Alternatives in Mobilization: Ethnicity, Religion, and Political Conflict
What determines which identity cleavage, ethnicity or religion, is mobilized in political contestation, be it peaceful or violent? In contrast to common predictions that the greatest contention occurs where identities are fully segmented, most identity conflicts in the world are between ethnic groups that share religion. Alternatives in Mobilization builds on the literature about political demography to address this seeming contradiction. The book proposes that variation in relative group size and intersection of cleavages help explain conundrums in the mobilization of identity, across transgressive and contained political settings. This theory is tested cross-nationally on identity mobilization in civil war and across violent conflict in Pakistan, Uganda, Nepal and Turkey, and peaceful electoral politics in Indonesia. This book helps illustrate a more accurate and improved picture of the ethnic and religious tapestry of the world and addresses an increasing need for a better understanding of how religion contributes to conflict.
1140880081
Alternatives in Mobilization: Ethnicity, Religion, and Political Conflict
What determines which identity cleavage, ethnicity or religion, is mobilized in political contestation, be it peaceful or violent? In contrast to common predictions that the greatest contention occurs where identities are fully segmented, most identity conflicts in the world are between ethnic groups that share religion. Alternatives in Mobilization builds on the literature about political demography to address this seeming contradiction. The book proposes that variation in relative group size and intersection of cleavages help explain conundrums in the mobilization of identity, across transgressive and contained political settings. This theory is tested cross-nationally on identity mobilization in civil war and across violent conflict in Pakistan, Uganda, Nepal and Turkey, and peaceful electoral politics in Indonesia. This book helps illustrate a more accurate and improved picture of the ethnic and religious tapestry of the world and addresses an increasing need for a better understanding of how religion contributes to conflict.
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Alternatives in Mobilization: Ethnicity, Religion, and Political Conflict

Alternatives in Mobilization: Ethnicity, Religion, and Political Conflict

by Jïhanna Kristïn Birnir, Nil Seda Satana
Alternatives in Mobilization: Ethnicity, Religion, and Political Conflict

Alternatives in Mobilization: Ethnicity, Religion, and Political Conflict

by Jïhanna Kristïn Birnir, Nil Seda Satana

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Overview

What determines which identity cleavage, ethnicity or religion, is mobilized in political contestation, be it peaceful or violent? In contrast to common predictions that the greatest contention occurs where identities are fully segmented, most identity conflicts in the world are between ethnic groups that share religion. Alternatives in Mobilization builds on the literature about political demography to address this seeming contradiction. The book proposes that variation in relative group size and intersection of cleavages help explain conundrums in the mobilization of identity, across transgressive and contained political settings. This theory is tested cross-nationally on identity mobilization in civil war and across violent conflict in Pakistan, Uganda, Nepal and Turkey, and peaceful electoral politics in Indonesia. This book helps illustrate a more accurate and improved picture of the ethnic and religious tapestry of the world and addresses an increasing need for a better understanding of how religion contributes to conflict.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781108419840
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 05/26/2022
Pages: 200
Product dimensions: 6.22(w) x 9.29(h) x 0.94(d)

About the Author

Jóhanna Kristin Birnir is Professor of Government and Politics at the University of Maryland.

Nil Seda Şatana is Visiting Associate Professor of Government and Politics at the University of Maryland.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction; 2. Demography as an Explanatory Variable; 3 The Theory: Alternatives in Mobilization; 4. Testing the Challenger's Winning Coalition Hypothesis on Mobilization of Religion in Civil War; 5. The Internal Validity of the Challenger's Winning Coalition Hypothesis; 6. The Challenger's Winning Coalition in Indonesia's electoral politics; 7. Conclusion.
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