RT Article T1 The meanings and possible implications of critical Islamic religious education JF British Journal of religious education VO 43 IS 2 SP 206 OP 217 A1 Saada, Najwan A1 Magadlah, Haneen LA English PB [publisher not identified] YR 2021 UL https://www.ixtheo.de/Record/1753023777 AB The teaching of Islam in Western and non-Western societies may be located along a continuum from critical to non-critical paradigms. Islamic religious education is dominated by the non-critical paradigm and a devotional discourse of religious education. This is true in both Islamic and non-Islamic countries and is relevant to the teaching of both the spiritual and moral messages of Islam. The current essay is motivated by the ‘inadequate theoretical reflections on the meaning of education, which gravely hinder the task of thinking about Islam educationally and education Islamically’. The first section reviews the tenets of Islamic religious education from a conservative and devotional perspective. In the second and third sections, the authors address the major shortcomings of this approach and its theory of Islamisation. In the final section, the authors propose a rationale for an alternative paradigm of critical Islamic religious education – which is rarely discussed in the literature – and for its appropriateness for living in modern, democratic, multi-faith societies. K1 liberal Islam K1 Islamisation of knowledge K1 critical religious education K1 Islamic Education DO 10.1080/01416200.2020.1785844