伊斯兰国对政治共同体和国家地位的看法及其对-à-Vis民族主义的表达

IF 1.2 3区 社会学 Q2 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Mohammed A. Salih
{"title":"伊斯兰国对政治共同体和国家地位的看法及其对-à-Vis民族主义的表达","authors":"Mohammed A. Salih","doi":"10.1080/1057610x.2023.2257011","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"AbstractThis article explores the Islamic State (IS)’s discursive construction of ideal forms of political community and statehood, i.e. the umma and caliphate, and their articulation in relation to the dominant forms of political community and statehood in the modern world, i.e. the nation and nation-state. Studying a large corpus of data from IS primary sources in multiple languages and mediums, I propose that IS’s discourse espouses a vision of umma-caliphalism that entails a thorough process of, what I call, de-nationization. On the material level, de-nationization results in dismantling the nation-state and its apparatus of sovereignty. At the symbolic level, de-nationization mandates derecognizing the political community of the nation and treating it as no more than a form of ethnic cultural unit, or ethnie, whereby ethnic symbols are not allowed to become the basis of political mobilization and demands. This expansionist umma-caliphalist vision centered on highly exclusionary notions of communal membership and solidarity is important to making sense of IS’s violent tendencies. Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.Notes1 Shiraz Maher, Salafi-Jihadism: The History of an Idea (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016).2 Mohammad-Mahmoud Ould Mohamedou, A Theory of ISIS: Political Violence and the Transformation of the Global Order (London: Pluto Press, 2018).3 William McCants, The ISIS Apocalypse: The History, Strategy, and Doomsday Vision of the Islamic State (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 2015); Masaki Nagata, “The Radical Nation-State and Contemporary Extremism,” Middle East Law and Governance 11, no. 3 (2019): 319–45; David J. Wasserstein, Black Banners of ISIS: The Roots of the New Caliphate (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2017).4 Nadia Kaneva and Andrea Stanton, “An Alternative Vision of Statehood: Islamic State’s Ideological Challenge to the Nation-State,” Studies in Conflict & Terrorism (2020): 1–19; Ben Caló, David Malet, Luke Howie, and Pete Lentini. “Islamic Caliphate or Nation State? Investigating the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant’s Imagined Community,” Nations and Nationalism 26 no. 3 (2020): 727–42.5 Amaryllis Maria Georges, “ISIS Rhetoric for the Creation of the Ummah,” in Religion and Theology: Breakthroughs in Research and Practice (IGI Global, 2020), 429–49; James Piscatori and Amin Saikal, Islam Beyond Borders: The Umma in World Politics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2019).6 Ibid.7 Kaneva and Stanton, “An Alternative”; Caló et al., “Islamic Caliphate”; Masaki Nagata (2019); Piscatori and Saikal, “Islam Beyond”; L. Carl Brown, Religion and State: The Muslim Approach to Politics (New York: Columbia University Press, 2000); Souran Mardini, “Fundamental Religio-Political Concepts in the Sources of Islam” (PhD diss., University of Edinburgh, 1984). https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/12813523.pdf8 Benedict Anderson, Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism (London: Verso, 2006); Karl W. Deutsch, Political Community at the International Level: Problems of Definition and Measurement (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1953); Igor Filibi, Noe Cirnago, and Justin O. Frosini, eds., Democracy With(out) Nations? Old and New Foundations for Political Communities in a Changing World (Universidad del País Vasco-Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea, 2011); Ernest Gellner, Nations and Nationalism (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1983); Anthony D. Smith, The Ethnic Origins of Nations (Oxford: Blackwell Publishing, 1988); Ferdinand Tonnies, Community and Civil Society (J. Harris, ed.) (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001).9 Martin Loughlin, “In Defense of Staatslehre,” Der Staat 48 no. 1 (2009): 5.10 See, for example, Paul W. Kahn, Political Theology: Four News Chapters on the Concept of Sovereignty (New York: Columbia University Press, 2011); Loughlin, “In Defense”.11 Max Weber, “Politics as a Vocation,” in The Vocation Lectures, ed. David Owen and Tracy B. Strong, trans. Rodney Livingstone (Indianapolis & Cambridge: Hackett Publishing, 2004), 33.12 Kamaran Palani, Kurdistan’s De Facto Statehood: A New Explanatory Framework (London: Routledge, 2022); Kenneth McRoberts, Catalonia: The Struggle over Independence (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2022).13 Anderson, Imagined; Filibi et al., Democracy.14 Muhittin Ataman, “Islamic Perspective on Ethnicity and Nationalism: Diversity or Uniformity?,” Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs 23, no. 1 (2003): 89–102; Mark Juergensmeyer, “Religious Terrorism as Performance Violence,” in The Oxford Handbook of Religion and Violence, ed. Mark Juergensmeyer, Margo Kitts, and Michael Jerryson (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013), 1–15; Nathan C. Mikami, “Among the Believers are men: The Role of Religious-Nationalist Identity and Religious Literacy in Islamic State Recruitment Efforts in the West” (PhD diss., Washington State University, 2019), https://rex.libraries.wsu.edu/esploro/outputs/doctoral/AMONG-THE-BELIEVERS-ARE-MEN-THE/99900581419201842; Robert A. Saunders, “The Ummah as Nation: A Reappraisal in the Wake of the ‘Cartoon Affair’,” Nations and Nationalism 12, no. 2: 303–21; Kaneva and Stanton, “An Alternative”; Caló et al., “Islamic Caliphate”.15 Anderson, Imagined; Paul