RT Review T1 Islam and Liberal Citizenship: The Search for an Overlapping Consensus JF A journal of church and state VO 51 IS 4 SP 696 OP 697 A1 An-Na'im, Abdullahi Ahmed LA English YR 2009 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1783934735 AB After offering a careful and extensive caveat on what this book is not about, Andrew March affirms his subject as “a work of political theory that seeks to analyze Islamic (as opposed to Muslim) attitudes toward shared citizenship through a methodology of comparative political ethics. It is a study of Muslim citizenship in non-Muslim liberal democracies as a religious problem for believing Muslims” (p. 4, his emphasis)., This thoughtfully written book consists of three parts. In Part I, in two chapters, the author seeks to make a case for a comparative ethics for consensus, convergence, or moral agreement to address what he sees as reasonable reservations about his subject. K1 Rezension DO 10.1093/jcs/csq017