RT Article T1 Malaysia’s Creeping Islamization—and Dimming Prospects for Covenantal Pluralism JF The review of faith & international affairs VO 19 IS 2 SP 1 OP 13 A1 Liow, Joseph Chin Yong 1972- LA English PB Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group YR 2021 UL https://www.ixtheo.de/Record/1760186031 AB For countries with religiously diverse populations that have a record of tense relations with each other, the notion of a covenantal pluralism, if successfully established and entrenched as an organizing principle for society, offers an opportunity to break out of the cycle of mutual mistrust and suspicion. Yet, the reality is that the effectiveness of covenantal pluralism as not just an idea but a framework will depend, among other things, on the structural nature of these relationships between religious constituencies and the processes that shape them, as determined by the configuration of political power. This paper proposes that this is precisely the case in Malaysia, where a deeply entrenched narrative of affirmative action favoring the majority ethnic group has found expression in the spheres of politics, economics, social relations, and indeed, everyday life. Concomitantly, it is for this reason that the prospects for covenantal pluralism to gain traction in Malaysia will be profoundly difficult. K1 Interfaith Dialogue K1 Tolerance K1 Religious Freedom K1 Pluralism K1 Ketuanan Melayu K1 Islam DO 10.1080/15570274.2021.1917127