Fitted sharia in democratizing Indonesia
Abstract
This article argues that the so-called sharia-inspired regulations have been locally fitted through democratic processes that engaged together the elected legislative body and the executive office as well as various social groups. It bases on a qualitative fieldwork in Cianjur, a district in West Java Indonesia. There are three underpinning factors to the fitted sharia. First, it is possible because the discursive elements of sharia that enabled the Islamists to find a local and perhaps diluted, and more moderate formulation of sharia. Second, social diversity with no single group predominating required compromise and political alliance within and between the Islamist and non-Islamist groups. Third, the so-called sharia has number of secular functions related to politics, economy, and local custom that eventually brought the contesting groups to compromise. Thus, the resurgence of the sharia-inspired regulation is driven by various factors ranging from religiosity and piety to the practical and pragmatic reasons. © 2018, State Islamic University of Sunan Ampel. All rights reserved.
Date
2018Author
Ikhwan, Hakimul (57207623178)
Metadata
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https://doi.org/10.15642/JIIS.2018.12.1.17-44https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85062676480&doi=10.15642%2fJIIS.2018.12.1.17-44&partnerID=40&md5=792fc52fe04d24ade88ee0a14aa11d40
http://digilib.fisipol.ugm.ac.id/repo/handle/15717717/21754