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Contemporary Islamic Ethics*

Summer 2013

For Muslims committed to living Islam as a way of life, contemporary society offers many challenges. A commitment to the common good exists in tension with the need to protect individual rights. The desire to uphold family values may conflict with the need to defend pluralism and civil liberties. In a world threatened with violence from many sources, self-defense and security take on new meaning. In this class, we will examine these tensions and the Islamic principles that can help Muslims live ethically and with integrity in American society. Case studies will include debates about abortion, gay marriage, militarism and minimum wage.

Monday, June 3 through Friday, June 7, 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. 

Omer Awass

Visiting Professor of Islamic Studies and Christian-Muslim Relations
(860) 509-9500
Downloads: 
Books: 

Muhammad al-Tahir, Ibn Ashur: Treatise on Maqāṣid al-Shariʽah, translated by Mohamed El-Tahir El-Mesawi. London and Washington, DC: International Institute of Islamic Thought, 2006. Buy now

(To be read in its entirety along with a submission of a book review prior to the beginning of classes. More will be said about this in the Description of Assignments).