ID | 124480 |
Title Proper | Elite strategies, civil society, and sectarian identities in postwar Lebanon |
Language | ENG |
Author | Clark, Janine A ; Salloukh, Bassel F |
Publication | 2013. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This article explains the endurance of sectarian identities and modes of political mobilization in Lebanon after the civil war. This is done by examining three case studies that demonstrate a recursive relation between sectarian elites and civil society actors: on one side of this relation, sectarian elites pursue their political and socioeconomic interests at the expense of civil society organizations (CSOs); on the other side, civil society actors instrumentalize the sectarian political system and its resources to advance their own organizational or personal advantage. These mutually reinforcing dynamics enable sectarian elites to penetrate, besiege, or co-opt CSOs as well as to extend their clientelist networks to CSOs that should otherwise lead the effort to establish cross-sectarian ties and modes of political mobilization or that expressly seek to challenge the sectarian system. The article fills a gap in the literature on sectarianism in postwar Lebanon and helps explain a puzzle identified by Ashutosh Varshney in the theoretical debate on ethnic conflict, namely the reasons behind the "stickiness" of historically constructed ethnic identities |
`In' analytical Note | International Journal of Middle East Studies Vol.45, No.4; 2013: p.731-749 |
Journal Source | International Journal of Middle East Studies Vol.45, No.4; 2013: p.731-749 |
Key Words | Elite Strategies ; Civil Society ; Sectarian Identities ; Post War ; Lebanon ; Political Mobilization ; Civil Society Organizations - CSOs ; Political Systems |