Юнусов, Ариф. Ислам в Азербайджане; ред. д-р ист. наук, проф. Р. Гусейнов ; Ин-т мира и демократии ; Фонд Фридриха Эберта.
Баку : Заман, 2004. 388 с. : табл., фот. 21 см.
Твёрдый переплёт. Тираж 1000 экз.
Дарственная надпись автора на титульном листе.
Состояние очень хорошее: минимальный износ; переплёт чистый; блок белый, крепкий, полный.
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Yunusov, Arif. Islam in Azerbaijan / ed. Rauf Huseinov, Doctor of Historical Sciences, Professor (National Academy of Sciences of Azerbaijan) ; Institute of Peace and Democracy ; Friedrich Ebert Stiftung.
Baku : Zaman, 2004. 388 pp. : tables, photos. 21 cm.
Hardcover. Print run of 1,000 copies.
Signed by the author on the title page.
Condition very good: minimal handling; binding clean; text block white, firm, and complete.
Arif Seidali Yunusov (born 1957) is an Azerbaijani historian and one of the most prominent civil society scholars and human rights researchers in the South Caucasus. As head of the Department of Migration and Demography at the Institute of Peace and Democracy in Baku - an independent think tank and the book's publisher - he conducted systematic fieldwork, media monitoring, and sociological surveys on religion in Azerbaijan over many years. This monograph, financed by the Friedrich Ebert Stiftung (Germany), is the first comprehensive historical and sociological study of Islam in Azerbaijan from ancient times to the present, a subject previously avoided or treated superficially in Soviet and early post-Soviet scholarship. The volume covers the pre-Islamic religious landscape of Azerbaijan, the entire chronological history of Islam's development in the territory across successive periods, the Soviet anti-religious campaigns and their long-term effects, and a detailed analysis of the contemporary religious situation - including the activities of Sunni and Shia Muslim organizations, Salafi movements, Iranian-linked structures, and the Azerbaijani state's management of religious affairs. The consultants for the project were Dina Malysheva (Institute of World Economy and International Relations, Russian Academy of Sciences), a specialist on Central Asian and Caucasian Islamic movements, and Thomas de Waal (London Institute for War and Peace), the foremost Western journalist on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and author of "Black Garden."