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CIVIL DISCOURSE (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   094012


Governance and religious conflict in the eighteenth century: religion and the civil discourse of separateness in the Maratha polity / Bowles, Adam   Journal Article
Bowles, Adam Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract Over the last couple of decades, it has become fashionable in some quarters to attribute the apparent rise of communal discord in colonial and post-colonial South Asia to the imposition on India of a 'modern secularist' ideology imported from the West. This foreign imposition, we are told, has undermined the conditions that enabled Indians associated with different religious and social identities to live side by side in relative harmony-conditions sometimes referred to as provided by something like (to paraphrase) a 'tradition of Indian tolerance rooted in its composite culture'.
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2
ID:   139246


Regional framing: Judea, Samaria and the Gaza Strip in the eyes of the security elite / Lebovitz, Asaf   Article
Lebovitz, Asaf Article
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Summary/Abstract The dominant societal discourse of actors comprising Israel's security networks influences their choices for solutions to the perceived existential threat to the state from the demands and actions of the Palestinian authorities. Israeli elites, who are identified with the liberal discourse, propose to solve this problem by withdrawing, either unilaterally or via a peace process, from the Judea and Samaria region conquered in the 1967 war. This discourse requires the ‘securitization’ of the political process and the framing of Israeli control of Judea, Samaria and Gaza as an existential burden. By framing the security narrative in this way, the liberal elite seeks to draw support from most Israelis, who subscribe to an alternative ethno-national discourse, for abandoning the region.
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