Book contents
- Human Dignity in Asia
- Human Dignity in Asia
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Editor and Contributors
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Introduction Human Dignity, Human Rights, and Cultural Change in Asia
- 1 Human Dignity in Indian Constitutional Adjudication
- 2 The Development of Individual Dignity in Japan
- 3 Constitutional Discourse on Human Dignity in South Korea
- 4 Human Dignity in the Jurisprudence of the Taiwan Constitutional Court
- 5 The Human Dignity Factor
- 6 Human Dignity in the Jurisprudence of the Indonesian Constitutional Court
- 7 Dignity as a Constitutional Value in Hong Kong
- 8 Human Dignity and Relational Constitutionalism in Singapore
- 9 Personal Dignity under Chinese
- 10 Virtue, Dignity, and Constitutional Democracy
- 11 Buddhist Philosophical Approaches to Human Dignity
- 12 Dignity and Status in Ancient and Medieval India
- 13 Human Dignity, Pancasila, and Islam
- 14 Catholicism and Human Dignity in the Philippines
- 15 Protestantism and Human Dignity in South Korea
- Index
13 - Human Dignity, Pancasila, and Islam
Contexts and Contestations in Indonesia
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 July 2022
- Human Dignity in Asia
- Human Dignity in Asia
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Editor and Contributors
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Introduction Human Dignity, Human Rights, and Cultural Change in Asia
- 1 Human Dignity in Indian Constitutional Adjudication
- 2 The Development of Individual Dignity in Japan
- 3 Constitutional Discourse on Human Dignity in South Korea
- 4 Human Dignity in the Jurisprudence of the Taiwan Constitutional Court
- 5 The Human Dignity Factor
- 6 Human Dignity in the Jurisprudence of the Indonesian Constitutional Court
- 7 Dignity as a Constitutional Value in Hong Kong
- 8 Human Dignity and Relational Constitutionalism in Singapore
- 9 Personal Dignity under Chinese
- 10 Virtue, Dignity, and Constitutional Democracy
- 11 Buddhist Philosophical Approaches to Human Dignity
- 12 Dignity and Status in Ancient and Medieval India
- 13 Human Dignity, Pancasila, and Islam
- 14 Catholicism and Human Dignity in the Philippines
- 15 Protestantism and Human Dignity in South Korea
- Index
Summary
This chapter contextualizes how ethical values drawn from Pancasila and Islam are mutually reinforcing in the formulation of human dignity. By using a genealogical approach, I argue that the pursuit of human dignity in Indonesia is debated in terms of the inviolability of human beings and the fulfilment of rights by the state. First, I show how the discourses surrounding human dignity by secular and Muslim nationalists in the colonial contexts coalesced with the pursuit of progress and the need for a sovereign nation. I also trace how secular and Muslim nationalists came to an agreement on the formulation of Pancasila and the 1945 Constitution of the Republic of Indonesia. Second, I draw values from Pancasila and the 1945 Constitution, in orienting the nation’s development and promotion of human dignity during the New Order regime. I also discusses the drawbacks of politicizing Pancasila and its impacts on the debates of human dignity and the way Islamic values were used as a framework for ethical and political considerations. I end the chapter by examining how Pancasila and Islam intersect as ethical frameworks in shaping human dignity as the fulfilment of rights.
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- Human Dignity in AsiaDialogue between Law and Culture, pp. 308 - 331Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022