Rethinking Ourselves
Justice, Reform and Ignorance in Postnormal Times
A groundbreaking exploration of justice, democracy and Islamophobia, inviting us to rethink what we know to create a more equitable future for all.
Description
Change has run amok! Technological advancement measures its frequency in minutes. Much of what we think we know about the world is fading in front of our eyes. How we are, how we know, and how we live our daily lives—all changing quicker than we can cope with. We find ourselves in a confusing, uncertain and volatile age.
Anwar Ibrahim, Malaysia’s tenth Prime Minister, asks how we might rethink ourselves to adjust to accelerating change, and to shape more just and sustainable futures. His passion for truth and justice is rooted in his own experience: he spent, in total, over a decade behind bars through three separate miscarriages of justice, from his days as a student activist to his time as Leader of the Opposition.
Woven through the reflections on his time in prison are critical investigations into justice, post- colonialism, Islamophobia, democracy and world order. Anwar brings together the ideas of scholars and other thinkers from the East and West, North and South, to explore how we can create a new inclusive synthesis—one that genuinely promotes good society and a just and sustainable world order. Vividly told, expertly dissected, this is a timely book for our turbulent age.
Author(s)

Anwar Ibrahim, Malaysia’s Prime Minister, is a public intellectual and founder of the People’s Justice Party. He endured a decade of imprisonment for his staunch anti- corruption and reformist politics. Formerly based at the University of Oxford, and Georgetown and Johns Hopkins Universities, he is the author of The Asian Renaissance.