Tuesday, November 22, 2011
Class video today made me miss West Africa. In honor of that and thinking peaceful thoughts going in to Thanksgiving, I'm limiting this post to photos and a virtual hat tip to Ghana. As I once saw painted on the side of a building in Ghana - "count your blessing!" (Singular being accidental, I know, but something I admire - each and every one should be counted and appreciated, right?)
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
USIP case studies, Nigeria, and cynicism
Thought 2 as the class turns towards peacemaking:
The USIP publication under discussion was an interesting one and of course I appreciated the optimism, but admittedly, the cynic (/realist) in me was thrown by the sentimentalism so prevalent in the case studies provided - often involving radial turn-arounds, tears, and hugging. All well and good, very happy to see some progress, and enjoying the personal focus but it often came hand in hand with simplification and romanticizing the reality of the case.
Take Nigeria, for instance, a case I naturally turn to as it is my own case study at the moment (and, on a more personal level, having spent some time in West Africa and studied sub-Saharan African politics). In neither of the USIP chapters on work in Nigeria did they make a point of mentioning tribal or ethnic ties, regional divisions, or colonialism. ...And as I'm sure they know full well, one cannot have a proper discussion of religious conflict in Nigeria without at least referencing the names Hausa, Ibo, and Yoruba - particularly the first two, given past civil war, a secession attempt, and military coups.
Of course, the USIP publication wasn't meant to provide a history of the conflict (and same to the clip watched in class), but it strikes me that completely failing to mention these other very large and very serious factors was too distracting an omission for me to take seriously an already sentimental overview. I don't expect that every case study or discussion cover ever detail (impossible), but I'd hope that it would at least recognize the complexities.
*Side note on the USIP: have to admit, I was entertained when I first learned that they were relocating to a very snazzy, prominent new building just down the road from DOS headquarters. I attended a USIP event back in April 2010 and had a hell of a time finding the place, which didn't even occupy the entire building in which it was then housed. Can't decide how much I can applaud the symbolism of the relocation when I'm so entertained by the irony of it all. heh
The USIP publication under discussion was an interesting one and of course I appreciated the optimism, but admittedly, the cynic (/realist) in me was thrown by the sentimentalism so prevalent in the case studies provided - often involving radial turn-arounds, tears, and hugging. All well and good, very happy to see some progress, and enjoying the personal focus but it often came hand in hand with simplification and romanticizing the reality of the case.
Take Nigeria, for instance, a case I naturally turn to as it is my own case study at the moment (and, on a more personal level, having spent some time in West Africa and studied sub-Saharan African politics). In neither of the USIP chapters on work in Nigeria did they make a point of mentioning tribal or ethnic ties, regional divisions, or colonialism. ...And as I'm sure they know full well, one cannot have a proper discussion of religious conflict in Nigeria without at least referencing the names Hausa, Ibo, and Yoruba - particularly the first two, given past civil war, a secession attempt, and military coups.
Of course, the USIP publication wasn't meant to provide a history of the conflict (and same to the clip watched in class), but it strikes me that completely failing to mention these other very large and very serious factors was too distracting an omission for me to take seriously an already sentimental overview. I don't expect that every case study or discussion cover ever detail (impossible), but I'd hope that it would at least recognize the complexities.
*Side note on the USIP: have to admit, I was entertained when I first learned that they were relocating to a very snazzy, prominent new building just down the road from DOS headquarters. I attended a USIP event back in April 2010 and had a hell of a time finding the place, which didn't even occupy the entire building in which it was then housed. Can't decide how much I can applaud the symbolism of the relocation when I'm so entertained by the irony of it all. heh
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
State intervention in religious conflict
Ok. I've been meaning to blog for quite some time here - and here, actually, though neither has happened - so that will likely manifest itself in a few brief posts in a short period of time... ideally.
Thought 1, then:
As we've turned to hopes of peacemaking and different potential methodologies and approaches, both Juergensmeyer and Sellengut list state actions as a viable solution. Sellengut particularly, as noted in class, considers the state use of political/military/police/legal authority to intervene or contain violence, prosecute instigators and/or violent actors, etc, as seen in the case of India and violence containment. [Speaking of, the recent NYT article regarding the prosecution of those implicated in the 2002 Muslim deaths in Gujurat, as mentioned in class, can be found here.]
