Holdings Information
The future of religious minorities in the Middle East / edited by John Eibner.
Bibliographic Record Display
-
Title:The future of religious minorities in the Middle East / edited by John Eibner.
-
Other Contributors/Collections:Eibner, John, editor.
-
Published/Created:Lanham, Maryland : Lexington, [2018]
-
Holdings
Holdings Record Display
-
Location:KOERNER LIBRARY stacks (Floor 1)Where is this?
-
Call Number: BL1060 .F88 2018
-
Number of Items:1
-
Status:Available
-
Location:KOERNER LIBRARY stacks (Floor 1)Where is this?
-
Library of Congress Subjects:Religious minorities--Middle East--History--21st century.
Middle East--Religion.
-
Description:xxv, 249 pages ; 24 cm
-
Summary:"The Future of Religious Minorities in the Middle East addresses the domestic and international politics that have created conditions for contemporary religious cleansing in the Middle East. It provides a platform for a host of distinguished scholars, journalists, human rights activists, and political practitioners. The contributors come from diverse political, cultural, and religious backgrounds; each one drawing on a deep wellspring of scholarship, experience, sobriety, and passion. Collectively, they make a major contribution to understanding the dynamics of the mortal threat to the social pluralism upon which the survival of religious minorities depends."--Publisher.
-
Notes:Includes bobliographical references and index.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
-
ISBN:9781498561969 hardcover ; alkaline paper
1498561969 hardcover ; alkaline paper
-
Contents:Machine generated contents note: 1. Anatomy of Religious Cleansing: Non-Muslims in the Ottoman Empire (1914
1918) (Boston, October 22, 2014) / Taner Akcam
2. Dhimmis No More: Christians' Trauma in the Middle East (Bern, March 7, 2012) / Daniel Pipes
3. Syria, the "Arab Spring," and the Future of Christians and other Religious Minorities (Zurich, June 12, 2012) / Habib Malik
4. Islamist Majoritarian Democracy in Egypt: What it means for Religious Minorities (Zurich, November 28, 2012) / Mariz Tadros
5. "Arab Spring" and Its Aftermath: Implications for Muslim
Christian Relations (Zurich, May 30, 2013) / Michael Nazir-Ali
6. Preventing Genocide in the Middle East: The Continuing Relevance of the Turkish Experience and the Problem of Bias within the United Nations (Zurich, May 2, 2013) / Hannibal Travis
7. Remarks on the "Arab Spring" and Religious Minorities in a Shari'a-State (Zurich, November 19, 2013) / Bassam Tibi
8. Impact of the Arab Uprisings on Dhimmitude: Non-Muslims in the Middle East Today (Geneva, March 20, 2014) / Bat Ye'or
9. IS Caliphate and the West's Wars in Syria and Iraq: A Challenge to Religious Pluralism in the Middle East (Zurich, October 8, 2014) / Patrick Cockburn
10. Religious Pluralism in the Middle East: A Challenge to the International Community (Boston, March 25, 2015) / Amine Gemayel
11. Revisiting Turkey's Policy toward Religious Minorities on the Centenary of the Armenian Genocide (Zurich, April 1, 2015) / Cengiz Aktar
12. Saudi Regional Interventions in the Middle East: Consequences for Local Societies (Zurich, October 27, 2015) / Madawi Al-Rasheed
13. Can Religious Pluralism Survive Sectarian War in Syria and Beyond? (Zurich, March 14, 2016) / Fabrice Balanche
14. ISIS, Christians, and National Identity in the Middle East (Boston, April 7, 2016) / Joshua Landis
15. Persecution of Christians in Today's Middle East (Zurich, May 4, 2016) / Daniel Williams
16. Challenges of Social Pluralism in Post-Revolutionary Egypt (Zurich, June 14, 2016) / Mariz Tadros
17. Saddam Hussein, Operation Iraqi Freedom, and the Islamic State: Can Religious Pluralism Survive the Onslaught? (Zurich, October 25, 2016) / William Warda
18. Christians of Lebanon: Surviving amidst Chaos (Boston, November 9, 2016) / Marius Deeb
19. Social Pluralism, Religious Cleansing and "Hybrid Warfare" in Contemporary Syria (Pembroke, Oxford, November 22, 2016) / John Eibner
20. Christians of the Holy Land-Exodus, Disintegration, and Ideological Necrophilia (Zurich, May 22, 2017) / Franck Salameh.