The Gallup Poll of the Muslim World is the most comprehensive study ever done of this group. Many key results counter conventional wisdom. By Jane Lampman | Staff writer of the Christian Science Monitor
from the May 16, 2008 edition
The Gallup Poll of the Muslim World is the most comprehensive study ever done of this group. Many key results counter conventional wisdom. Read more…
Is Islam compatible with democracy?
Many cite the equal importance of democracy and Islam to the progress of the Muslim world. Read more…
How do Muslims view women’s rights?
Many Muslims believe that women should have the right to vote and to hold any job outside the home that they qualify for. Read more…
What makes a radical?
When asked why they supported the 9/11 attacks, the radicals gave political rather than religious reasons. Read more…
How do Muslims view the West?
Among the things Muslims admire are the West’s technology and fair political systems. Read more… Reporter head shot
Reporter Jane Lampman talks with Dalia Mogahed, executive director of the Gallup Center for Muslim Studies.
Since the momentous events of Sept. 11, 2001, countless news stories, TV commentaries, and books have speculated on the causes of terrorism, the attitudes of Muslims, and a purported clash of civilizations between Islamic societies and the West.
What has not been available is any reliable measure of the viewpoints of ordinary Muslims, who constitute 20 percent of the global population.
That is no longer the case. Through an ambitious six-year project that involved hour-long, face-to-face interviews with residents in nearly 40 nations, Gallup has plumbed the perspectives of Muslim men and women – urban and rural, educated and illiterate, young and old.
The Gallup Poll of the Muslim World surveyed a representative sample of 90 percent of the world’s 1.3 billion Muslims, the most comprehensive study ever done. The findings are explored in the new book “Who Speaks for Islam?” by John Esposito, Islamic studies professor at Georgetown University; and Dalia Mogahed, executive director of the Gallup Center for Muslim Studies in Washington.
Discussion
No comments for “What do a billion Muslims really think?”