World Journal of Islamic History and Civilization

                            

DEPARTMENT OF ISLAMIC HISTORY & CIVILIZATION
Academy of Islamic Studies, University Malaya, Malaysia
THE WORLD JOURNAL OF ISLAMIC HISTORY AND CIVILIZATION
CALL FOR PAPERS SUBMISSIONS
We are excited to announce the all-new launch of our new online “World Journal of Islamic History and Civilization” which was initiated only a few weeks ago. This is a professional peer-reviewed journal for the publication of interdisciplinary scientific and social research on Islamic History and Civilization. This journal addresses the vast body of knowledge and scholarship on issues relevant to area of Islamic history and Civilization, and Islamic studies in general. In commemoration of the beginning of this journal, all submissions for 2011 quarterly issues will be taken in free of charge.
We invite all interested academicians and researchers to take part in our new surging academic journey. Kindly refer to the following link: (http://idosi.org/wjihc/wjihc.htm) for further details. Please send your submissions to: Dr. Mohd Roslan Mod Nor, Journal Chief Editor at the following address: m_roslan@um.edu.my or roslan.um@gmail.com
We eagerly anticipate receiving your submissions.

The World Journal of Islamic History and Civilization (WJIHC)

Journal: Contemporary Islamic Studies

                                  

QScience.com – Member of Qatar Foundation
Journal: Contemporary Islamic Studies
Editor-in-chief: Hatem El-Karanshawy – Qatar Faculty of Islamic Studies, Doha, Qatar
ISSN: 2220-2757
                                           
SUBMIT YOUR ARTICLE TO QSCIENCE.COM FOR RAPID PUBLICATION AND HIGH VISIBILITY
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Dear Sir/madam,
I am writing  to encourage you to submit your article to Contemporary Islamic Studies a new international, peer-reviewed, open access journal from QScience.com Follow this link to submit your article: http://www.edmgr.com/cis/
Contemporary Islamic Studies [http://www.qscience.com/loi/cis/] is an interdisciplinary journal set to become the number one open access journal covering key issues in its field.
         
Contemporary Islamic Studies [http://www.qscience.com/loi/cis/]; addresses the following major themes in Islamic studies including:
– Contemporary Islamic jurisprudence
– Islamic history and civilization
– Comparative religions and modern Islamic thought
– Islamic economics and finance
– Public policy in Islam
Learn more about our internationally recognized editorial board here:
         
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– Abstracts translated into Arabic
– Authors keep full copyright to their work through Creative Commons licenses
– Enforcement of rigid peer-review and a transparent editorial process
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– High visibility and exposure through targeted and well-resourced marketing campaigns
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– Engagement of an internationally experienced publishing team
Be part of one of the world’s fastest growing research communities and publish your article with us today.
Details on how to submit your manuscript [http://www.edmgr.com/cis/] are available at QScience.com [http://www.qscience.com/page/cis/ji_cis].
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About QScience.com
QScience.com is the innovative and collaborative, peer-reviewed, online publishing platform from Bloomsbury Qatar Foundation Journals (BQFJ). It offers a fast and transparent scholarly publishing process, which is centered on the author, bringing their research to a global audience.
           
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Bloomsbury Qatar Foundation Journals
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The Making of Saints in the Muslim World in 20th Century

                                             
Conference: The Making of Saints in the Muslim World in 20th Century
CNRS- Paris – 2-3 December 2011
(All are welcome, Main language of program is English)

Conveners:

Michel BOIVIN, Pedram KHOSRONEJAD, Pierre-Jean LUIZARD, Thierry ZARCONE

Groupe Societes, Religions, La?cit?s
GSRL – UMR 8582 – CNRS

Department of Social Anthropology,
University of St Andrews, Scotland

Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes – Sorbonne

Centre d’etudes sur l’Inde et l’Asie du Sud
CEIAS – UMR 8564 – CNRS ? EHESS

FRIDAY 2 DECEMBER

9:30 Opening
9:45 Introduction to the program

Session 1: Africa and the Middle East

Chair: Pedram Khosronejad

10:00 Cheikh ANTA BABOU (University of Pennsylvania, USA)
The making of a saint: an exploration of the foundations of Amadou Bamba’s religious authority

10: 40 Mark SEDGWICK (Aarhus University, Denmark)
The Making of a Sufi Saint of the Twentieth Century: Shaikh Ahmad al- Alawi and the European Construction of Sufism

11:20 Morning Coffee

11:45 Paulo PINTO (Universidade Federal Fluminense, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil)
The Metamorphosis of Baraka: Ritual, Sainthood and Charismatic Succession in Syrian Sufism

12:25 Questions and discussion
13:00 Lunch Break

Session 2: Shi’ite World and Turkey

Chair: Michel Boivin

15:00 Pedram KHOSRONEJAD (Department of Social Anthropology, University of St- Andrews – Scotland)
Immortal Spirits: Materiality and Immateriality of Iran-Iraq War Martyrs

15:40 Pierre-Jean LUIZARD (CNRS-GSRL/EPHE, Paris, France)
The two Sadr in Iraq : from political activism to sanctification or how martyrdom leads to sainthood

16:20 Afternoon Tea

16:45 Thierry ZARCONE (CNRS-GSRL/EPHE, Paris, France)
The Making of Saints in Republican Turkey: Sufi shaykhs versus Sufis

