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  1. Fundamentalism, type of religious movement characterized by the advocacy of strict conformity to sacred texts. Once used exclusively to refer to American Protestants who insisted on the inerrancy of the Bible, the term was applied more broadly beginning in the late 20th century to a variety of religious movements.

    • Henry Munson
  2. Jun 29, 2019 · John P. Pelissero. Government ethics applies to the processes, behavior, and policy of governments and the public officials who serve in elected or appointed positions. The role of government and its officials is to serve the public interest with ethical awareness and ethical actions. When governments serve the public interest and avoid ...

  3. Fundamentalism is a tendency ... Ethical order ; Familialism; Family values ... opening up public spaces to alternate displays rather than the Nativity scene is an ...

  4. Bowman, J. S. (1989, November) Ethics in government: A national survey of public administrators. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Society of Public Administrators, Washington, DC.

    • Debra W. Stewart
    • 1991
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  6. Nov 28, 2022 · To many people, both secular and religious, “fundamentalism” is an essentially pejorative term, referring to authoritarian religious forces seeking to drag society back into the past. According to prominent Protestant theologian Edward Farley, who passed away in 2014, this isn’t all wrong. But, he argues, fundamentalism is also a ...

  7. Clearly, the government bore much responsibility because the army, in putting down the unrest, is estimated to have killed somewhere around 200 people.11 This so enraged the rioters that a spiraling escalation developed. Out of the riots, the Islamic Salvation Front (FIS) was born. Seeking to end the rioting, the government quite early on

  8. The aim of this article is to define ‘fundamentalism’, one of the main drivers of conflict in our world. The literature on fundamentalism is vast, comprising work from criminology, economics, law, philosophy, political theory, psychiatry, psychology, religious studies, sociology, and theology. One would expect that defining fundamentalism ...

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