R. Brass, Ethnicity and Nationalism (London: Sage, 1991); Loughlin, “In Defense”; Kaneva and Stanton, “An Alternative”; Gellner, Nations; Kahn, Political Theology; Nagata, “The Radical”; Xavier Márquez, “Models of Political Community: The Nation State and Other Stories,” in Democracy With(out) Nations? Old and New Foundations for Political Communities in a Changing World, ed. Igor Filibi, Noe Cirnago, and Justin O. Frosini (Universidad del País Vasco-Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea, 2011); Smith, The Ethnic.16 For Turkish items, I relied on their Arabic subtitles provided by IS production houses.17 Rudolf de Cillia, Martin Reisigl, and Ruth Wodak, “The Discursive Construction of National Identities,” Discourse and Society 10, no. 2 (1999), 149–73; Ruth Wodak, The Politics of Fear: What Right-Wing Populist Discourses Mean (London: Sage, 2015); Ruth Wodak, “The Semiotics of Racism: A Critical Discourse-Historical Analysis,” in Discourse, of Course: An Overview of Research in Discourse Studies, ed. Jan Renkema (Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2009), 311–26.18 De Cillia et al., “The Discursive”; Wodak, The Politics; Wodak, The Semiotics.19 Norman Fairclough, Media Discourse (Edward Arnold, 1995); Wodak, The Politics; Wodak, The Semiotics.20 Wodak, The Politics.21 De Cillia et al., The Discursive, 160.22 De Cillia et al., The Discursive, 161.23 Caló et al., “Islamic”; Kaneva and Stanton, “An Alternative”; Nagata, “The Radical”; Piscatori and Saikal, Islam Beyond.24 “Be Patient for Indeed the Promise of Allah Is True,” Rumiyah, no. 9 (May 2017): 26–35; “Imamah Is from the Millah of Ibrahim,” Dabiq, no. 1 (July 2014): 20–9.25 “From Hijrah to Khilāfa,” Dabiq, 1 (July 2014): 34–41; “Interview with the Amir of the Khilāfah Soldiers in Bangal Shaykh Abu Ibrahim al-Hanif,” Dabiq 14 (April 2016): 58–66; “IS Spokesman Muhammad al-Adnani: This Is the Promise of Allah,” al-Furqan Media, June 2014, https://jihadology.net/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/shaykh-abc5ab-mue1b8a5ammad-al-e28098adnc481nc4ab-al-shc481mc4ab-22this-is-the-promise-of-god22.mp3; Maher, Salafi-Jihadism; Joana Cook and Shiraz Maher, eds., The Rule Is for None but Allah: Islamist Approaches to Governance (Hurst Publishers, 2022).26 Abul-Hassan al-Mawardi, Al-Ahkam as-Sultaniyyah: The Laws of Islamic Government, trans. Asadullah Yate (London: Ta-Ha Publishers, 1996); Patricia Crone, God’s Rule: Government and Islam (New York: Columbia University Press, 2004).27 “Establishing the Islamic State: Between Prophetic Methodology and the Paths of Deviants, Part 1,” Rumiyah 7 (March 2017): 6–9; “The Position of Imamah in the Religion,” Rumiyah 13 (September 2017): 14–20.28 “IS Spokesman”, 2014.29 “From Hijrah”, 2014; “Interview with the Amir”, 2016; “IS Spokesman”, 2014; “The End of Sykes-Picot,” Al-Hayat Media Center, June, 2014, https://jihadology.net/2014/06/29/al-%e1%b8%a5ayat-media-center-presents-a-new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-of-iraq-and-al-sham-the-end-of-sykes-picot/30 “Foreword,” Dabiq, no. 8 (March 2015): 6.31 “Inside the Caliphate 1,” Al-Hayat Media Center, July 2017. https://jihadology.net/2017/07/28/new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-inside-the-caliphate/32 “Be Patient,” 2017: 27.33 “And what is after impotence except surrender,” Al-Naba’, no. 170: 3.34 “Be Patient,” 2017: 28.35 “Turkey and the Fire of Nationalism,” Al-Hayat Media Center, November 2015, https://jihadology.net/2015/11/21/new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-turkey-and-the-fire-of-nationalism/36 “Khilafah Declared,” Dabiq, no. 1 (July 2014): 7.37 “Foreword,” 2015: 4.38 “Turkey and the Fire,” 2015.39 “From the “Pages of History: The Flags of Jahiliyya,” Dabiq, no. 9 (May 2015): 22.40 “The End of Sykes-Picot,” 2014.41 “Khilafah Declared,” 2014: 9.42 Anderson, Imagined; Gellner, Nations; Smith, The Ethnic.43 Michèle Lamont and Virág Molnár, “The Study of Boundaries in the Social Sciences,” Annual Review of Sociology 28, no. 1 (2002): 168; Márquez, Models of Political.44 Anderson, Imagined; Lamont and Molnár, “The Study of”; De Cillia et al., “The Discursive”; Wodak, The Semiotics.45 “Be Patient”, 27.46 “Imamah Is From”, 24.47 “The Commander of the Faithful to the Jews, Crusaders and Apostates: So Wait; Indeed We, Along with You, Are Waiting,” Al-Naba’ 11 (December 2015): 3; “Inside the Caliphate 1,” Al-Hayat Media Center, July 2017, https://jihadology.net/2017/07/28/new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-inside-the-caliphate/48 “Turkey and the Fire of Nationalism,” Al-Hayat Media Center, November 2015, https://jihadology.net/2015/11/21/new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-turkey-and-the-fire-of-nationalism/49 “For God Not for the Homeland,” Al-Naba’ 5 (November 2015): 8.50 Ibid., 8.51 “The Murtadd Taliban Movement: On the Footsteps of the Iraqi and Shami Sahawat,” Rumiyah 10 (June 2017): 42–3; “The Ruling on the Belligerent Christians,” Rumiyah 9 (May 2017): 4–11; “Wala’ and Bara’ Versus American Racism,” Dabiq 11 (September 2015): 18–21.52 “Wala’ and Bara’”, 2015.53 “The Allies of al-Qa’idah in Sham,” Dabiq 8 (March 2015): 7–11; “For God Not”, 2015.54 Ibn Khaldun, The Muqadimah: An Introduction to History, ed. N. J. Dawood, trans. Franz Rosenthal (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2015).55 Ibn Khaldun, The Muqadimah; Manzooruddin Ahmed, “Umma: The Idea of A Universal Community,” Islamic Studies 14, no. 1 (1975): 27–54.56 Sayyid Abul A’la Maududi, Nasyonalisme Eslami (Islamic Nationalism), trans. O. Asad (Qalam Library, 2017).57 Jahiliyya is a highly loaded term that semantically means ignorance and refers to the pre-Islamic age in Arabia where polytheism was the norm. Islamist