You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
Muslim Mothering is an interdisciplinary volume, concentrating on the experiences of Muslim mothers, largely in the contemporary period. The volume is notable for the global range of its contributors and topics, indicative of the number of Muslim majority national contexts and large and diverse Muslim diaspora of today’s world. While motherhood is highly valued in the sacred texts of Islam, the lived reality of Muslim mothers demonstrates that their lives do not often conform with traditional religious paradigms. For instance, prominent among the themes uniting these essays from diverse global contexts are the challenges facing Muslim mothers to protect and nurture their children in the co...
The implications of population ageing have long concerned politicians, policy makers and governmental and non-governmental organizations in the welfare states of Europe. However, an ageing workforce is increasingly a matter of concern for the developed and fast-developing countries of Asia. Japan leads the field in this respect on account of the speed of its postwar economic development. But the little tigers of Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea and Taiwan are poised to catch up, and Malaysia, though in the second tier of developing Asian economics, faces the prospect of population ageing sufficient to daunt an as yet under-prepared infrastructure for old age support. This book is the first ...
Halal has become more than just an eating habit of Muslims around the world in today’s global economy. It has evolved into a giant economic phenomenon which has affected the global ecosystem beyond the boundaries of religion, politics, culture and ethnicity. Politics, various halal businesses, social entities including geographical location play a part to reflect the complexity of the halal ecosystem. Discussions on its various aspects are richly illustrated through interdisciplinary global perspectives from students and scholars working across disciplines: social sciences, religious studies, humanities and sciences. Global Halal Perspectives — past, present and future brings forth a special set of knowledge and information that even the public will find interesting. This book is the outcome of a research funded by the Ministry of Higher Education (MOHE) Malaysia through its Fundamental Research Grant Scheme (S/O 13246).
1; General works and history -- 2; Crime and delinquency -- 3; Economic conditions, employment aspects, status and women's role in development -- 4; Education -- 5; Feminism and women's rights -- 6; Health and welfare -- 7; Legal statuss, women and family law -- 8; Literary aspects, women in literature, mass media and the arts -- 9; Marriage and divorce, fertility and demography -- 10; Muslim women and islam -- 11; Political activities and public life -- 12; Socio-cultural conditions, status in society, sociological and anthtopological studies -- 13; Technology and science.
Shopping with Allah illustrates the ways in which religion is mobilised in package tourism and how spiritual, economic and gendered practices are combined in a form of tourism where the goal is not purely leisure but also ethical and spiritual cultivation. Focusing on the intersection of gender and Islam, Viola Thimm shows how this intersection develops and changes in a pilgrimage-tourism nexus as part of capitalist and halal consumer markets. Based on extensive ethnographic fieldwork in Malaysia, the United Arab Emirates and Oman, Thimm sheds light on how Islam and gender frame Malaysian religious tourism and pilgrimage to the Arabian Peninsula, but she raises many issues that are of great ...
This compelling account offers a unique insight into the modern Islamic corporation.
The book examines three issues in entrepreneurship that are often overlooked yet powerful when taken together. The first is the way people learn gender roles and how this in turn affects their entrepreneurial behavior. The second are differences between two major population groups in Malaysia, the Malays and the Chinese, specifically in terms of their respective levels of societal masculinity. The third is entrepreneurial innovation. By combining these topics and examining how they apply to a sample of Malaysian women entrepreneurs, the author produces genuinely new, insightful and occasionally counter-intuitive findings such as Malay women entrepreneurs’ lower level of uncertainty avoidance compared to Chinese women entrepreneurs. Another intriguing discovery is her radical overhaul of the construct of ego orientation, which gives a new angle on the old idea of entrepreneurs as people who are different from the rest of us. In all, the study poses some challenges to long-standing but infrequently tested ideas about the nature of entrepreneurs and their behavior.
None
Directory of professors in the University of Malaya.
This paper examines the construction and representation of women in Malaysia by government, Islamist groups, Muslim feminists and the media, particularly popular women's magazines.