Part I. Theory: 1. Liberal individualism; 2. Multiculturalism; 3. Classical pluralism; Part II. Practice: 4. Banks; 5. Charities; 6. Schools; 7. Elections; 8. Clans; Conclusion.
Asks and answers the hardest questions about the relationship between British Islam and English law using classical pluralist theory.
Patrick Nash is a research fellow at the Woolf Institute and a postdoctoral research associate at St. Edmund's College, Cambridge. He taught jurisprudence, public law, criminal law, tort law and family law at the Universities of Bristol and Newcastle before moving to Cambridge. He was called to the Bar of England and Wales in 2019 (Lincoln's Inn).
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