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Don't have an account? User-contributed reviews Add a review and share your thoughts with other readers. Be the first. Add a review and share your thoughts with other readers. Tags Add tags for "Why Muslims rebel : repression and resistance in the Islamic world". Islam and politics -- Islamic countries. Opposition Political science Political participation -- Islamic countries.
Political violence -- Religious aspects -- Islam. Political violence -- Islamic countries. Islam et politique -- Pays musulmans. Opposition Science politique Participation politique -- Pays musulmans. Violence politique -- Aspect religieux -- Islam. Violence politique -- Pays musulmans. Islam and politics. Political participation. Political violence. Politics and government.
Islamic countries. Sociale bewegingen. Politieke bewegingen. Politiek geweld. Violence -- Religious aspects -- Islam. Charting militant Islamist activism from reports in the chronologies in Middle East Journal quarterly in these two countries beginning in the mids and peaking in the early s especially between , and falling back to low levels after , the author follows the increasing extremism as tied to political exclusion.
Moreover, where Islamist activists were afforded some political participation--such as in Tunisia and Jordan--Islamist extremism was ameliorated. However, the case of Pakistan is notable since the state afforded some inclusion of the major Islamist party, Jama'at al-Islami, but this did not stem the tide of political extremism.
The author thus concludes that political exclusion, while a major contributing factor for Islamist rebellion, is not sufficient unto itself to induce mass insurgency p.
Moving next to an analysis of the breadth and depth of political repression in the Muslim world, the author expresses surprise and alarm that this fact is given scant attention in theoretical and empirical studies. This underscores the oft-cited point that Western attention has focused more on the results of Islamist extremism than on its causes.
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