Collective Action, Foreign Fighting, and the Global Struggle for the Islamic State

P. J. Schraeder, Michael J. Schumacher
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Abstract

ABSTRACT This project examines the global “foreign fighter” phenomenon, in which individuals fight in a foreign conflict. We explore the question – “Why do ordinary people travel abroad to fight and potentially die for a foreign cause?” – by analyzing a dataset of 27,223 foreign fighters from 75 countries who fought for the Islamic State. The statistical results demonstrate that one must draw on three different bodies of collective action theory to provide a robust explanation. The Islamic State’s foreign fighters come from countries that are predominantly Muslim (social network theory), that have greater levels of educational attainment (grievance theory), and that are experiencing elevated levels of domestic political instability (political opportunity theory). These findings have theoretical implications for understanding the international dimension of collection action, most notably regarding international democracy promotion. Whereas a country’s degree of democracy or authoritarianism does not affect the numbers of foreign fighters from that country, the democratization process and democratic transition foster domestic political instability that in turn favors higher numbers of foreign fighters.
集体行动,国外战斗,以及对伊斯兰国的全球斗争
本项目探讨了全球“外国战士”现象,即个人在外国冲突中战斗。我们探讨了一个问题——“为什么普通人要到国外去打仗,甚至可能为外国的事业而死?”——通过分析来自75个国家、曾为伊斯兰国作战的27223名外国战斗人员的数据集。统计结果表明,一个人必须利用三个不同的集体行动理论来提供一个强有力的解释。伊斯兰国的外国战士来自穆斯林占主导地位的国家(社会网络理论)、受教育程度较高的国家(不满理论),以及国内政治不稳定程度较高的国家(政治机会理论)。这些发现对理解收集行动的国际层面具有理论意义,尤其是在国际民主促进方面。虽然一个国家的民主或威权程度不会影响该国外国战士的数量,但民主化进程和民主转型会助长国内政治不稳定,从而有利于更多的外国战士。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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