000 01427nam a22002177a 4500
008 120307t xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a978-1-61977-461-2
040 _aES-MaBCA
_cES-MaBCA
245 _aReligion, identity, and countering violent extremism
_h[Recurso electrónico] PDF
260 _bThe Atlantic Council of the United States
_cSeptember 2016
_a030 15th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20005
300 _aRecurso online, 25 p.
490 _v2016
520 _aIn recent decades, Muslims have been debating political and social aspects of their religious teachings in new ways. The religious debates are connected to and sometimes stem in considerable part from underlying political and social trends demographic shifts; rising education; unaccountable and authoritarian governance; stuttering economic and governmental performance; and corruption. They cannot, however, be wholly reduced to those trends. Religion is not an isolated field, but neither is it simply a mask for other struggles; the terms and outcomes of religious debates matter in their own right.
650 0 _93690
_aReligión
650 0 _910900
_aRelaciones con las minorías
_xIdentidad cultural
650 0 _91670
_aIslamismo
650 0 _95470
_aRadicalismo
710 _914217
_aRafik Hariri Center For The Middle East
856 4 _uhttp://www.atlanticcouncil.org/images/publications/MEST_Religion_web_0921.pdf
_qPDF
942 _2udc
_cART
999 _c18599
_d18602