Rebel governance and kinship groups in the Middle East and Africa

Dag Tuastad, E. Sogge, Brynjar Lia
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Abstract

ABSTRACT Since the 2010s, the Middle East and Africa have witnessed a sharp proliferation of insurgent proto-states – territorial enclaves controlled by insurgent groups. Gathering six ethnographic accounts from these regions, this volume seeks to answer the following: How do rebel governments and kin-based forms of socio-political organisation shape and influence one another? When rebels establish territorial control, their emerging proto-states will be shaped by processes of negotiation with pre-existing social forces. Therefore, sociopolitical organisation in rebel-held areas can only be understood by analysing the interactions between “the preexisting” and “the incoming” orders. Nonetheless, as we emphasise in this introduction, the study of kinship groups in conflict areas and rebel governments have developed as two distinct research fields. The aim of this volume is to bring them together and seek a deeper understanding of how kin-based loyalties, networks, institutions, and social conventions may shape and influence rebel governance practices. The volume features many examples of insurgent groups meticulously crafting “tribal administrations” to curtail civilian resistance. Yet, it also shows that the various rebel groups described face far greater difficulties in reforming society culturally, than asserting military dominance over tribal actors. For the rebels, social revolutions are harder earned than political domination.
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中东和非洲的叛军统治和亲属组织
自2010年代以来,中东和非洲见证了叛乱原始国家(由叛乱组织控制的领土飞地)的急剧扩散。本书收集了这些地区的六个民族志记述,试图回答以下问题:反叛政府和以亲属为基础的社会政治组织形式是如何相互塑造和影响的?当反叛者建立了对领土的控制,他们新兴的原型国家将通过与已有的社会力量的谈判过程来塑造。因此,只有通过分析“先前存在的”和“即将到来的”秩序之间的相互作用,才能理解叛军控制地区的社会政治组织。尽管如此,正如我们在本引言中强调的那样,对冲突地区和反叛政府的亲属群体的研究已经发展成为两个不同的研究领域。本卷的目的是将他们聚集在一起,并寻求更深层次的理解如何基于亲属的忠诚,网络,制度和社会习俗可能塑造和影响叛军治理实践。这本书列举了许多叛乱组织精心打造“部落管理”以遏制平民抵抗的例子。然而,它也表明,所描述的各种反叛组织在改革社会文化方面面临着比对部落行动者施加军事统治大得多的困难。对于反叛者来说,社会革命比政治统治更难赢得。
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