Transcript Slide 1

Religion, Nationalism, and
Conflicting Identities
Religion
Nations, Ethnic Groups, and
States
Approaches to dealing with
Nationalism & Ethnicity
Social and Economic
Approaches to
Intercommunal Peace
The Wars of the World
 Largest contemporary wars
 Iraq
 Western Sudan (Darfur)
 Afghanistan
 Of the 11 wars, all but Chechnya (Russia) are in the
global South.
 All but Colombia are in a zone of active fighting
spanning parts of Africa, South Asia, and the Middle
East.
 Most peace agreements in the world’s postwar zones
are holding up.
Conflicts of Ideas
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Six types of international conflict:
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Ethnic
Religious
Ideological
Territorial
Governmental
Economic
Most difficult types of conflict have intangible elements such
as ethnic hatred, religious fervor, or ideology – all conflicts
of ideas
These identity-based sources of international conflict today
have been shaped historically by nationalism – link between
identity and internationally recognized statehood
Nationalism
 Devotion to the interests of one’s own
nation over others
 May be the most important force in world
politics in the past two centuries
 Nationality is a difficult concept to define
precisely.
 Historical development of
“nationalism”
 Principle of self-determination
Ethnic Conflict
 Quite possibly the most important source of
conflict in the numerous wars now
occurring throughout the world.
 Ethnic groups
 Large groups of people who share ancestral,
language, cultural, or religious ties and a
common identity
 Often form the basis for nationalist sentiments
 Territorial control
Ethnic Conflict
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Lack of a home state
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Kurds
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Albania
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Systematic extermination of ethnic or religious groups in whole
or in part
Sudan
Rwanda
Redrawing of borders by force
Outside states worry about the fate of “their people.”
Genocide
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Causes of ethnic hostility
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Longstanding historical conflicts over specific territories or
natural resources, or exploitation or political domination of
another
Ethnocentrism
Dehumanization
Global identity in the future?
Kurdish National
Area
Religious Conflict
 Because religion is the
core of a community’s
value system in much
of the world, people
whose religious
practices differ are
easily disdained and
treated as unworthy or
even inhuman.
 Fundamentalist
movements
 Secular political
organizations
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Islamist movements
Armed Islamist groups
Afghanistan
Pakistan
Saudi Arabia
Palestine
Sudan
Algeria
Chechnya
Causes of War
 The question of why war breaks out can be
approached in different ways.
 Descriptive approaches
 Theoretical approaches
 Broad generalizations about the causes of
war have been elusive.
 Wars do not have a single or simple cause.
 Levels of analysis can help us organize
theories of war.
Causes of War
 On the individual level of analysis, theories
about war center on rationality.
 One theory, consistent with realism, holds that
the use of war and other violent means of
leverage in international conflicts is normal and
reflects rational decisions of national leaders:
that “wars begin with conscious and reasoned
decisions based on the calculation, made by
both parties, that they can achieve more by
going to war than by remaining at peace.”
 An opposite theory that conflicts often escalate
to war because of deviations from rationality in
the individual decision-making processes of
national leaders.
 Neither theory holds up well.
Causes of War
 The domestic level of analysis draws
attention to the characteristics of
states or societies that may make
them more or less prone to use
violence in resolving conflicts.
Causes of War
 Theories at the interstate level explain wars in terms
of power relations among actors in the international
system.
 Power transition theory holds that conflicts generate
large wars at times when power is relatively equally
distributed and a rising power is threatening to
overtake a declining hegemon in overall position.
 Deterrence – stop wars by building up power and
threatening its use
 Theory of arms race – wars are caused, not
prevented by such actions
 No general formula has been discovered to tell us in
what circumstances each of these principles holds
true.
Causes of War
 At the global level of analysis, a number of theories of
war have been proposed.
 Several variations on the idea that major warfare in
the international system is cyclical.
 One approach links wars with long economic waves in
the world economy (~50 years)
 Another approach links the largest wars with a 100year cycle based on the creation and decay of world
orders.
 These cycle theories at best can explain only general
tendencies toward war in the international system.
 Theory of linear long-term change: war as an
outcome of conflict is becoming less likely over time
due to the worldwide development of both technology
and international norms.
Ideological Conflict
 Ideology symbolizes and intensifies
conflicts between groups and states more
than it causes them.
 Because they have a somewhat weaker hold on
core values and absolute truth than religions do,
they pose somewhat fewer problems for the
international system.
 China Maoist communism in 1949; Russia’s
Leninist communism in 1917, U.S. democracy in
1776
 Angola
Conflicts of Interest
 Territorial disputes
 Means of controlling territory – primarily military
 Secession – province or region leaving an existing
state
 Ethnic cleansing - driving out or massacre of
designated ethnic population
 Interstate borders
 Role of the norm of territorial integrity
 Lingering disputes – Israeli borders; Kashmir; Peru &
Ecuador; Spratly Islands
 Territorial waters – part of national territory
 Airspace
Control of Governments
 Most struggles to control territory do not
involve changing borders.
 They are conflicts over which governments
will control entire states.
 International conflicts over the control of
governments – along with territorial
disputes – are likely to lead to the use of
violence.
Economic Conflict
 Economic competition is the most pervasive
form of conflict in international relations
because economic transactions are
pervasive.
 Such transactions contain a strong element
of mutual economic gain.
 Usually do not lead to military force and war
 But this was not always the case historically
Economic Conflict
 Economic conflict seldom leads to violence
today because military forms of leverage
are no longer very effective in economic
conflicts.
 Mercantilism
 Lateral pressure
 Drug trafficking
Glossary List:
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Binational state
Confederation
Multinational states
Nation-states
National self-determination
Neocolonialism
Tribalism
Review – How much do you
understand?
1. The world is conventionally
divided into all of these
categories except?
A.
B.
C.
D.
nation-states
multinational states
ethnic groups
nations
Review– How much do you
understand?
2. Which of the following is the best
example of a non-state nation?
A.
B.
C.
D.
the Kurds
Switzerland
Yugoslavia
Muslims
Review– How much do you
understand?
3. Which of the following is the best
example of a multinational state?
A.
B.
C.
D.
Canada
Czech Republic
Switzerland
Belgium
Review– How much do you
understand?
4. Another term for a state in which
all political power and authority
rests in the institutions of the
central government is
A.
B.
C.
D.
unitary state.
communism.
totalitarianism.
dictatorship.
Review– How much do you
understand?
5. Nationalism is?
A.
B.
C.
D.
the same as ethnicity.
patriotism.
a basis for national mobilization.
Inherently dangerous.
Review– How much do you
understand?
6. Approximately what percent of
the world’s population is
Christian?
A.
B.
C.
D.
34%
20%
16%
5%
Review– How much do you
understand?
7. Which is the single largest
religious identity in the world?
A.
B.
C.
D.
Roman Catholics
Protestants
Muslims
Hindus
Review– How much do you
understand?
8. At the start of the 21st century,
there has seen a general global
resurgence of
A.
B.
C.
D.
nation-states.
religious ideas and movements.
ethnic genocide.
apartheid.
Review– How much do you
understand?
9. Nations without a state include
A.
B.
C.
D.
E.
Kurds.
Palestinians.
Slavs.
both A and B.
all of the above.
Review– How much do you
understand?
10. The boundaries of states in
Africa were determined by
A.
B.
C.
D.
tribal and ethnic identities.
national identities.
other local identities.
European colonial powers.