Skip to main content
Book Forum

Islam and Statecraft:

Religious Soft Power in the Arab Gulf States

Published By Bloomsbury Publishing •
Watch the Event
Islam and Statecraft: Religious Soft Power in the Arab Gulf States
Video Player is loading.
Current Time 0:00
Duration 0:00
Loaded: 0%
Stream Type LIVE
Remaining Time 0:00
 
1x
  • Chapters
  • descriptions off, selected
  • captions off, selected

      Join the conversation on X using #CatoEvents. Follow @CatoInstitute on X to get future event updates, live streams, and videos from the Cato Institute.

      Date and Time
      -
      Location
      Cato Institute, 1000 Massachusetts Ave, NW, Washington, DC
      Share This Event
      Featuring
      Annelle-Sheline-cropped.jpg
      Annelle Sheline

      Research Fellow, Quincy Institute

      Peter Mandaville - circle
      Peter Mandaville

      Professor, George Mason University

      Religion plays a prominent role in the domestic and foreign policies of Middle Eastern states, particularly in the Persian Gulf. But the ways in which religion, specifically Islam, is used as a tool of statecraft are often misunderstood, leading to mischaracterizations and counterproductive policies.

      In his new book, Jon Hoffman examines how Islam is marshaled as a tool of statecraft in the Middle East. The book offers new insight into the geopolitics of religion in the Middle East and how ruling elites in the region use Islam to protect and advance what are inherently political objectives—namely, regime preservation and power projection. Understanding the political incentives behind the manipulation of religion in the region is critical to debates surrounding Islam, democracy, and authoritarianism in the Middle East. The book also raises critical questions for US policy in the Middle East, which often relies on fundamental misunderstandings of Islam and its relationship with politics in the region.

      Join Hoffman for a discussion on Islam and Statecraft, followed by commentary by Mustafa Akyol, Peter Mandaville, and Annelle Sheline on the politics of Islam in the Middle East.

      Lunch to follow.

      Islam and Statecraft - book cover
      Featured Book

      Islam and Statecraft: Religious Soft Power in the Arab Gulf States

      Instead of religion influencing political outcomes, this analysis examines how politics influences religious outcomes. Dominant analyses examining the utilization of religion as a tool of statecraft in the Middle East remain overwhelmingly fixated on how Islam influences the foreign policies of different state actors – not how political considerations often influence the forms Islam assumes and how religion itself is often molded according to strategic considerations of political elites.