Challenging the State in the Middle East and North Africa: The Role of Identities
Since independence, states in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region have been dominant players in shaping the regional order. The purpose of this paper is to explore and define challenges to the state and their role in shaping identities in the MENA region, and to evaluate their regional roots. The paper emphasizes two key aspects of nationalism in the region. The first concerns the existence of multiple identities and layers of identity that co-exist in the MENA region and which do not necessarily clash with each other. The second is that nationalism and national identities are not a recent phenomenon in the region. This paper shows that there are similarities as well as differences among the three major sub-regions of MENA in terms of the impact of identities at three levels of analysis.
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Details
Roma, IAI, September 2017, 23 p. -
In:
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Issue
Working Papers 1
Introduction
1. Tribalism, Sectarianism and Ethnicity: Deconstructing Simplified Versions of the Past
2. State Nationalism in the MENA Region: Friction
2.1 State Nationalism in the Arab Countries
2.2 The Cases of Turkey, Iran and Israel
3. Challenging State Identities at the Supranational Level
Conclusion
References