thinker and ideologist Sayyid Qutb defined jahiliyya as the “defiance of divine guidance” where one man is lord over others. See: Sayyid Qutb, Milestones, ed. A. B. al-Mehri (Maktaba Booksellers and Publishers, 2006), 79.58 “For God”, 8; Qawmi nationalism or qawmiyya refers to ethnic-based nationalism, and watani nationalism or wataniyya refers to state-based nationalism. Ideologically, both qawmi and watani national identities emphasized the supremacy of Arab identity, language, and culture in their multi-ethnic, multilingual, and multicultural territories. While watani nationalists are mainly committed to the extant post-WWI nation states, qawmi nationalists advocate a vision of pan-Arabism that would unify all Arab-majority states within an Arab super state. For more on this see, Adeed Dawisha, Arab Nationalism in the Twentieth Century: From Triumph to Despair (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2016); Albert Hourani, Arabic Thought in the Liberal Age 1798-1939 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013).59 “Partisanship of Jahiliyya,” Rumiyah 5 (January 2017): 11; “We Disbelieve in You,” Al-Naba’ 173 (March 2019): 3; “Foreword,” Dabiq 8 (March 2015): 3–6.60 “Wala’ and Bara’”, 20; Mohamedou, A Theory of.61 “Foreword,” 2015, 3; Mohamedou, A Theory of.62 “Irja’: The Most Dangerous Bid’ah,” Dabiq 8 (March 2015): 39–56; “Be Patient”, 2017; Maher, Salafi-Jihadism.63 “The Rafidah: From ibn Saba’ to the Dajjal,” Dabiq 13 (January 2016): 34; “Foreword,” 2015; “Kill the Imams of Kufr in the West,” Dabiq 14 (April 2016): 12; “Our Battle with the Rafidhis: So There Will Be No Sedition,” Al-Naba’ 28 (April 2016): 3; Partisanship of Jahiliyya,” Rumiyah 5 (January 2017): 11; “The Law of Allah or the Laws of Men: IS Waging War against the Khilāfah Apostasy,” Dabiq 10 (July 2015): 55. IS’s complex conception of the ideal form of umma membership should not be construed as meaning that the group physically eliminates any Sunni who does not fall under its narrow conception of communal membership and solidarity. While it was merciless toward those captured in combat against it, IS generally attempted to accommodate large sections of Sunni Muslims within the ranks of its umma and re-proselytize them into its exclusionary form of religious belief and practice.64 Ahm Ershad Uddin, “The Fanatical ISIS through the Lens of Islamic Law 1,” International Journal of Islamic Thought 12 (2017): 1–14; Michael Crawford, Ibn ‘Abd al-Wahhab: Makers of the Muslim World, (London: Oneworld Publications, 2014); Namira Nahouza, Wahhabism and the Rise of the new Salafists: Theology, Power and Sunni Islam (London: I. B. Tauris, 2018); Maher, Salafi-Jihadism; “Shia as Internal Others: A Salafi Rejection of the ‘Rejecters’,” Islam and Christian–Muslim Relations 28, no. 4 (2017): 409–30.65 Frederick M. Denny, “Ummah in the Constitution of Medina,” Journal of Near Eastern Studies 36, no. 1 (1977): 39–47; Piscatori and Saikal, Islam Beyond.66 Maulana Husain Ahmad Madani, Composite Nationalism and Islam, trans. Mohammad Anwar Hussain and Hasan Imam (New Delhi: Manohar Publishers & Distributors); Rafiya Nisar, Maulana Hussain Ahmad Madani and Composite Nationalism, Insight Islamicus 12 (2012).67 David H. Warren, Rivals in the Gulf: Yusuf al-Qaradawi, Abdullah Bin Bayyah, and the Qatar-UAE Contest over the Arab Spring and the Gulf Crisis (London: Routledge, 2021), 32; Usaama A al-Azmi, “Abdulla¯h bin Bayyah and the Arab Revolutions: Counter-revolutionary Neo-traditionalism’s Ideological Struggle against Islamism,” Muslim World 109, no. 3 (2019).68 Hugh Kennedy, Caliphate: The History of an Idea (New York: Basic Books, 2016).69 Jens Bartelson, Sovereignty as Symbolic Form (London: Routledge, 2014), 2.70 See, for example, Anderson, Imagined; Bartelson, Sovereignty; Loughlin, “In Defense”; J. Samuel Barkin and Bruce Cronin, “The State and the Nation: Changing Norms and the Rules of Sovereignty in International Relations,” International Organization 48, no. 1 (1994): 107–30.71 Giorgio Agamben, Homo Sacer: Sovereign Power and Bare Life, trans. Daniel Heller-Roazen (Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press, 2005); Giorgio Agamben, State of Exception, trans. Kevin Attell (Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 2005); Kahn, Political Theology.72 Asma Kounsar, “The Concept of Tawhid in Islam: In the Light of Perspectives of Prominent Muslim Scholars,” Journal of Islamic Thought and Civilization (JITC) 6, no. 2 (2016): 94–110; Maher Salafi-Jihadism; “The Rule of the Sharia Not the Rule of Jahiliyya,” Rumiyah 13 (September 2017): 6–8; “Tawhid of Allah in His Rule,” Rumiyah 3 (November 2016): 27.73 “Tawhid of”, 2016.74 Sayyid Abul A’la Maududi, Jihad in Islam (Islamic Publications, 1976); Qutb, Milestones.75 Qutb, Milestones.76 Qutb’s ideas played an important role in the birth of the Salafi-Jihadi movement through its fusion with Wahhabism as many Qutbists fled from the oppression of Gamal Abd al-Nasser’s government in Egypt to Saudi Arabia, see Marc Lynch, “Islam Divided Between Salafi-jihad and the Ikhwan,” Studies in Conflict & Terrorism 33, no. 6 (2010): 467–87.77 “A Fatwa for Khurasan,” Dabiq 10 (July 2015): 18–24; “Establishing the”, 2017; Wael B. Hallaq, Sharī’a: Theory, Practice, Transformations (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009); “The Position of”, 2017.78 “Imamah Is From”, 2014; “The structure of the Caliphate,” Al-Furqan Media, July 2016, https://jihadology.net/2016/07/06/new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-the-structure-of-the-caliphate/79 “The Position of”, 16.80 “Be patient,” 2017; “Foreword,” Dabiq 15 (July 2016): 4–7; “The Rule of,” 2017.81 See, for example, Bartelson, Sovereignty; Kahn, Political Theology.82 “Legislation Is Only for Allah,” Wilaya ar-Raqqah, October 2015, https://jihadology.net/2015/10/30/new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-legislation-is-not-but-for-god-wilayat-al-raqqah/83 “Be Patient”, 2017.84 For instance, scholars such as Ataman, “Islamic Perspective”; Juergensmeyer, Religious Terrorism; Mikami, “Among the Believers”.85 “Foreword,” 2015.86 “A Fatwa for,” 2015; “Foreword,” 2015; Shadi Hamid and William McCants, Rethinking Political Islam (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017); “The Allies of,” 2015.87 From the “Pages of History: The Flags of Jahiliyya,” Dabiq 9 (May 2015): 21.88 “A Fatwa for,” 2015; “Foreword,” 2015.89 Warren, “Rivals in the Gulf”, 32; Bettina Gräf, “The Concept of Wasat.iyya in the Work of Yusuf al-Qarad.