{
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"doi": "10.48321/D1BW2S",
"url": "https://dmphub.uc3prd.cdlib.net/dmps/10.48321/D1BW2S",
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"name": "Australian National University",
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"titles": [
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"lang": "en-US",
"title": "Standardising Halal: interpreting the tension between global and local"
}
],
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"lang": "en-US",
"name": "DMPHub"
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"contributors": [
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"name": " Australian National University ",
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"date": "2022",
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"lang": "en-US",
"description": "This study focuses on the expansion of the current global halal (permission according to Islamic principles) industry in Malaysia and Indonesia. It investigates the halal cultural economy—finance, food, travel, fashion, media, and cosmetics—in these two Muslim majority countries in Southeast Asia. In both countries, the Islamic cultural economy is thriving. Malaysia tops the Global Islamic Economy (GIE) indicator, while Indonesia has enormous potential in the halal economy as the largest Muslim majority country. The GIE serves as the dominant framework for evaluating and measuring the immense halal economy. This proposed ethnography of reimagining and mainstreaming halal focuses on the hidden dimensions underlying the seemingly homogenous halal cultural economy. It will trace the ‘key players’ in the vibrant halal industry, and the dynamics of halal practices: the majority of which have been completely overlooked by the standard quantitative indicators, leaving us with a partial and biased understanding of what are two of the world’s most enterprising economies. As such, my project will investigate the interplay between halalisation projects in both countries at the local/regional level, to unravel the complex cultural politics of ‘being Muslim’, and what it means to live in multi-cultural and multi-religious settings, and the challenges of ethical self-fashioning among Muslims within a rapidly globalising halal environment.",
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"awardTitle": "Standardising Halal: interpreting the tension between global and local ",
"funderName": "Australian Research Council ",
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