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Crafting a New Alliance with the Muslim World
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 September 2012
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Most Muslims now live in democracies—a fact that is rarely acknowledged. The Muslim world has also elected five women heads of state in the past decade. These two indicators are symbolic of the diversity within the Muslim world, and also of the direction in which that world is headed.
Few Muslims wish to be classified in a category that would prevent them from participating in the benefits of modernity. The pull of mass education, commerce, trade, and engagement with the world is strong. But these possibilities are openings that radical Islam is attempting to close off, which has led to an ideological civil war within Islam. In country after country, the middle class, the elite, and most of the poor are frightened by an austere version of theocratic Islam that has managed to gain political leverage. In order to sustain modern governments and access to the world in which they want to be active contributors, Muslims need an alliance with the West—not a confrontation.
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- Copyright © Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs 2002
References
1 For an analysis of the spread of democracy in the world, see United Nations Development Programme Human Development Report 2002: Deepening Democracy in a Fragmented World 2002 New YorkUnited Nations Development ProgrammeGoogle Scholar.
2 For an excellent review of the dilemmas involved in addressing these problems, see Carothers, ThomasAiding Democracy Abroad: The Learning Curve 1999 Washington, D.C.Carnegie Endowment for International PeaceGoogle Scholar.