In any case, my initial responding thought was inspired by a meeting of courses, actually, in that I'd just been explaining Max Weber's definition of the state in an English class, of all places. That is, for a state to be a state, it is essential that it has the monopoly on violence (and is thereby capable of controlling it's own territory) - something that can be taken into consideration when looking at Somalia, uncontrolled areas of Pakistan, etc. The point, however, is this: while of course state response to religious violence is only one part of a resolution, it is a vital one, particularly when we consider what the role of the state is meant to be. (Also debatable, but this one's pretty basic. Citizen safety is more agreed upon than, say, health care. heh) More recent readings have, of course, considered this as tracks 1 and 2 of diplomacy, intertwining both governmental and non-governmental actions, secular and religious, etc.
Potential follow-up thought on that: how do we apply this to religious violence taking place within one nation-state (say, India) versus international issues (say, al-Qaeda)?
Thought 1, then:
As we've turned to hopes of peacemaking and different potential methodologies and approaches, both Juergensmeyer and Sellengut list state actions as a viable solution. Sellengut particularly, as noted in class, considers the state use of political/military/police/legal authority to intervene or contain violence, prosecute instigators and/or violent actors, etc, as seen in the case of India and violence containment. [Speaking of, the recent NYT article regarding the prosecution of those implicated in the 2002 Muslim deaths in Gujurat, as mentioned in class, can be found here.]
In any case, my initial responding thought was inspired by a meeting of courses, actually, in that I'd just been explaining Max Weber's definition of the state in an English class, of all places. That is, for a state to be a state, it is essential that it has the monopoly on violence (and is thereby capable of controlling it's own territory) - something that can be taken into consideration when looking at Somalia, uncontrolled areas of Pakistan, etc. The point, however, is this: while of course state response to religious violence is only one part of a resolution, it is a vital one, particularly when we consider what the role of the state is meant to be. (Also debatable, but this one's pretty basic. Citizen safety is more agreed upon than, say, health care. heh) More recent readings have, of course, considered this as tracks 1 and 2 of diplomacy, intertwining both governmental and non-governmental actions, secular and religious, etc.
Potential follow-up thought on that: how do we apply this to religious violence taking place within one nation-state (say, India) versus international issues (say, al-Qaeda)?
Saturday, November 5, 2011
The individual and the "banality of evil"
(First, the necessary apology for slacking off of late; things have been on the crazy side. that said...)
As we reviewed Kakar's psychoanalytic take on Hindu-Muslim violence, particularly when recapping the influence of individual character/personality, my mind somehow went straight to the concept of "the banality of evil." Likely because Kakar noted, significantly, that the individuals largely leading the communal violence weren't crazy or psychologically abnormal in some way; they are/were relatively normal people. And the resulting question then has to be, of course, what makes seemingly normal people do seemingly crazy things?
Admittedly, I recall talking about the banality of evil recently, but I can't for the life of me recall when or where it was. I'm relatively positive it was in a class (though my friends are the sort who could reference Hannah Arendt and Adam Sandler over the same meal), but I'm not 100% sure that it was in this Rel/Soc. class - if anyone can assist my memory in that way, I'd be most grateful. ...so my apologize if this is repetitive from a discussion we already had in class. ahem. ...Either way, the concept of the banality of evil is a highly relevant one, particularly, perhaps, as we consider communal violence - be it in India, Nigeria (my paper), 1994 Rwanda, Kosovo... the list goes on. Neighbors against neighbors. Friends turned murderers. Everyday interactions turned nightmarish.
In the midst of it, on one hand, can't help but think that, sure, chalking violence up to insanity really doesn't help us in attempting to resolve or prevent anything. So we look for a pattern, warning signs, etc. But then again, if even the most "normal," sane of people, under circumstances, can become akin to Adolf Eichmann... well, then who's safe, and again, how do we prevent or battle it? What sparks the difference between the reasoned reaction and the violent one?
Along those lines, I do recall mentioning the real-life prison experiment in class, but I don't believe we've mentioned this movie telling of it - a disturbing film, and worth a watch if you're interested. Adrien Brody and Forest Whitaker are powerhouses.
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