The postliberal politics of halal: new directions in the civilizing process?

Authors

  • John Lever University of Huddersfield Business School

Abstract

This paper examines the emergence of postliberal halal politics in European societies. Building on research undertaken during the EU funded Dialrel project, it examines how the Malaysian state is inserting hegemonic claims into transnational space in order to dominate the international halal market. Moving beyond the idea of horizontally aligned networks of transnational power as the dominant framework for understanding social and economic change, the paper explores the complex interweaving of the large-scale macro processes and everyday micro practices underpinning the rise of Malaysia’s postliberal halal strategy. It is argued that the processes of social and economic differentiation emerging as a result of these processes have the potential to be an important step in the global civilizing process. In conclusion, the paper discusses the implication of these developments for figurational sociology

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Published

2013-11-01

How to Cite

Lever, J. (2013). The postliberal politics of halal: new directions in the civilizing process?. Human Figurations, 2(3). Retrieved from https://journals.le.ac.uk/index.php/hf/article/view/5336

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Articles