Hinnebusch - Identity and State Formation in Multi‐sectarian Societies
Tags: papers, Nationalism and Outsiders in the Middle East
- State formation and identity in MENA are not necessarily co-terminus
- Sect and class are not necessarily orthonognal
- Claims that the westphalian state was unnaturally applied to MENA
- 3 levels of identity
- Supra-state
- Islam, Ummah, Pan-Arabism, etc
- State level
- Nationalism, secularism, etc
- Sub-state
- Sectarian, tribal, etc
- Supra-state
- Hybrid states with multiple identities can exist for a surprisingly long time
- In the long run, strong, inclusive states and national identities work in tandem, alongside weak states and sectarianism. But the curve is not linear and has multiple permutations.
Case of Syria
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Intial state formation: 1946-1963
- Largely weak oligarchic weak states, but somewhat inclusive, subsumbed state identities
- Embraced pan-Arabism
- Largely similar lingustic background (Anderson - Imagined Communities) allowed state formation
-
Ba’thist state building and identity: 1963-2000
- Embraced distintly nationalist identities against Israel
- Also embraced low level sectarian identities with Alawis
- Still provided for Sunni penetration
- Based on cold war patronage lines like nasser
- sectarian arithmatic
- The regime thus exploited both supra‐state (Pan‐Arabism) state (Syrian civic nationalism), class, and sectarian identities to legitimize itself. - pg 150
-
Neoliberal years: 2000-2010
- Neolibral reforms reduced capacity for the state to dole out based on sectarian identities
- No more patronage lines