01325nam a22001697a 4500999001900000008004100019100002700060245007300087260001500160300003500175520075500210650004100965773001501006906001701021942000701038952011001045 c516316d516316210223b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aGunn, T. Jeremy925086 aDo human rights have a secular, individualistic & anti-Islamic bias? aDaedalus  a149(3), Summer 2020: p.148-169 a There is a widely shared belief, both within and outside the Muslim world, that Islamic law cannot be reconciled with the modern human rights regime that developed out of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR). Many Muslims perceive that the purportedly individualistic, secular, and Western orientation of human rights is alien to Islamic values. Abdulaziz Sachedina and other scholars of Islam have argued that the underlying tenets of the UDHR and its progeny are simply incompatible with Islamic law. In reality, the problem is not an underlying conflict between human rights and Islam, but the mistaken assumption that the modern nation-state is the proper institution for interpreting and enforcing Islamic law. - Reproduced  aMuslims, Islam, Islamic law, 925087 aDaedalus  aHUMAN RIGHTS cAR 00102ddc40709390408aIIPAbIIPAd2021-02-23h149(3), Summer 2020: p.148-169pAR124393r2021-02-23yAR