| Series Preface |
Lawrence E. Sullivan
|
| |
| Series Foreword |
Mary Evelyn Tucker
and John A. Grim |
| |
| Preface |
Adnan Z. Amin |
| |
| Introduction |
Richard C. Foltz |
| |
| Chapter
1 |
God, Humans,
and Nature
Toward and Understanding of Environmental Ethics
from a Quranic Perspective
Abrahim Özdemir
The Universe Alive: Nature in the Masnavi of Jalal al-Din Rumi
L. Clarke
Fitra: An Islamic Model for Humans and the
Environment
Saadia Khawar Khan Chishti
|
| |
| Chapter
2 |
The Challenge
of (Re)Interpretation
Islam, the Contemporary Islamic World, and the Environmental
Crisis
Seyyed Hossein Nasr
Islam and the Environment: Theory and Practice
Mawil Izzi Dien
Islam and Ecology: Toward Retrieval and Reconstruction
S. Nomanul Haq
Peace in Islam: An Ecology of the Spirit
Abdul Aziz Said and Nathan C. Funk
The Basis for a Discipline of Islamic Environmental
Law
Othman Abd-ar-Rahman Llewellyn
Islamic Environmentalism: A Matter of Interpretation
Richard C. Foltz
Toward an Islamic Ecotheology
Kaveh L. Afrasiabi |
| |
| Chapter
3 |
Environment
and Social Justice
Islam, Ecology, and Modernity: An Islamic Critique
of the Root Causes of Environmental Degradation
Fazlun M. Khalid
The Environmental Crisis of Our Time: A Muslim Response
Yasin Dutton
Islam, Muslim Society, and Environmental Concerns:
A Development Model Based on Islams Organic
Society
Hashim Ismail Dockrat
Ecological Justice and Human Rights for Women in
Islam
Nawal Ammar |
| |
| Chapter
4 |
Toward
a Sustainable Society
Scientific Innovation and al-Mizan
Mohammad Aslam Parvaiz
Capacity Building for Sustainable Development:
The Dilemma of Islamization of Environmental Institutions
Safei-Eldin A. Hamed
Islam, the Environment, and Family Planning: The
Cases of Egypt and Iran
Nancy W. Jabbra and Joseph G. Jabbra
An Ecological Journey in Muslim Bengal
Mohammad Yusuf Siddiq
Islam in Malaysias Planning and Development
Doctrine
Abu Bakar Abdul Majeed
The Aga Khan Development Network: An Ethic of Sustainable
Development and Social Conscience
Tazim R. Kassam |
| |
| Chapter
5 |
The Islamic
Garden as Metaphor for Paradise
Nature in Islamic Urbanism: The Garden in Practice
and in Metaphor
Attilio Petruccioli
From the Gardens of the Quran to the Gardens of
Lahore
James L. Wescoat, Jr.
Trees as Ancestors: Ecofeminism and the Poetry
of Forugh Farrokhzad
Farzaneh Milani |
| |
|
Glossary of Arabic Terms
Bibliography Notes on Contributors
Index
| |
| |
| |
Copyright
© 2003 Center for the Study of World Religions,
Harvard Divinity School.
Reprinted with permission. |