Geopolitical Contest over ‘Moderate Islam’

James M. Dorsey
2 min readJul 9, 2024

The past few decades — since 9/11 in particular — have seen the increasing prominence of ‘moderate Islam’ in the public sphere. But who gets to define what this term means? How are these different definitions projected to wider Muslim, and non-Muslim, audiences? And what are the political implications of these varied versions of ‘moderate Islam,’ whether locally or internationally?

In this episode, we focus on three major players in the geopolitical competition to define ‘moderate Islam,’ namely Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Indonesia, while also bringing in Qatar, Turkey, and Iran. By paying special attention to Indonesia — and its huge civil society organization called Nahdlatul Ulama — we see how Asian Muslims are becoming increasingly important arbiters of Islam for the twenty-first century.

Nile Green talks to James M. Dorsey, author of The Battle for the Soul of Islam: Defining the Muslim Faith in the 21st Century (Palgrave Macmillan, 2024).

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James M. Dorsey
James M. Dorsey

Written by James M. Dorsey

James is an award-winning journalist covering ethnic and religious conflict. He blogs using soccer as a lens on the Middle East and North Africa's fault lines

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