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J. Craig Jenkins - Identity Conflicts: Can Violence Be Regulated?

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J. Craig Jenkins Identity Conflicts: Can Violence Be Regulated?

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Social conflicts are ubiquitous and inherent in organized social life. This volume examines the origins and regulation of violent identity conflicts. It focuses on the regulation of conflict: the constraining, directing, and repression of violence through institutional rules and understandings. The core question the authors address is how violence is regulated and the social and political consequences of such regulation.The contributors provide a multidisciplinary multi-regional analysis of identity conflicts and their regulation. The chapters focus on the forging and suppression of religious and ethnic identities, problematic national identities, the recreation of identity in post-conflict peace-building efforts, and the forging of collective identities in the process of democratic state building. The instances of violent conflict treated here range across the globe from Central and South America, to Asia, to the Balkans, and to the Islamic world.One of the key findings is that conflicts involving religious, ethnic, or national identity are inherently more violence prone and require distinctive methods of regulation. Identity is a question both of power and of integrity. This means that both material and symbolic needs must be addressed in order to constrain or regulate these conflicts. Accordingly, some chapters draw on a political-economy approach that places primary emphasis on resources, organization, and interests, while others develop a cultural approach focusing on how identities are constructed, grievances defined, blame attributed, and redress articulated.This volume offers new ideas about the regulation of identity conflicts, at both the global and local level, that engage both tradition and modernization. It will be of interest to policymakers, political scientists, human rights activists, historians, and anthropologists.