āwī,” in Global Mufti: The Phenomenon of Yūsuf Al-Qarad.āwi ¯ (New York: Columbia University Press, 2009), 213–38.90 Warren, “Rivals in the Gulf”, 33.91 Peter J. Taylor, “The State as Container: Territoriality in the Modern World-System,” Progress in Human Geography 18, no. 2 (1994): 151.92 John Gerard Ruggie, “Territoriality and Beyond: Problematizing Modernity in International Relations,” International Organization 47, no. 1 (1993): 139–74; Saskia Sassen, Territory, Authority, Rights: From Medieval to Global Assemblages (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2008); Taylor, “The State”.93 Neil Brenner and Stuart Elden, “Henri Lefebvre on State, Space, Territory,” International Political Sociology 3, no. 4 (2009): 353–77.94 Anderson, Imagined; Smith, The Ethnic.95 “Foreword,” Rumiyah 12 (August 2017): 5.96 “Foreword,” 2015, 4.97 “A Fatwa for,” 2015, 19.98 “Foreword,” 2015, 3.99 Michael D. Berdine, Redrawing the Middle East: Sir Mark Sykes, Imperialism and the Sykes-Picot Agreement (London: I. B. Tauris, 2018).100 “Wala’ and bara’,” 2015; “Be Patient,” 2017; “Why Do We Fight? The Most Important Goals of Jihad in the Path of God,” Al-Naba’ 25 (April 2016): 12–3; “The Kurds… and the Autumn of Nations,” Al-Naba’ 19 (February 2016): 3; “The Murtadd Taliban,” 2017; Islam Is the Religion of the Sword Not Pacifism,” Dabiq 7 (February 2015): 20–4.101 “Be Patient,” 2017, 28.102 Bruce Lawrence, Messages to the World: The Statements of Osama bin Laden, trans. James Howarth (London: Verso, 2005), 194.103 Paul Brykczynski, “Radical Islam and the Nation: The Relationship between Religion and Nationalism in the Political Thought of Hassan al-Banna and Sayyid Qutb,” History of Intellectual Culture 5 (2005): 9; P. J. Vatikiotis, Islam and the State (London: Routledge, 2017); “Hasan al-Banna,” in Princeton Readings in Islamist Thought: Texts and Contexts from al-Banna to Bin Laden, ed. Roxanne L. Euben and Muhammad Qasim Zaman (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2009), 56–78.104 Gail Minault, The Khilafat Movement: Religious Symbolism and Political Mobilization in India (New York: Columbia University Press, 1982), 6.105 David Held, Democracy and the Global Order: From the Modern State to Cosmopolitan Governance (Cambridge, UK: Polity, 1995).106 “The Revival of Jihad in Bengal: With the Spread of the Light of the Khilāfah,” Dabiq 12 (November 2015): 41.107 “For God MNot,” 2015, 8; “Kurds between,” 2016; Message to Our People in Kurdistan,” Al-Hayat Media Center, March 2015, https://jihadology.net/2015/03/23/al-%E1%B8%A5ayat-media-center-presents-a-new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-message-to-our-people-in-kurdistan/; “The Religion of Islam,” Rumiyah 1 (September 2016): 4–8; “Turkey and”, 2015.108 I use de-nationization here rather than terms like denationalization because the latter is mainly used in regard to moving ownership of an industry from public to private hands; or stripping one of citizenship; or forms of citizenship and belonging which are transnational or postnational as a result of processes of globalization. But the emphasis in de-nationization is on unraveling the nation and transforming it into another form of political community. On denationalization see, Linda Bosniak, “Citizenship Denationalized,” Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies 7, no. 2 (2000): 447–509; Saskia Sassen, “Towards Post-National and Denationalized Citizenship,” in Handbook of Citizenship Studies, ed. Engin F. Isin and Bryan S. Turner (London: Sage, 2002), 277–92.109 “Breaking of the Borders,” Al-I’tisam Media, June 2014, https://jihadology.net/2014/06/29/al-iti%e1%b9%a3am-media-presents-a-new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-of-iraq-and-al-sham-breaking-of-the-border/110 “Breaking of,” 2014; “Turkey and” 2015.111 “Khutbah and Jum’ah Prayer in the Grand Mosque of Musul,” Al-Furqan Media, July 2014, https://jihadology.net/2014/07/05/al-furqan-media-presents-a-new-video-message-from-the-islamic-states-abu-bakr-al-%E1%B8%A5ussayni-al-qurayshi-al-baghdadi-khu%E1%B9%ADbah-and-jumah-prayer-in-the-grand-mosque-of-mu/112 “The End of,” 2014.113 “The Structure of,” 2016.114 “The Birth of Two New Wilayat,” Dabiq 4 (October 2014): 18.115 “The Structure of,” 2016.116 Arseny Saparov, “The Alteration of Place Names and Construction of National Identity in Soviet Armenia,” Cahiers du monde russe. Russie-Empire russe-Union soviétique et États indépendants 44, no. 1 (2003): 179–98; Harold R. Isaacs, “Basic Group Identity: The Idols of the Tribe,” Reprinted from Ethnicity 1, no. 1 (1974): 15–41.117 Duri A. A., Gottschalk H. L., Colin G. S., Lambton A. K. S., and Bazmee Ansari A. S.,. “Dīwān,” in Encyclopaedia of Islam, ed. P. Bearman, Th. Banquis, C. E. Bowworth, E. van Donzel, and W. P. Heinrichs Bowworth, 2nd ed.; Khilafah, “Declared,” Dabiq 1 (July 2014): 6–11; “The structure of,” 2016.118 IS considers the Abbasid caliphate (775-1258 CE) as the last rightful caliphate and does not