Muslim Politics Review https://journal.uiii.ac.id/index.php/mpr <p align="justify">Muslim Politics Review is an international peer-reviewed journal published by the Faculty of Social Sciences of the Indonesian International Islamic University (UIII) that focuses on the multifaceted relationships between religion and political and socio-economic development of Muslim states and societies. The journal examines political dynamics within Muslim societies and their responses to global world.</p> <p align="justify">Broadly defined, the journal invites scholarly works dealing with theoretical and empirical issues on the domestic politics and international relations of the Muslim societies. It opens to both qualitative and quantitative works from all methodological standpoints. While the journal emphasizes the substantive works, it also welcomes research notes that address methodological challenges in studying the politics of the Muslim societies. Concurrently, Muslim Politics Review supports a broad research agenda aimed at building inter-disciplinary bridges with relevant areas and invigorating cross-disciplinary debate on the complexity of Muslim world.</p> <p align="justify">The Editorial Board welcomes scholars, researchers, and practitioners to submit scholarly articles to be published through this journal. All articles will be reviewed by experts before accepted for publication. Each author is solely responsible for the content of published articles.</p> <p align="justify">Muslim Politics Review has become a <a href="http://www.crossref.org/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener"><strong>CrossRef Member</strong></a> since year 2022. Therefore, all articles published by Muslim Politics Review will have unique DOI number.</p> <p><strong>P-ISSN: 2829-3568<br></strong><strong>E-ISSN: 2964-979X<br></strong></p> en-US mpr.journal@office.uiii.ac.id (A'an Suryana) mpr.journal@office.uiii.ac.id (Syahrul Miladi Firmansyah) Mon, 29 Dec 2025 00:00:00 +0000 OJS 3.1.2.4 http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss 60 Foreword https://journal.uiii.ac.id/index.php/mpr/article/view/528 <p>Women’s empowerment dominates this eighth edition of Muslim Politics Review [Vol. 4, No. 2, December 2025]. The edition’s first three articles discuss the challenges that women face in both culture and the political systems they live in, such as in India, Indonesia, the Philippines, and Bangladesh. Discussing these challenges is important: women are increasingly assuming important roles in Muslim societies, particularly thanks to better access to education and work opportunities. At the same time, the dual pressures of women’s professional roles and traditional care roles such as being a mother present unique challenge. So, as more women shape social and political affairs in Global South countries, their roles deserve scrutiny in this edition of Muslim Politics Review.</p> Philips J. Vermonte; A’an Suryana Copyright (c) 2025 Philips J. Vermonte; A’an Suryana https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0 https://journal.uiii.ac.id/index.php/mpr/article/view/528 Mon, 29 Dec 2025 05:46:50 +0000 Governing Religion: Colonial Legality, State, and the Case of Hijab in India https://journal.uiii.ac.id/index.php/mpr/article/view/508 <p>In March 2022, India’s Karnataka High Court ruled that the wearing of hijab by Muslim students was not an ‘essential religious practice’ under Islam. This raised a question of authority to interpret Islamic law, as the judges effectively decided what constitutes Islam legitimately and what does not. To trace the genealogy of these modes of governing religion, the paper examines three connected moments—the Karnataka hijab case, the Indian Constituent Assembly debates of 1946-1949, and the codification of Islamic law by the British colonial government—as instances in which the authority of the state emerges in judicial, constitutional, and colonial registers respectively. Across these sites, using genealogical method, this article shows how the state has continuously reorganized Islamic legal and ethical traditions into manageable forms, producing self-organizing Muslim subjects. I argue that the court’s capacity to define and limit Islamic norms is structurally embedded in the grammar of the modern state and its logic of governance, inherited and reconfigured from colonial techniques of defining and regulating religion.