Islam in the Balance

This concise and important book deals with the dimensional change in international conflicts and security pertaining to the power of ideas: Do ideas and/ or political ideologies threaten the security of regimes and states in ways that differ from those conventionally attributed to the mere balance...

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Autor principal: Amr G.E. Sabet
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: International Institute of Islamic Thought 2015
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/d3a6ea39ba3d4b63893d3ffaab929794
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:d3a6ea39ba3d4b63893d3ffaab9297942021-12-02T17:46:23ZIslam in the Balance10.35632/ajis.v32i3.9972690-37332690-3741https://doaj.org/article/d3a6ea39ba3d4b63893d3ffaab9297942015-07-01T00:00:00Zhttps://www.ajis.org/index.php/ajiss/article/view/997https://doaj.org/toc/2690-3733https://doaj.org/toc/2690-3741 This concise and important book deals with the dimensional change in international conflicts and security pertaining to the power of ideas: Do ideas and/ or political ideologies threaten the security of regimes and states in ways that differ from those conventionally attributed to the mere balance of military power? By studying the role of religious or transnational ideology in the Middle East in particular, the study aims to advance an understanding of “how, why, and when ideology affects threat perception and state policy” (p. vii) via two aspects, one related to ideational threat perception and the other to ideational balancing. Together they provide an analytical framework for understanding strategic interaction as an “ideational security dilemma” (p. vii) with a specific focus on how Egypt and Saudi Arabia have responded to threat perceptions emanating both from the rise and the activities of Iran and Sudan. These four dyads attempt to examine changes in threat perceptions before and after Islamists came to power in the latter two countries (p. 4). The idea behind this dyadic approach is to show how threat perceptions to national security are not altered due to increased hard power capabilities, but rather due to soft power projections. Rubin makes the interesting point that Egypt and Saudi Arabia felt more threatened by a militarily weak Sudan as well as a militarily degraded post-revolutionary Iran far more than they did during the time of the militarily powerful Shah (pp. 2-3). Much of this has to do with the point that it is not mere ideology or ideas that pose a threat to national security, but rather that they become so in their “projected” form (p. 4). The following six chapters elaborate on this simple and straightforward, yet highly significant and relevant, proposition. In the introductory chapter, Rubin develops his framework of analysis (the “ideational security dilemma”) and makes it clear that one of the study’s main purposes is “to take ideology seriously.” This is done within the realist framework that accepts the centrality of the state, as well as that of neo-classical realism (p. 124) which focuses on the foreign policy emanating from domestic cultural and perceptual variables (p. 18). The study refocuses attention on ideational projections that resonate with a foreign domestic audience and that may consequently bring about a transnational response, thereby exacerbating internal societal unrest ... Amr G.E. SabetInternational Institute of Islamic ThoughtarticleIslamBP1-253ENAmerican Journal of Islam and Society, Vol 32, Iss 3 (2015)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic Islam
BP1-253
spellingShingle Islam
BP1-253
Amr G.E. Sabet
Islam in the Balance
description This concise and important book deals with the dimensional change in international conflicts and security pertaining to the power of ideas: Do ideas and/ or political ideologies threaten the security of regimes and states in ways that differ from those conventionally attributed to the mere balance of military power? By studying the role of religious or transnational ideology in the Middle East in particular, the study aims to advance an understanding of “how, why, and when ideology affects threat perception and state policy” (p. vii) via two aspects, one related to ideational threat perception and the other to ideational balancing. Together they provide an analytical framework for understanding strategic interaction as an “ideational security dilemma” (p. vii) with a specific focus on how Egypt and Saudi Arabia have responded to threat perceptions emanating both from the rise and the activities of Iran and Sudan. These four dyads attempt to examine changes in threat perceptions before and after Islamists came to power in the latter two countries (p. 4). The idea behind this dyadic approach is to show how threat perceptions to national security are not altered due to increased hard power capabilities, but rather due to soft power projections. Rubin makes the interesting point that Egypt and Saudi Arabia felt more threatened by a militarily weak Sudan as well as a militarily degraded post-revolutionary Iran far more than they did during the time of the militarily powerful Shah (pp. 2-3). Much of this has to do with the point that it is not mere ideology or ideas that pose a threat to national security, but rather that they become so in their “projected” form (p. 4). The following six chapters elaborate on this simple and straightforward, yet highly significant and relevant, proposition. In the introductory chapter, Rubin develops his framework of analysis (the “ideational security dilemma”) and makes it clear that one of the study’s main purposes is “to take ideology seriously.” This is done within the realist framework that accepts the centrality of the state, as well as that of neo-classical realism (p. 124) which focuses on the foreign policy emanating from domestic cultural and perceptual variables (p. 18). The study refocuses attention on ideational projections that resonate with a foreign domestic audience and that may consequently bring about a transnational response, thereby exacerbating internal societal unrest ...
format article
author Amr G.E. Sabet
author_facet Amr G.E. Sabet
author_sort Amr G.E. Sabet
title Islam in the Balance
title_short Islam in the Balance
title_full Islam in the Balance
title_fullStr Islam in the Balance
title_full_unstemmed Islam in the Balance
title_sort islam in the balance
publisher International Institute of Islamic Thought
publishDate 2015
url https://doaj.org/article/d3a6ea39ba3d4b63893d3ffaab929794
work_keys_str_mv AT amrgesabet islaminthebalance
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