Recognition of the fragility of Lebanon, a state that is officially secular but which in fact is upheld by criteria of communal belonging, led the Shi'ite thinker and imam Muhammad Mahdī Shamseddine (1936-2001) to relaunch the model of the civic state (dawla madaniyya), in which faith, without being denied or privatized, does not determine the rights of individuals.

Diez, M., Muhammad Mahdi, S., A Government without Religion for Religious Citizens, <<OASIS>>, 2012; 16 (ii): 76-79 [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/328720]

A Government without Religion for Religious Citizens

Diez, Martino
Secondo
;
2012

Abstract

Recognition of the fragility of Lebanon, a state that is officially secular but which in fact is upheld by criteria of communal belonging, led the Shi'ite thinker and imam Muhammad Mahdī Shamseddine (1936-2001) to relaunch the model of the civic state (dawla madaniyya), in which faith, without being denied or privatized, does not determine the rights of individuals.
2012
Inglese
Diez, M., Muhammad Mahdi, S., A Government without Religion for Religious Citizens, <<OASIS>>, 2012; 16 (ii): 76-79 [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/328720]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10807/328720
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