"Amid Chaos Can Democracy Arise in the Islamic World" with Professor Michael Curtis
My guest this week is Michael Curtis a Distinguished Professor Emeritus of political science at Rutgers University. He is highly regarded as an expert in several fields--political theory, comparative government, European politics and the Middle East and is the author of Orientalism and Islam, European Thinkers on Oriental Despotism in the Middle East and India, and how historical perspectives give us insights into today’s problems in that vital area. Professor Curtis last appeared on The Advocates on September 23, 2009, and that show and all others can be accessed at: advocates-wvox.com.

Our topic today will be his views on North Africa and the Middle East and his views on whether democracy can be expect to take root in that vital and contentious region.
Among his approximately 30 books a few should be singled out as being particularly important and influential. His most recent book Verdict on Vichy, 2004 examined the degree to which the French legal and administrative system, the Church, and individuals in different walks of life collaborated with the Nazis who occupied France between 1940 and 1944. He reviewed the careers of those persons indicted for crimes against humanity, and the complex aryanisation process which requisitioned Jewish goods and property. His analysis of the rise of anti-democratic and anti-Semitic ideology in France after the Dreyfus affair in a book called, Three Against the Third Republic is considered the definitive study of this era in early 20th century French political history.
Other books include Totalitarianism, a study of the 20th century European totalitarian regimes, and Anti-Semitism in the Contemporary World. The latter book is a collection based on the papers delivered at a groundbreaking conference Professor Curtis organized in the 1980s.
In addition, Professor Curtis is considered an expert on the Middle East. His many books on this area of the world cover a number of subjects. He was one of the first to discuss the tangled web of the interconnections between religion and politics in the Muslim world in Religion and Politics in the Middle East. Other significant books on the Middle East include Israel: Social Structure and Change and Israel in the Third World. Professor Curtis is the author, as well, of textbooks that cover political theory,The Great Political Theories, a book first published forty years ago is still in print today.
Professor Curtis has been an activist as well as a scholar. For many years, he was the president of American Professors for Peace in the Middle East and editor of the Middle East Review. As such he was often called upon by the press and television for comments as problems arose in the Middle East conflict over the last decades. He has traveled widely, in all the Western European countries including a year in Paris, as well as visits to Russia, Croatia, Israel, Korea, Japan, and Australia.
Recent posts by Professor Curtis:
http://www.americanthinker.com/2011/07/multiculturalism_revisited.html
Our topic today will be his views on North Africa and the Middle East and his views on whether democracy can be expect to take root in that vital and contentious region.
Among his approximately 30 books a few should be singled out as being particularly important and influential. His most recent book Verdict on Vichy, 2004 examined the degree to which the French legal and administrative system, the Church, and individuals in different walks of life collaborated with the Nazis who occupied France between 1940 and 1944. He reviewed the careers of those persons indicted for crimes against humanity, and the complex aryanisation process which requisitioned Jewish goods and property. His analysis of the rise of anti-democratic and anti-Semitic ideology in France after the Dreyfus affair in a book called, Three Against the Third Republic is considered the definitive study of this era in early 20th century French political history.
Other books include Totalitarianism, a study of the 20th century European totalitarian regimes, and Anti-Semitism in the Contemporary World. The latter book is a collection based on the papers delivered at a groundbreaking conference Professor Curtis organized in the 1980s.
In addition, Professor Curtis is considered an expert on the Middle East. His many books on this area of the world cover a number of subjects. He was one of the first to discuss the tangled web of the interconnections between religion and politics in the Muslim world in Religion and Politics in the Middle East. Other significant books on the Middle East include Israel: Social Structure and Change and Israel in the Third World. Professor Curtis is the author, as well, of textbooks that cover political theory,The Great Political Theories, a book first published forty years ago is still in print today.
Professor Curtis has been an activist as well as a scholar. For many years, he was the president of American Professors for Peace in the Middle East and editor of the Middle East Review. As such he was often called upon by the press and television for comments as problems arose in the Middle East conflict over the last decades. He has traveled widely, in all the Western European countries including a year in Paris, as well as visits to Russia, Croatia, Israel, Korea, Japan, and Australia.
Recent posts by Professor Curtis:
http://www.americanthinker.com/2011/07/multiculturalism_revisited.html
http://www.americanthinker.com/2011/06/the_coming_un_crisis.html
Download | Duration: 00:50:27


Comments