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Causal Layered Analysis of Good Governance in Islamic Utopia | ||
مطالعات سیاسی جهان اسلام | ||
مقاله 5، دوره 6، شماره 1 - شماره پیاپی 21، خرداد 1396، صفحه 69-78 اصل مقاله (119.53 K) | ||
نوع مقاله: مقاله پژوهشی | ||
نویسندگان | ||
سینا سعیدی* 1؛ مجتبی امیری2؛ محمدمهدی ذوالفقارزاده3 | ||
1دانشکده مدیریت دانشگاه تهران | ||
2مدیر گروه مدیریت دولتی دانشکده مدیریت دانشگاه تهران | ||
3عضو هیات علمی دانشگاه تهران، دانشکده مدیریت | ||
تاریخ دریافت: 03 بهمن 1395، تاریخ بازنگری: 18 اسفند 1395، تاریخ پذیرش: 11 اردیبهشت 1396 | ||
چکیده | ||
Since ancient times, humankind has aspired to create an ideal society and live in an environment free of problems and difficulties, a utopia with high levels of excellence, bringing him happiness and satisfaction. Great western philosophers and eminent oriental sages have articulated their ideas and revealed their dreams about the characteristics of people and traits of governors of such ideal places. Nowadays, governance is considered the main custodian of the social order and responsible for the comfort and satisfaction of citizens; so that bad governance is being increasingly regarded as one of the root causes of all evil within our societies while good governance is deemed the origin of public prosperity. Recently, some international institutions such as the UN and the World Bank and also several scholars have presented various definitions, models and theories about the concept of good governance and its attributes. The present study makes an attempt to employ a new approach to explore the requirements of good governance in the religious perspective of Ali ibn Abi Talib as the first Imam of Shia muslims. Therefore, the causal layered analysis (CLA) as a futuristic method has been applied to investigate letter 53 of the Nahj al-Balagha containing his orders to Malik al-Ashtar and finally the results have been presented and discussed at different analysis levels. | ||
کلیدواژهها | ||
Good governance؛ Islamic Utopia؛ CLA | ||
عنوان مقاله [English] | ||
Causal Layered Analysis of Good Governance in Islamic Utopia | ||
چکیده [English] | ||
Since ancient times, humankind has aspired to create an ideal society and live in an environment free of problems and difficulties, a utopia with high levels of excellence, bringing him happiness and satisfaction. Great western philosophers and eminent oriental sages have articulated their ideas and revealed their dreams about the characteristics of people and traits of governors of such ideal places. Nowadays, governance is considered the main custodian of the social order and responsible for the comfort and satisfaction of citizens; so that bad governance is being increasingly regarded as one of the root causes of all evil within our societies while good governance is deemed the origin of public prosperity. Recently, some international institutions such as the UN and the World Bank and also several scholars have presented various definitions, models and theories about the concept of good governance and its attributes. The present study makes an attempt to employ a new approach to explore the requirements of good governance in the religious perspective of Ali ibn Abi Talib as the first Imam of Shia muslims. Therefore, the causal layered analysis (CLA) as a futuristic method has been applied to investigate letter 53 of the Nahj al-Balagha containing his orders to Malik al-Ashtar and finally the results have been presented and discussed at different analysis levels. | ||
کلیدواژهها [English] | ||
Good governance, Islamic Utopia, CLA | ||
مراجع | ||
. Aleksandra & Djuric (2016) 2. Bell, Wendell (2009). Foundations of Futures Studies. Transactions Publishers. 3. Braun, Ernest (1994). Can technological innovation lead us to utopia? Futures, 26(8) 852-861. 4. Brown, Valerie A. (2015). Utopian thinking and the collective mind: Beyond trans-disciplinarity. Futures, 65, 209–216. 5. Clarke, I. F. (1971). Prophets and predictors: the utility of utopia. Futures, 396-401. 6. Dator, Jim (1993). Futures Studies and Sustainable Community Development. The First World Futures-Creating Seminar "Renewing Community as Sustainable Global Village", Japan. 7. Eivazi, Mohammadrahim & Marzban, Nazanin (2016). A Study of the components of good governance from the viewpoint of Imam Khomeini. Political Studies of Islamic World, 5(3), 117-138. 8. Grindle, Merilee (2005). Good Enough Governance Revisited. A Report for DFID with reference to the Governance Target Strategy Paper, 2001, available at: https://www.odi.org/ 9. Grindle, Merilee (2010). Good Governance: The Inflation of an Idea. HKS Faculty Research Working Paper Series, available at: http://www.hks.harvard.edu/ 10. Inayatullah, Sohail (1998). Causal Layered Analysis – Post-structuralism as method. Futures, 30(8), 815–829. 11. Izgarjan, Aleksandra & Djuric, Dubravka (2016). Metaphors of the future and the power of images in the British TV drama Spooks. Futures, 1-9, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.futures.2016.03.016 12. Seyyed Razi, Nahj al-Balagha [English version]. Available at: https://www.al-islam.org/nahjul-balagha-part-2-letters-and-sayings/letter-53-order-malik-al-ashtar 13. Son, Hyeonju (2013). Images of the future in South Korea. Futures, 52, 1–11. 14. Stevenson, Tony (2009). Enacting the vision for sustainable development. Futures, 41, 246–252. 15. UNESCAP (2016). What is Good Governance? United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific, available at: http://www.unescap.org/ 16. World Bank (2013). What is Governance? Available at: http://go.worldbank.org/G2CHLXX0Q0.
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