regard the Ottomans as a caliphate. See, “The Law of,” 2015: 59; “The Structure of,” 2016.119 Pinar Dinc, “The Kurdish Movement and the Democratic Federation of Northern Syria: An Alternative to the (Nation-)State Model?,” Journal of Balkan and Near Eastern Studies 22, no. 1 (2020): 47–67; Damian Gerber and Shannon Brincat, “When Öcalan Met Bookchin: The Kurdish Freedom Movement and the Political Theory of Democratic Confederalism,” Geopolitics 26, no. 4 (2018): 973–97; Milena Sterio, “Self-Determination and Secession under International Law: The Cases of Kurdistan and Catalonia,” American Society of International Law 22, no. 1 (2018).120 Harriet Allsopp and Wladimir van Wilgenburg, The Kurds of Northern Syria: Governance, Diversity and Conflicts (London: I. B. Tauris, 2019); David McDowall, A Modern History of the Kurds (London: I. B. Tauris, 2007); David Romano, The Kurdish Nationalist Movement: Opportunity, Mobilization, and Identity (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006); Abbas Vali, Kurds and the State in Iran: The Making of Kurdish Identity (London: I. B. Tauris, 2014).121 Mohammed A. Salih, “How Islamic State Is Trying to Lure the Kurds to Its Ranks” Al-Monitor (2016), https://www.al-monitor.com/originals/2016/08/islamic-state-propaganda-video-kurds-iraq.html122 “Kurds between,” 2016; “Message to Our,” 2015.123 “Kurds between,” 2016; Jonathan Phillips, The Life and Legend of the Sultan Saladin (New Haven, Yale University Press, 2019).124 Allsopp and van Wilgenburg, The Kurds of; McDowall, A Modern History; Romano, The Kurdish.125 Kawa Abdulkareem Sherwani, “The Discourse of Kurdish Traditional Textiles,” Industria Textila 72, no. 6 (2021): 623–31.126 McDowall, A Modern History; Romano, The Kurdish. A Kurdistan province exists in Iran but as an administrative, not political, unit.127 “For God Not,” 2015: 8.128 Brass, Ethnicity and; Smith, The Ethnic.129 Smith, The Ethnic, 13.130 Ibid, 32.131 Brass, Ethnicity and.132 Gellner, Nations.133 Anderson, Imagined; Smith, The Ethnic; Sterio, “Self-Determination and”.134 Allsopp and van Wilgenburg, The Kurds of; “The structure of,” 2016.135 Ataman, “Islamic Perspective”; Sami Hanna and George H. Gardner, eds., Arab Socialism [Al-Ishtirakīyah al-’Arabīyah]: A Documentary Survey (Leiden, E. J. Brill, 1969).136 Nagata, “The Radical”; Cyrus Schayegh, The Middle East and the Making of the Modern World (Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 2017).137 Schayegh, The Middle East; Nazan Cicek, “The Role of Mass Education in Nation-Building in the Ottoman Empire and the Turkish Republic, 1870–1930,” in Mass Education and the Limits of State Building, c. 1870-1930, ed. Laurence Brockliss and Nicola Sheldon (Palgrave Macmillan, 2012); Erik J. Zürcher, The Young Turk Legacy and Nation Building: From the Ottoman Empire to Atatürk’s Turkey (London: I. B. Tauris, 2010).138 Kaneva and Stanton, “An Alternative”; Saunders, “The Umma”; Ruud Koopmans and Paul Statham, “Challenging the Liberal Nation-State? Postnationalism, Multiculturalism, and the Collective Claims Making of Migrants and Ethnic Minorities in Britain and Germany,” American Journal of Sociology 105, no. 3 (1999): 652–96; Yasemin Nuhoglu Soysal, Limits of Citizenship: Migrants and Postnational Membership in Europe (Chicago: Chicago University Press, 1994).139 “Iraq: ISIS Abducting, Killing, Expelling Minorities: Armed Group Targeting Christian Nuns, Turkmen, Shabaks, Yazidis,” Human Rights Watch, July 2014, https://www.hrw.org/news/2014/07/19/iraq-isis-abducting-killing-expelling-minorities#140 Mathilde Becker Aarseth, Mosul under ISIS: Eyewitness Accounts of Life in the Caliphate (London: I. B. Tauris, 2021); Mara Revkin, “The Legal Foundations of the Islamic State,” Brookings July, 2016, https://www.brookings.edu/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/Brookings-Analysis-Paper_Mara-Revkin_Web.pdf; Mohammed A. Salih and Marwan M. Kraidy, “Islamic State and Women: A Biopolitical Analysis,” International Journal of Communication 14 (2020): 1933–50.","PeriodicalId":38834,"journal":{"name":"Studies in Conflict & Terrorism","volume":"34 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":1.2000,"publicationDate":"2023-09-25","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The Islamic State’s Visions of Political Community and Statehood and Their Articulation Vis-à-Vis Nationalism\",\"authors\":\"Mohammed A. Salih\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/1057610x.2023.2257011\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"AbstractThis article explores the Islamic State (IS)’s discursive construction of ideal forms of political community and statehood, i.e. the umma and caliphate, and their articulation in relation to the dominant forms of political community and statehood in the modern world, i.e. the nation and nation-state. Studying a large corpus of data from IS primary sources in multiple languages and mediums, I propose that IS’s discourse espouses a vision of umma-caliphalism that entails a thorough process of, what I call, de-nationization. On the material level, de-nationization results in dismantling the nation-state and its apparatus of sovereignty. At the symbolic level, de-nationization mandates derecognizing the political community of the nation and treating it as no more than a form of ethnic cultural unit, or ethnie, whereby ethnic symbols are not allowed to become the basis of political mobilization and demands. This expansionist umma-caliphalist vision centered on highly exclusionary notions of communal membership and solidarity is important to making sense of IS’s violent tendencies. Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.Notes1 Shiraz Maher, Salafi-Jihadism: The History of an Idea (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016).2 Mohammad-Mahmoud Ould Mohamedou, A Theory of ISIS: Political Violence and the Transformation of the Global Order (London: Pluto Press, 2018).3 William McCants, The ISIS Apocalypse: The History, Strategy, and Doomsday Vision of the Islamic State (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 2015); Masaki Nagata, “The Radical Nation-State and Contemporary Extremism,” Middle East Law and Governance 11, no. 3 (2019): 319–45; David J. Wasserstein, Black Banners of ISIS: The Roots of the New Caliphate (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2017).4 Nadia Kaneva and Andrea Stanton, “An Alternative Vision of Statehood: Islamic State’s Ideological Challenge to the Nation-State,” Studies in Conflict & Terrorism (2020): 1–19; Ben Caló, David Malet, Luke Howie, and Pete Lentini. “Islamic Caliphate or Nation State? Investigating the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant’s Imagined Community,” Nations and Nationalism 26 no. 3 (2020): 727–42.5 Amaryllis Maria Georges, “ISIS Rhetoric for the Creation of the Ummah,” in Religion and Theology: Breakthroughs in Research and Practice (IGI Global, 2020), 429–49; James Piscatori and Amin Saikal, Islam Beyond Borders: The Umma in World Politics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2019).6 Ibid.7 Kaneva and Stanton, “An Alternative”; Caló et al., “Islamic Caliphate”; Masaki Nagata (2019); Piscatori and Saikal, “Islam Beyond”; L. Carl Brown, Religion and State: The Muslim Approach to Politics (New York: Columbia University Press, 2000); Souran Mardini, “Fundamental Religio-Political Concepts in the Sources of Islam” (PhD diss., University of Edinburgh, 1984). https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/12813523.pdf8 Benedict Anderson, Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism (London: Verso, 2006); Karl W. Deutsch, Political Community at the International Level: Problems of Definition and Measurement (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1953); Igor Filibi, Noe Cirnago, and Justin O. Frosini, eds., Democracy With(out) Nations? Old and New Foundations for Political Communities in a Changing World (Universidad del País Vasco-Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea, 2011); Ernest Gellner, Nations and Nationalism (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1983); Anthony D. Smith, The Ethnic Origins of Nations (Oxford: Blackwell Publishing, 1988); Ferdinand Tonnies, Community and Civil Society (J. Harris, ed.) (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001).9 Martin Loughlin, “In Defense of Staatslehre,” Der Staat 48 no. 1 (2009): 5.10 See, for example, Paul W. Kahn, Political Theology: Four News Chapters on the Concept of Sovereignty (New York: Columbia University Press, 2011); Loughlin, “In Defense”.11 Max Weber, “Politics as a Vocation,” in The Vocation Lectures, ed. David Owen and Tracy B. Strong, trans. Rodney Livingstone (Indianapolis & Cambridge: Hackett Publishing, 2004), 33.12 Kamaran Palani, Kurdistan’s De Facto Statehood: A New Explanatory Framework (London: Routledge, 2022); Kenneth McRoberts, Catalonia: The Struggle over Independence (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2022).13 Anderson, Imagined; Filibi et al., Democracy.14 Muhittin Ataman, “Islamic Perspective on Ethnicity and Nationalism: Diversity or Uniformity?,” Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs 23, no. 1 (2003): 89–102; Mark Juergensmeyer, “Religious Terrorism as Performance Violence,” in The Oxford Handbook of Religion and Violence, ed. Mark Juergensmeyer, Margo Kitts, and Michael Jerryson (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013), 1–15; Nathan C. Mikami, “Among the Believers are men: The Role of Religious-Nationalist Identity and Religious Literacy in Islamic State Recruitment Efforts in the West” (PhD diss., Washington State University, 2019), https://rex.libraries.wsu.edu/esploro/outputs/doctoral/AMONG-THE-BELIEVERS-ARE-MEN-THE/99900581419201842; Robert A. Saunders, “The Ummah as Nation: A Reappraisal in the Wake of the ‘Cartoon Affair’,” Nations and Nationalism 12, no. 2: 303–21; Kaneva and Stanton, “An Alternative”; Caló et al., “Islamic Caliphate”.15 Anderson, Imagined; Paul R. Brass, Ethnicity and Nationalism (London: Sage, 1991); Loughlin, “In Defense”; Kaneva and Stanton, “An Alternative”; Gellner, Nations; Kahn, Political Theology; Nagata, “The Radical”; Xavier Márquez, “Models of Political Community: The Nation State and Other Stories,” in Democracy With(out) Nations? Old and New Foundations for Political Communities in a Changing World, ed. Igor Filibi, Noe Cirnago, and Justin O. Frosini (Universidad del País Vasco-Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea, 2011); Smith, The Ethnic.16 For Turkish items, I relied on their Arabic subtitles provided by IS production houses.17 Rudolf de Cillia, Martin Reisigl, and Ruth Wodak, “The Discursive Construction of National Identities,” Discourse and Society 10, no. 2 (1999), 149–73; Ruth Wodak, The Politics of Fear: What Right-Wing Populist Discourses Mean (London: Sage, 2015); Ruth Wodak, “The Semiotics of Racism: A Critical Discourse-Historical Analysis,” in Discourse, of Course: An Overview of Research in Discourse Studies, ed. Jan Renkema (Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2009), 311–26.18 De Cillia et al., “The Discursive”; Wodak, The Politics; Wodak, The Semiotics.19 Norman Fairclough, Media Discourse (Edward Arnold, 1995); Wodak, The Politics; Wodak, The Semiotics.20 Wodak, The Politics.21 De Cillia et al., The Discursive, 160.22 De Cillia et al., The Discursive, 161.23 Caló et al., “Islamic”; Kaneva and Stanton, “An Alternative”; Nagata, “The Radical”; Piscatori and Saikal, Islam