</p> Thahir Jamal Kiliyamannil Copyright (c) 2025 Thahir Jamal Kiliyamannil https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0 https://journal.uiii.ac.id/index.php/mpr/article/view/508 Mon, 29 Dec 2025 05:55:04 +0000 Post-Conflict Political Dynamics in Aceh and Bangsamoro: Religious Symbols and Patrimonialism in Practice https://journal.uiii.ac.id/index.php/mpr/article/view/509 <p>Post-conflict Aceh and Bangsamoro continue to face significant governance challenges marked by ineffective autonomy and the consolidation of religiously-grounded political authority. While special autonomy theoretically provides an inclusive framework for development, in practice, authority remains monopolized by elites who draw legitimacy from Islamic symbols. The rise of figures labeled as <em>‘abang-abang syar’i’</em> (male leaders who publicly represent Islam) demonstrates how public displays of piety are often intertwined with patronage, collusion and kinship-based power consolidation. In Aceh, widespread trust in religious scholars conceals an accommodative and hierarchical power structure, while in Bangsamoro, religious rhetoric is strategically deployed to distribute benefits narrowly within elite circles. This study adopts a comparative perspective and a theoretical framework integrating Islamic patrimonialism, moral politics, masculinity, and Islamic neopopulism. The findings suggest that religious symbolism primarily operates as aesthetic legitimation, while entrenched corruption and patronage networks continue to undermine inclusive, accountable, and socially-just governance.</p> Syarifah Huswatun Miswar, King Alizon M. Camral Copyright (c) 2025 Syarifah Huswatun Miswar, King Alizon M. Camral https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0 https://journal.uiii.ac.id/index.php/mpr/article/view/509 Mon, 29 Dec 2025 06:04:24 +0000 Faith and Empowerment among Bangladeshi Muslim Women https://journal.uiii.ac.id/index.php/mpr/article/view/510 <p>This study explores whether Islam in Bangladesh supports or restricts women's empowerment. Using qualitative analysis of peer-reviewed literature, policy documents, and digital content, the research examines how religious teachings, cultural norms, and social realities interact. Although Islamic teachings emphasize justice, consent, and women's economic rights, these ideals are often unevenly applied due to patriarchal customs, informal dispute parties, and selective religious interpretations. The findings show that practices such as wearing the hijab, praying, and studying the Quran help many women build discipline, dignity, and social capital, which strengthens their confidence, mobility, and voice. At the same time, the same religious spaces, both offline and online, can become restrictive through social monitoring, ‘religious vigilantism’, family norms, and barriers in the job market. While legal protections and systems such as microfinance create new opportunities, their impact often remains limited because of men’s mediation, institutional weakness, and poor enforcement. Overall, the study argues that women's empowerment should not be viewed only through a secular religious divide but through a faith-sensitive lens. It highlights the need for justice-based religious education, inclusive religious leadership, digital safety and literacy, and stronger implementation of legal rights. The findings suggest that religion can function both as a resource and a barrier, and its impact depends on factors such as class, location, disability, and access to digital platforms.</p> Md. Abdullah Al Mamun, Md. Nadim Hossen Copyright (c) 2025 Md. Abdullah Al Mamun, Md. Nadim Hossen https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0 https://journal.uiii.ac.id/index.php/mpr/article/view/510 Mon, 29 Dec 2025 06:29:51 +0000 When Piety is Framed as Threatening: The Hijrah Movement within the Politics of Religious Moderation in Indonesia https://journal.uiii.ac.id/index.php/mpr/article/view/511 <p>This article investigates how the <em>hijrah</em> movement in Indonesia – characterized by a return to Islamic pious practices, lifestyle changes, and global Muslim identity – is increasingly constructed as a security threat within Indonesia’s religious moderation agenda. Drawing on discourse analysis of state narratives, media portrayals, field research, and statements from mainstream Islamic organizations, the study finds that <em>hijrah</em> is framed not merely as a cultural or spiritual trend but as a potential conduit for ideological deviation and radicalization. Focusing on local responses in urban centers such as Jakarta and Bandung, it examines how the movement and its participants are positioned against state-sanctioned visions of moderate Islam. Using securitization theory and grounded Foucauldian analysis, the article argues that the state's discursive alignment of <em>hijrah</em> with extremism enables soft repression and delegitimization of non-violent yet non-conforming Islamic expressions. This securitizing logic risks narrowing Indonesia’s religious pluralism by stigmatizing identity-based piety, thereby undermining the very goals of tolerance and harmony that moderation policies claim to promote.