Islamic Public Value

Hardback

Islamic Public Value

Theory, Practice, and Administration of Indigenous Cooperative Institutions

9781035333639 Edward Elgar Publishing
Edited by Wolfgang Drechsler, Professor of Governance, Ragnar Nurkse Department, TalTech, Estonia, Honorary Professor, Institute of Innovation and Public Purpose, University College London, UK and Adjunct Professor, Faculty of Administrative Sciences, Universitas Indonesia, Salah Chafik, Senior Research Fellow, Institute for Innovation and Public Purpose, University College London, UK and Visiting Research Fellow, Ragnar Nurkse Department, TalTech, Estonia and Rainer Kattel, Professor of Innovation and Public Governance and Deputy Director, Institute for Innovation and Public Purpose, University College London, UK
Publication Date: May 2025 ISBN: 978 1 03533 363 9 Extent: c 432 pp
This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 License. It is free to read, download and share on Elgaronline.com.

This insightful book examines the public value aspects of Non-Western Public Administration (NWPA) and establishes the presence of Islamic Public Administration in NWPA. It investigates how Islamic institutions across state, local, and community levels collaborate to meet societal needs, foster inclusion, and enhance public value. Renowned experts propose faith-based perspectives to the field of public value and present diverse research into the relationship between religion and public administration.

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This insightful book examines the public value aspects of Non-Western Public Administration (NWPA) and establishes the presence of Islamic Public Administration in NWPA. It investigates how Islamic institutions across state, local, and community levels collaborate to meet societal needs, foster inclusion, and enhance public value.

Renowned experts propose faith-based perspectives to the field of public value and present diverse research into the relationship between religion and public administration. Chapters discuss Islamic indigenous governance institutions as functional examples of Islamic public administration and as existing alternatives to dominant global-Western models. They highlight historical cases of Islamic governance and administration that demonstrate practical approaches and solutions in contemporary society. The book’s international case studies span Muslim-majority and -minority contexts based on ethnographic fieldwork and provide an empirical basis for the book’s thought-provoking arguments.

Islamic Public Value is a vital resource for students and academics in politics, public administration, regulation and governance and Islamic studies. Its exploration of non-Western governance models also makes it an essential guide for practitioners and policymakers in public management and policy.
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