Beyond.24 “Be Patient for Indeed the Promise of Allah Is True,” Rumiyah, no. 9 (May 2017): 26–35; “Imamah Is from the Millah of Ibrahim,” Dabiq, no. 1 (July 2014): 20–9.25 “From Hijrah to Khilāfa,” Dabiq, 1 (July 2014): 34–41; “Interview with the Amir of the Khilāfah Soldiers in Bangal Shaykh Abu Ibrahim al-Hanif,” Dabiq 14 (April 2016): 58–66; “IS Spokesman Muhammad al-Adnani: This Is the Promise of Allah,” al-Furqan Media, June 2014, https://jihadology.net/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/shaykh-abc5ab-mue1b8a5ammad-al-e28098adnc481nc4ab-al-shc481mc4ab-22this-is-the-promise-of-god22.mp3; Maher, Salafi-Jihadism; Joana Cook and Shiraz Maher, eds., The Rule Is for None but Allah: Islamist Approaches to Governance (Hurst Publishers, 2022).26 Abul-Hassan al-Mawardi, Al-Ahkam as-Sultaniyyah: The Laws of Islamic Government, trans. Asadullah Yate (London: Ta-Ha Publishers, 1996); Patricia Crone, God’s Rule: Government and Islam (New York: Columbia University Press, 2004).27 “Establishing the Islamic State: Between Prophetic Methodology and the Paths of Deviants, Part 1,” Rumiyah 7 (March 2017): 6–9; “The Position of Imamah in the Religion,” Rumiyah 13 (September 2017): 14–20.28 “IS Spokesman”, 2014.29 “From Hijrah”, 2014; “Interview with the Amir”, 2016; “IS Spokesman”, 2014; “The End of Sykes-Picot,” Al-Hayat Media Center, June, 2014, https://jihadology.net/2014/06/29/al-%e1%b8%a5ayat-media-center-presents-a-new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-of-iraq-and-al-sham-the-end-of-sykes-picot/30 “Foreword,” Dabiq, no. 8 (March 2015): 6.31 “Inside the Caliphate 1,” Al-Hayat Media Center, July 2017. https://jihadology.net/2017/07/28/new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-inside-the-caliphate/32 “Be Patient,” 2017: 27.33 “And what is after impotence except surrender,” Al-Naba’, no. 170: 3.34 “Be Patient,” 2017: 28.35 “Turkey and the Fire of Nationalism,” Al-Hayat Media Center, November 2015, https://jihadology.net/2015/11/21/new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-turkey-and-the-fire-of-nationalism/36 “Khilafah Declared,” Dabiq, no. 1 (July 2014): 7.37 “Foreword,” 2015: 4.38 “Turkey and the Fire,” 2015.39 “From the “Pages of History: The Flags of Jahiliyya,” Dabiq, no. 9 (May 2015): 22.40 “The End of Sykes-Picot,” 2014.41 “Khilafah Declared,” 2014: 9.42 Anderson, Imagined; Gellner, Nations; Smith, The Ethnic.43 Michèle Lamont and Virág Molnár, “The Study of Boundaries in the Social Sciences,” Annual Review of Sociology 28, no. 1 (2002): 168; Márquez, Models of Political.44 Anderson, Imagined; Lamont and Molnár, “The Study of”; De Cillia et al., “The Discursive”; Wodak, The Semiotics.45 “Be Patient”, 27.46 “Imamah Is From”, 24.47 “The Commander of the Faithful to the Jews, Crusaders and Apostates: So Wait; Indeed We, Along with You, Are Waiting,” Al-Naba’ 11 (December 2015): 3; “Inside the Caliphate 1,” Al-Hayat Media Center, July 2017, https://jihadology.net/2017/07/28/new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-inside-the-caliphate/48 “Turkey and the Fire of Nationalism,” Al-Hayat Media Center, November 2015, https://jihadology.net/2015/11/21/new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-turkey-and-the-fire-of-nationalism/49 “For God Not for the Homeland,” Al-Naba’ 5 (November 2015): 8.50 Ibid., 8.51 “The Murtadd Taliban Movement: On the Footsteps of the Iraqi and Shami Sahawat,” Rumiyah 10 (June 2017): 42–3; “The Ruling on the Belligerent Christians,” Rumiyah 9 (May 2017): 4–11; “Wala’ and Bara’ Versus American Racism,” Dabiq 11 (September 2015): 18–21.52 “Wala’ and Bara’”, 2015.53 “The Allies of al-Qa’idah in Sham,” Dabiq 8 (March 2015): 7–11; “For God Not”, 2015.54 Ibn Khaldun, The Muqadimah: An Introduction to History, ed. N. J. Dawood, trans. Franz Rosenthal (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2015).55 Ibn Khaldun, The Muqadimah; Manzooruddin Ahmed, “Umma: The Idea of A Universal Community,” Islamic Studies 14, no. 1 (1975): 27–54.56 Sayyid Abul A’la Maududi, Nasyonalisme Eslami (Islamic Nationalism), trans. O. Asad (Qalam Library, 2017).57 Jahiliyya is a highly loaded term that semantically means ignorance and refers to the pre-Islamic age in Arabia where polytheism was the norm. Islamist thinker and ideologist Sayyid Qutb defined jahiliyya as the “defiance of divine guidance” where one man is lord over others. See: Sayyid Qutb, Milestones, ed. A. B. al-Mehri (Maktaba Booksellers and Publishers, 2006), 79.58 “For God”, 8; Qawmi nationalism or qawmiyya refers to ethnic-based nationalism, and watani nationalism or wataniyya refers to state-based nationalism. Ideologically, both qawmi and watani national identities emphasized the supremacy of Arab identity, language, and culture in their multi-ethnic, multilingual, and multicultural territories. While watani nationalists are mainly committed to the extant post-WWI nation states, qawmi nationalists advocate a vision of pan-Arabism that would unify all Arab-majority states within an Arab super state. For more on this see, Adeed Dawisha, Arab Nationalism in the Twentieth Century: From Triumph to Despair (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2016); Albert Hourani, Arabic Thought in the Liberal Age 1798-1939 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013).59 “Partisanship of Jahiliyya,” Rumiyah 5 (January 2017): 11; “We Disbelieve in You,” Al-Naba’ 173 (March 2019): 3; “Foreword,” Dabiq 8 (March 2015): 3–6.60 “Wala’ and Bara’”, 20; Mohamedou, A Theory of.61 “Foreword,” 2015, 3; Mohamedou, A Theory of.62 “Irja’: The Most Dangerous Bid’ah,” Dabiq 8 (March 2015): 39–56; “Be Patient”, 2017; Maher, Salafi-Jihadism.63 “The Rafidah: From ibn Saba’ to the Dajjal,” Dabiq 13 (January 2016): 34; “Foreword,” 2015; “Kill the