</p> Hamzah Fansuri Copyright (c) 2025 Hamzah Fansuri https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0 https://journal.uiii.ac.id/index.php/mpr/article/view/511 Mon, 29 Dec 2025 06:37:45 +0000 When Religious Conservatism Intertwines with Anti-Scientism: Friday Prayers in the Time of Corona in Semarang, Indonesia https://journal.uiii.ac.id/index.php/mpr/article/view/512 <p>This article discusses the implementation of Friday prayers during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic in Indonesia. It focuses on why Islamic preachers, mosque administrators, and religious leaders (<em>ʿulamā</em>) continued to hold congregational prayers despite appeals and even prohibition from the government, scientists, and Islamic organizations. By examining the contents of 67 Friday prayers’ sermons from 67 mosques in Semarang, Central Java, in-depth interviews with <em>ʿulamāʾ</em>, and journalistic reports, we argue that, firstly, a growing trend of religious conservatism influenced the reasons behind the performance of Friday prayers. Secondly, most Islamic preachers, mosque administrators, and religious leaders ignored scientists’ advice on appropriate COVID-19 health protocols. Finally, there was a sense of bewilderment at mosques, caused by poor communication and ambiguous messages from the government and Islamic mass organizations. All in all, these strong religious factors reflect the rapid growth of conservative forms of Islam in post-New Order Indonesia.</p> Wijayanto Wijayanto, Muhammad Adnan, Aniello Iannone, Yanwar Pribadi Copyright (c) 2025 Wijayanto Wijayanto, Muhammad Adnan, Aniello Iannone, Yanwar Pribadi https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0 https://journal.uiii.ac.id/index.php/mpr/article/view/512 Mon, 29 Dec 2025 06:46:25 +0000 China's Soft Power in Indonesia: Eliminating the Remnants of Suharto’s US-Backed Anti-Communist Propaganda https://journal.uiii.ac.id/index.php/mpr/article/view/513 <p>The paper examines the extent to which China's ‘soft power’ in Indonesia is effective in reducing negative perceptions of the anti-communist propaganda launched by the United States-backed Suharto regime during the Cold War. Using theoretical framework proposed by Joseph S. Nye and relevant theories from Joshua Kurlantzick, the study finds that China's soft power performance in Indonesia is significant. After years of harboring a negative image due to anti-communist campaigns, a new, friendlier image of China is emerging. This transformation is reflected by a 2025 Pew Research Center survey, which shows show that 65 percent of Indonesians have a positive perception of China. There are several dimensions of soft power I discuss in this paper, ranging from educational diplomacy such as providing scholarships for Indonesian students; religious diplomacy or ‘Islamic diplomacy’ with through Indonesia’s two largest religious organizations, Nahdlatul Ulama and Muhammadiyah; and the establishment of Confucius Institutes on university campuses. These components were preceded by vigorous economic diplomacy by China, particularly during the Joko Widodo presidency (2014-2024), and were later reinforced by expanding Chinese digital diplomacy, which takes the form of entertainment and gaming platforms for young people, further distancing China from being perceived as a threat. Overall, this demonstrates how China’s soft power efforts have helped to mitigate the lingering negative perceptions of China linked to the Indonesian Communist Party of the mid-twentieth century.</p> Ahmad Nurcholis Copyright (c) 2025 Ahmad Nurcholis https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0 https://journal.uiii.ac.id/index.php/mpr/article/view/513 Mon, 29 Dec 2025 06:54:57 +0000 Book Review of Is the Bangladesh Paradox Sustainable? https://journal.uiii.ac.id/index.php/mpr/article/view/471 <p data-id="79ba2c95-2cc5-4039-ae9a-0da4853ee128" data-pm-slice="1 1 []">The book <em data-start="24" data-end="101">Is the Bangladesh Paradox Sustainable? The Institutional Diagnostic Project</em>, edited by Selim Raihan, François Bourguignon, and Umar Salam, delves into the puzzling question of how Bangladesh has managed to achieve sustained economic growth and social progress despite weak formal institutions and governance structures. The volume examines the "Bangladesh paradox" through a mix of empirical case studies and theoretical insights, highlighting that informal arrangements and sector-specific elite bargains have played a crucial role in the country’s development. The book challenges dominant theories of political economy, particularly the claim by Acemoglu and Robinson that inclusive institutions are necessary for development. The volume further explores key sectors such as the RMG industry, banking, taxation, land management, and the judiciar for understanding how adaptive governance mechanisms have compensated for institutional fragility. Despite Bangladesh's success, the book warns of the risks posed by rising inequality, climate change, and elite capture, suggesting that while informal institutions can sustain growth temporarily, they may not be sufficient in the long term. Overall, the book provides valuable insights for both scholars and policymakers on the complexities of development in Bangladesh.</p> Abdur Rahman Copyright (c) https://journal.uiii.ac.id/index.php/mpr/article/view/471 Mon, 29 Dec 2025 07:00:48 +0000 Book Review: Islam in a Secular State – Muslim Activism in Singapore https://journal.uiii.ac.id/index.php/mpr/article/view/454 Sheikh Mohamad Farouq Copyright (c) https://journal.uiii.ac.id/index.php/mpr/article/view/454 Mon, 29 Dec 2025 07:06:03 +0000