Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://elea.unisa.it/xmlui/handle/10556/5517
Abstract: This paper focuses on the constitutional phases which recently led the Sudan to the secession – so that we have now to consider two different States, the Sudan and the Southern Sudan – underlining the importance of the inclusion of Islam and of the islamization in these processes and in the light of the question of the public role of religion. The comparative analysis of both the constitutions and the consideration of the respective contexts – and factors like the regime’s nature and the political and socio-economic conditions – led to prefer a scientific approach focusing on the specificities of the single cases in the perspective of a more correct evaluation of the relationships between Islam and constitutionalism and, more generally, between politics, law and religion.
Appears in Collections:Iura & Legal Systems. Volume 4 (Gennaio - Dicembre 2017)

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