate religious demands in a secular aut...
My thesis examines state-religious relationship in secular authoritarian Singapore by analysing fatw...
This article examines the Singaporean model of “secularism” and its impact on the relations between ...
My previous research on Pandalungan Kiai as a mediatized world shows a complicated case of negotiati...
The article attempts to understand the relationship between Muslim religious scholars and the govern...
The Islamic Religious Council of Singapore (Muis), is a statutory board, or a semi- official governm...
Singapore embraces a form of secularism that provides the state with the authority to unilaterally d...
The relationship between religion and the state in Muslim countries has become a much debated and di...
The paper explores an Islamic institution in contemporary Malaysia. It studies the roles of the Muft...
Malaysia ranks sixth out of 175 countries worldwide in the degree of state regulation of religion. T...
The Singapore state’s relationship with religion has been one of pragmatism, rooted in the realities...
Scholars use the term 'religious economy' to describe situations where religion is treated as a mark...
This study analyses the state involvement in religious life in modern Indonesia. It will focus on ho...
There are some questions on the relationship between Islam and state that can be traced from the ear...