Cyclical jihadist governance: the Islamic State governance cycle in Iraq and Syria

IF 0.9 Q3 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Matthew Bamber-Zryd
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

ABSTRACT The rise and decline of the Islamic State’s (IS) caliphate between 2014 and 2018 have garnered significant policy and academic attention. Explanations for the group’s territorial demise have focussed on its internal group dynamics and external conflict processes. Although both explanations are valid, I adopt a historical approach to show that IS’s caliphate was just one cycle in a two-decade history of governance activity. IS has undertaken three governance cycles composed of phases of insurgency, gaining territory, establishing institutions, and losing territory. After each governance cycle, IS engaged in a process of critical self-reflection and adapted its governance strategy significantly. This resulted in a progressive history in which, with each cycle, IS governed greater amounts of territory, through more complex institutions, for a longer period of time. This article is based on fieldwork interviews conducted with both IS members and civilians who lived under IS control in Iraq, Lebanon, Syria, and Turkey, as well as archival research on IS historical and contemporary governing documents.
周期性圣战治理:伊拉克和叙利亚的伊斯兰国治理周期
摘要2014年至2018年间,伊斯兰国哈里发国的兴衰引起了政策和学术界的高度关注。对该集团领土消亡的解释集中在其内部集团动态和外部冲突过程上。尽管这两种解释都是有效的,但我采用了一种历史方法来表明,IS的哈里发国只是20年治理活动历史中的一个周期。IS经历了三个治理周期,包括叛乱阶段、获得领土阶段、建立机构阶段和失去领土阶段。在每个治理周期之后,信息系统都会进行批判性的自我反思,并对其治理战略进行重大调整。这导致了一段进步的历史,在这段历史中,伊斯兰国通过更复杂的机构,在更长的时间内统治着更多的领土。本文基于对伊拉克、黎巴嫩、叙利亚和土耳其伊斯兰国成员和生活在伊斯兰国控制下的平民的实地采访,以及对伊斯兰国历史和当代统治文件的档案研究。
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来源期刊
Small Wars and Insurgencies
Small Wars and Insurgencies INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS-
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
25.00%
发文量
65
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