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IDENTITY CONFLICTS
IDENTITY CONFLICTS ?
Can Violence be Regulated
J. Craig Jenkins Esther E. Gottlieb editors
First published 2007 by Transaction Publishers Published 2017 by Routledge 2 - photo 1
First published 2007 by Transaction Publishers
Published 2017 by Routledge
2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon OX14 4RN
711 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10017, USA
Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business
Copyright 2007 by Taylor & Francis.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers.
Notice:
Product or corporate names may be trademarks or registered trademarks, and are used only for identification and explanation without intent to infringe.
Library of Congress Catalog Number: 2007024453
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Identity conflicts: can violence be regulated? / J. Craig Jenkins and Esther E.
Gottlieb [editors].
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-1-4128-0659-6 (alk. paper)
1. Ethnic conflict-Case studies. 2. Social conflict-Case studies. 3.
Political violence-Case studies. I. Jenkins, J. Craig, 1948- II. Gottlieb,
Esther E.
HM1121.I337 2007
305.8--dc22
2007024453
ISBN 13: 978-1-4128-0659-6 (hbk)
To the Memory of Ruth C. Jenkins 8/31/1917-10/15/2006 and Bluma (Fuhrer) Gottlieb 11/2/1917-12/4/2006
Contents
  1. 1. Identity Conflicts and Their Regulation: An Introduction
    J. Craig Jenkins and Esther E. Gottlieb
  2. 2. Uncertain Connections: Globalization, Localization Identities, and Violence
    Neil J. Smelser
    1. 3. The Musha Rebellion as Unthinkable: Coloniality, Aboriginality, and the Epistemology of Colonial Difference
      Leo T. S. Ching
    2. 4. Dispossession and Possession: The Maya, Identi/ties, and Post War Guatemala
      Diane M. Nelson
    3. 5. Public Islam as an Antidote to Violence?
      Dale E Eickelman and Armando Salvatore
    1. 6. Cyber-Separatism, Islam, and the State in China
      Dru C. Gladney
    2. 7. Re-Evaluating the Kurdish Question
      Michael M. Gunter
    3. 8. The Buddhist Purification Movement in Postcolonial South Korea: Restoring Clerical Celibacy and State Intervention
      Pori Park
    1. 9. From Expressive to Actionable Hatred: Ethnic Divisions and Riots in Macedonia
      Robert Hislope
    2. 10. Abkhazia: A Summary of Ethnic Conflict
      Georgi M. Derluguian
    3. 11. Reconstructing Heritage and Tradition in Postwar Beirut
      Aseel Sawalha
    1. 12. Regulating Peace or Institutionalizing Rage? The Identity Conundrums of Postwar Educational Policymaking in Mozambique
      Antoinette Errante
    2. 13. Reconstituting Guerrillas as Veterans in Postwar Zimbawbwe
      Norma Kriger
    1. 14. Africas Crisis of State-Building
      Kidane Mengisteab
    2. 15. Weak States and Democratization: Ethnic and Religious Conflicts in Nigeria
      Muhammad Sani Umar
    3. 16. The Intercultural Construction of Public Authority in Latin America
      Donna Lee Van Cott
    1. 17. Can Violence Be Regulated?
      Esther E. Gottlieb and J. Craig Jenkins
  1. 1. Identity Conflicts and Their Regulation: An Introduction
    J. Craig Jenkins and Esther E. Gottlieb
  2. 2. Uncertain Connections: Globalization, Localization Identities, and Violence
    Neil J. Smelser
    1. 3. The Musha Rebellion as Unthinkable: Coloniality, Aboriginality, and the Epistemology of Colonial Difference
      Leo T. S. Ching
    2. 4. Dispossession and Possession: The Maya, Identi/ties, and Post War Guatemala
      Diane M. Nelson
    3. 5. Public Islam as an Antidote to Violence?
      Dale E Eickelman and Armando Salvatore
    1. 6. Cyber-Separatism, Islam, and the State in China
      Dru C. Gladney
    2. 7. Re-Evaluating the Kurdish Question
      Michael M. Gunter
    3. 8. The Buddhist Purification Movement in Postcolonial South Korea: Restoring Clerical Celibacy and State Intervention
      Pori Park
    1. 9. From Expressive to Actionable Hatred: Ethnic Divisions and Riots in Macedonia
      Robert Hislope
    2. 10. Abkhazia: A Summary of Ethnic Conflict
      Georgi M. Derluguian
    3. 11. Reconstructing Heritage and Tradition in Postwar Beirut
      Aseel Sawalha
    1. 12. Regulating Peace or Institutionalizing Rage? The Identity Conundrums of Postwar Educational Policymaking in Mozambique
      Antoinette Errante
    2. 13. Reconstituting Guerrillas as Veterans in Postwar Zimbawbwe
      Norma Kriger
    1. 14. Africas Crisis of State-Building
      Kidane Mengisteab
    2. 15. Weak States and Democratization: Ethnic and Religious Conflicts in Nigeria
      Muhammad Sani Umar
    3. 16. The Intercultural Construction of Public Authority in Latin America
      Donna Lee Van Cott
    1. 17. Can Violence Be Regulated?
      Esther E. Gottlieb and J. Craig Jenkins
Guide
This volume was imagined and shaped following a 2003 conference at Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio. The conference was made possible by a grant from the Mershon Center for International Security awarded to the Office of International Affairs, headed at the time by Jerry Ladman and Frank Spaulding. Organizers were the Area Studies programs at Ohio State: African Studies Center, East Asian Studies Center, Center for Latin American Studies, Middle East Studies Center, Center for Slavic and East European Studies, and the Clusters of Interdisciplinary Research on International Themes (CIRIT) program. This conference was planned by a committee that consisted of Joanna Kukielka-Blaser, Ahmad Sikainga, Frank Spaulding, Halina Stephan, and the editors. Thanks are due to the Area Studies directors and assistant directors, and to OSU faculty who served as discussants and contributed valuable insights to the authors of this volume. They are: Nina Berman (Germanic Languages and Literatures), Philip Brown (History), Kevin R. Cox (Geography), Richard K. Herrmann (Political Science), John Mueller (Political Science), Ivy Pike (Anthropology), Christopher Reed (History), Daniel Reff (Comparative Studies), Ileana Rodriguez (Spanish and Portuguese), Halina Stephan (Slavic and East European Languages and Literatures), Kazimierz Slomczynski (Sociology), Abril Trigo (Spanish and Portuguese), Fernando Unzueta (Spanish and Portuguese), Sabra Webber (Near Eastern Languages and Cultures), and Alexander Pantsov (History, Capital University).
Deprivation, Violence, and Identities was a truly international interdisciplinary effort, embracing not only many world areas and academic disciplines, as reflected in the authors and discussants research, but also in the staging of an original play, Photographs from S-21 , by Catherine Filloux (published by Playscripts, 2003). A finalist for the 1999 Heideman Award at the Actors Theatre of Louisville, Fillouxs play is based on documentary evidence of the detainment, torture, and execution of Cambodians in a secret prison called S-21 under the Khmer Rouge regime. The production of the play at OSU Theater Department, directed by Professor Lesley Ferris, was followed by a panel discussion with John B. Quigley, Presidents Club Professor of Law, Moritz College of Law, author of The Genocide Convention : An International Law Analysis, Ara Wilson, author of The Intimate Economies of Bangkok , and Alan Woods, director of the Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee Theatre Research Institute.
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