17:25 – 18:00 Questions and discussion
19:15 Dinner

SATURDAY 3 DECEMBER

Session 3: India Subcontinent and Central Asia

Chair: Pierre-Jean Luizard

10:00 Iqbal AKHTAR (University of Edinburgh, Scotland)
A modern reimaging of the medieval Khoja saint

10:40 Michel BOIVIN (CNRS/CEIAS, Paris, France)
The ‘hidden Sufi’ of India: building sainthood among the Hindu followers of Sufi pir-s

11:20 Morning Coffee

11:45 Alexandre PAPAS (CNRS-CETOBAC/EHESS, Paris, France)
Deconstructing saints: The anti-hagiographic literature in Xinjiang

12:25 Questions and discussion
13:00 Conclusion

Venue:
CNRS
59-61, Rue Pouchet, 75849 Paris
Salle de conference – RDC
Tel. : 33 (0)1 40 25 10 94
Plan d’acces
http://www.gsrl.cnrs.fr/sites/gsrl/IMG/pdf/Plan_d_acces_GSRL.pdf

Cultural Sociology of the Middle East, Asia, and Africa: An Encyclopedia

                 
Read my encyclopedic entries regarding Nationalism (1920 to present), Qatar (1920 to present), and Suez Canal (1250 to 1920).

About the encyclopedia:
            
In our age of globalization and multiculturalism, it has never been more important for Americans to understand and appreciate foreign cultures and how people live, love, and learn in areas of the world unfamiliar to most U.S. students and the general public.
 

The four volumes in our cultural sociology reference encyclopedia take a step forward in this endeavor by presenting concise information on those regions likely to be most “foreign” to U.S. students: the Middle East, Asia, and Africa. The intent is to convey what daily life is like for people in these selected regions.

It is hoped entries within these volumes will aid readers in efforts to understand the importance of cultural sociology, to appreciate the effects of cultural forces around the world, and to learn the history of countries and cultures within these important regions.

Editors:

– Andrea L. Stanton        
– Edward Ramsamy        
– Peter J. Seybolt             
– Carolyn M. Elliott          
Publication details:
– January 2012                  
– 1976 pages      
– SAGE Publications, Inc 
– ISBN: 9781412981767
               
Pre-Publication Price: $450.00

Comparative Regionalisms: Changing Forms of Governance in Asia, Africa and the Americas and the Effects on the World Order

                
The course fosters new approaches to the study of regionalisms in Asia, Africa and the Americas. Building on, but seeking to go beyond the European experience the course examines the rise of regions after World War II and the resurgence of the idea in and from the 1980s. It considers the different interpretations, values and expectations assigned to ‘region’, from regional free trade agreements to security communities to supra-national integrative projects. The course will examine how such regions vary across time and geography, assuming different characteristics, and will also consider to what extent regions are a result of and/or a response to globalization and the extent to which they constitute and shape global order.

The aim of the course is three-fold: to introduce varieties of new regionalisms in Asia, Africa and the Americas; critically engage extant theories of regionalism and discuss the extent to which western theories and models can be applied to other types of regionalism; and examine questions of inter-regional relations and regional change. The course will pay special attention to the origins, the specific features, and the changing characters of the various regions, and their effects on world order. Among the key questions discussed in the course are the following: when is a region a region?; how and when do regions rise to international prominence?; how do different regions interact with each other (if at all)?; how do regions and types of regionalism change? These questions are not purely academic: understanding why regions form, organize and institutionalize can shed light on the process of change such regions undergo, but also contributes to understanding processes of inter-regional relations, so far left at the margins of academic debates. Ultimately they speak to one of the key questions in the study of international relations, namely that of war and peace. The course also pays special attention to methodological issues arising from inter-regional comparisons, as well as to the extent to which western theories, largely designed to account for the process of European integration, can also explain non-western varieties of regionalism.

Period

02-07-2012 – 12-07-2012 (2 weeks)

Target group

The course encourages applications from graduate students (PhD, advanced MA), early career scholars (post-docs) and professionals in the social sciences, and especially from the fields of comparative politics, international relations, international political economy, political science, and sociology. Some familiarity with the regions discussed in the course and expertise in non-European regions would be an advantage. rnUndergraduates without a university degree will not be considered.

Course aim

The aim of the course is three-fold: first to introduce varieties of new regionalisms in Asia, Africa and the Americas; critically engage extant theories of regionalism and discuss the extent to which western theories and models can be applied to other types of regionalism; examine questions of inter-regional relations and regional change. The course also pays special attention to methodological issues pertaining to the study of comparative regionalism.

Credits

2.0 ECTS credits
The ECTS points offered by this course may be accepted for credit transfer by the participants’ home universities. Those who wish to obtain these credits should inquire about the possible transfer at their home institution prior to their enrollment. The Summer University Office will send a transcript to those who have fulfilled all the necessary course requirements and request one.

Course fee

Course leader

Amitav Acharya, School of International Service American University, Washington D.C., USA, Matteo Fumagalli, Department of International Relations and European Studies, Central European University, Budapest,

Scholarships

Financial aid is available in the following categories:
– tuition waiver,
– travel grant (full or partial)
– accommodation
New deadline for applications is February, 29.