谁支持早期的穆斯林兄弟会?

IF 1.3 1区 哲学 Q2 POLITICAL SCIENCE Politics and Religion Pub Date : 2021-10-21 DOI:10.1017/S1755048321000298
Neil Ketchley, S. Brooke, Brynjar Lia
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引用次数: 1

摘要

关于政治伊斯兰的学术研究表明,早期伊斯兰运动的支持者来自有文化的商人、政府官员和缺乏政治代表的专业人士。我们用一组独特的微观数据来检验这些说法,这些数据来自两次世界大战之间埃及的穆斯林兄弟会请愿活动。我们将2500多名穆兄会支持者的职业与当时的人口普查数据进行对比,发现从事商业、公共管理和专业工作的埃及人更有可能在穆兄会的请愿书上签名。该运动的支持者也绝大多数受过教育。与预期相反,早期的兄弟会也吸引了从事农业的埃及人的支持,尽管考虑到农业工人在人口中普遍存在,这比我们预期的要少。一个在尼罗河三角洲村庄追踪穆斯林兄弟会分支形成和请愿活动的案例研究表明,识字、社会流动的农业家庭是该运动在农村地区传播的关键。
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Who Supported the Early Muslim Brotherhood?
Abstract Scholarship on political Islam suggests that support for early Islamist movements came from literate merchants, government officials, and professionals who lacked political representation. We test these claims with a unique tranche of microlevel data drawn from a Muslim Brotherhood petition campaign in interwar Egypt. Matching the occupations of over 2,500 Brotherhood supporters to contemporaneous census data, we show that Egyptians employed in commerce, public administration, and the professions were more likely to sign the movement's petitions. The movement's supporters were also overwhelmingly literate. Contrary to expectations, the early Brotherhood also attracted support from Egyptians employed in agriculture, albeit less than we would expect given the prevalence of agrarian workers in the population. A case study tracing Muslim Brotherhood branch formation and petition activism in a Nile Delta village illustrates how literate, socially mobile agrarian families were key to the propagation of the movement in rural areas.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
13.30%
发文量
34
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊介绍: Politics and Religion is an international journal publishing high quality peer-reviewed research on the multifaceted relationship between religion and politics around the world. The scope of published work is intentionally broad and we invite innovative work from all methodological approaches in the major subfields of political science, including international relations, American politics, comparative politics, and political theory, that seeks to improve our understanding of religion’s role in some aspect of world politics. The Editors invite normative and empirical investigations of the public representation of religion, the religious and political institutions that shape religious presence in the public square, and the role of religion in shaping citizenship, broadly considered, as well as pieces that attempt to advance our methodological tools for examining religious influence in political life.
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