13 January 2014 | 9:30am – 5:30pm
14 January 2014 | 9:30am – 5pm
Organisers: Centre for Comparative and Public Law, the Faith and Global Engagement initiative, and Bridging Gaps
This interfaith conference will explore the relationship between spiritual ethos and power in a number of world religions – Buddhism, Christianity, Islam, and Judaism. In particular, the conference will address how religious engagement with political, legal and economic issues can have beneficial and detrimental consequences in contemporary society.
Keynote Speakers:
Dr Jamal Badawi (St. Mary’s University)
Prof Michael Helfand (Pepperdine University School of Law)
Prof C.F. Lee (The University of Hong Kong)
Prof Graham Ward (University of Oxford)
Speakers:
Arif Anis, Psychology of the Religious Brain
Kristiane Backer, Empowerment Through Faith – An Islamic Perspective
Prof Chen Jianlin
Shaikh Esam Ishaq, Islamic Finance
Dr Gareth Jones, Habeas Corpus & Religion
Dr Iqbal Masood Nadwi, Issues Of Power: An Islamic Perspective
Prof Kang Phee Seng
Dr Khun Eng Kuah-Pearce, Buddhist Charity and Distributive Justice
Dr Rafiullah Kazmi, Rise of the Islamists and Democratization of the Arab World under the Shadow of the Arab Spring: a Case Study of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt
Dr David Palmer, Can Religion Contribute to Civil Society in China?
Kalana Senaratne, Buddhism, Power-Politics and the Minority-Question: Reappraising the Relevance of Religion in Society
Dr Fazlul Hadi Wazeen, The Rights of non-Muslims Living in Muslim Societies: Historical Facts and Contemporary Considerations from an Islamic Perspective
Peng Yin