Ancestral and Instrumental in the Politics of Ethnic and Religious Conflict

Ayelet Harel Shalev, Arthur A. Stein

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

Abstract

Ethnicity, like race, religion, and nationality, is a feature of group identity that is contested. There are literatures devoted to each, and in each there are those who see the origins of identity and affiliation in ancestry and deeply rooted affect and those who see these as socially constructed and instrumentally used by elites. Yet all recognize that the ancestral is socially constructed and that social constructions make use of existing cultural features, and that the vertical cleavages of race, religion, ethnicity, and nationality dominate the horizontal ones of class. This generates implications for institutional changes, for the pursuit of extraterritorial interests, for the selection of explanatory narratives for conflict when multiple attributions are possible, for intra-communal conflict, and for policies for ethnic conflict regulation.
Original languageAmerican English
Title of host publicationAffect, Interest, and Political Entrepreneurs in Ethnic and Religious Conflicts
EditorsArthur A Stein, Ayelet Harel-Shalev
PublisherRoutledge
Pages1-20
Edition1
ISBN (Electronic)9781351182607
ISBN (Print)9780815396116, 9780367519421
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2018

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