Imams of Kufr in the West,” Dabiq 14 (April 2016): 12; “Our Battle with the Rafidhis: So There Will Be No Sedition,” Al-Naba’ 28 (April 2016): 3; Partisanship of Jahiliyya,” Rumiyah 5 (January 2017): 11; “The Law of Allah or the Laws of Men: IS Waging War against the Khilāfah Apostasy,” Dabiq 10 (July 2015): 55. IS’s complex conception of the ideal form of umma membership should not be construed as meaning that the group physically eliminates any Sunni who does not fall under its narrow conception of communal membership and solidarity. While it was merciless toward those captured in combat against it, IS generally attempted to accommodate large sections of Sunni Muslims within the ranks of its umma and re-proselytize them into its exclusionary form of religious belief and practice.64 Ahm Ershad Uddin, “The Fanatical ISIS through the Lens of Islamic Law 1,” International Journal of Islamic Thought 12 (2017): 1–14; Michael Crawford, Ibn ‘Abd al-Wahhab: Makers of the Muslim World, (London: Oneworld Publications, 2014); Namira Nahouza, Wahhabism and the Rise of the new Salafists: Theology, Power and Sunni Islam (London: I. B. Tauris, 2018); Maher, Salafi-Jihadism; “Shia as Internal Others: A Salafi Rejection of the ‘Rejecters’,” Islam and Christian–Muslim Relations 28, no. 4 (2017): 409–30.65 Frederick M. Denny, “Ummah in the Constitution of Medina,” Journal of Near Eastern Studies 36, no. 1 (1977): 39–47; Piscatori and Saikal, Islam Beyond.66 Maulana Husain Ahmad Madani, Composite Nationalism and Islam, trans. Mohammad Anwar Hussain and Hasan Imam (New Delhi: Manohar Publishers & Distributors); Rafiya Nisar, Maulana Hussain Ahmad Madani and Composite Nationalism, Insight Islamicus 12 (2012).67 David H. Warren, Rivals in the Gulf: Yusuf al-Qaradawi, Abdullah Bin Bayyah, and the Qatar-UAE Contest over the Arab Spring and the Gulf Crisis (London: Routledge, 2021), 32; Usaama A al-Azmi, “Abdulla¯h bin Bayyah and the Arab Revolutions: Counter-revolutionary Neo-traditionalism’s Ideological Struggle against Islamism,” Muslim World 109, no. 3 (2019).68 Hugh Kennedy, Caliphate: The History of an Idea (New York: Basic Books, 2016).69 Jens Bartelson, Sovereignty as Symbolic Form (London: Routledge, 2014), 2.70 See, for example, Anderson, Imagined; Bartelson, Sovereignty; Loughlin, “In Defense”; J. Samuel Barkin and Bruce Cronin, “The State and the Nation: Changing Norms and the Rules of Sovereignty in International Relations,” International Organization 48, no. 1 (1994): 107–30.71 Giorgio Agamben, Homo Sacer: Sovereign Power and Bare Life, trans. Daniel Heller-Roazen (Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press, 2005); Giorgio Agamben, State of Exception, trans. Kevin Attell (Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 2005); Kahn, Political Theology.72 Asma Kounsar, “The Concept of Tawhid in Islam: In the Light of Perspectives of Prominent Muslim Scholars,” Journal of Islamic Thought and Civilization (JITC) 6, no. 2 (2016): 94–110; Maher Salafi-Jihadism; “The Rule of the Sharia Not the Rule of Jahiliyya,” Rumiyah 13 (September 2017): 6–8; “Tawhid of Allah in His Rule,” Rumiyah 3 (November 2016): 27.73 “Tawhid of”, 2016.74 Sayyid Abul A’la Maududi, Jihad in Islam (Islamic Publications, 1976); Qutb, Milestones.75 Qutb, Milestones.76 Qutb’s ideas played an important role in the birth of the Salafi-Jihadi movement through its fusion with Wahhabism as many Qutbists fled from the oppression of Gamal Abd al-Nasser’s government in Egypt to Saudi Arabia, see Marc Lynch, “Islam Divided Between Salafi-jihad and the Ikhwan,” Studies in Conflict & Terrorism 33, no. 6 (2010): 467–87.77 “A Fatwa for Khurasan,” Dabiq 10 (July 2015): 18–24; “Establishing the”, 2017; Wael B. Hallaq, Sharī’a: Theory, Practice, Transformations (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009); “The Position of”, 2017.78 “Imamah Is From”, 2014; “The structure of the Caliphate,” Al-Furqan Media, July 2016, https://jihadology.net/2016/07/06/new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-the-structure-of-the-caliphate/79 “The Position of”, 16.80 “Be patient,” 2017; “Foreword,” Dabiq 15 (July 2016): 4–7; “The Rule of,” 2017.81 See, for example, Bartelson, Sovereignty; Kahn, Political Theology.82 “Legislation Is Only for Allah,” Wilaya ar-Raqqah, October 2015, https://jihadology.net/2015/10/30/new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-legislation-is-not-but-for-god-wilayat-al-raqqah/83 “Be Patient”, 2017.84 For instance, scholars such as Ataman, “Islamic Perspective”; Juergensmeyer, Religious Terrorism; Mikami, “Among the Believers”.85 “Foreword,” 2015.86 “A Fatwa for,” 2015; “Foreword,” 2015; Shadi Hamid and William McCants, Rethinking Political Islam (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017); “The Allies of,” 2015.87 From the “Pages of History: The Flags of Jahiliyya,” Dabiq 9 (May 2015): 21.88 “A Fatwa for,” 2015; “Foreword,” 2015.89 Warren, “Rivals in the Gulf”, 32; Bettina Gräf, “The Concept of Wasat.iyya in the Work of Yusuf al-Qarad.āwī,” in Global Mufti: The Phenomenon of Yūsuf Al-Qarad.āwi ¯ (New York: Columbia University Press, 2009), 213–38.90 Warren, “Rivals in the Gulf”, 33.91 Peter J. Taylor, “The State as Container: Territoriality in the Modern World-System,” Progress in Human Geography 18, no. 2 (1994): 151.92 John Gerard Ruggie, “Territoriality and Beyond: Problematizing Modernity in International Relations,” International Organization 47, no. 1 (1993): 139–74; Saskia Sassen, Territory, Authority, Rights: From Medieval to Global Assemblages (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2008); Taylor, “The State”.93 Neil Brenner and Stuart Elden, “Henri Lefebvre on State, Space, Territory,” International Political Sociology 3, no. 4 (2009): 353–77.94 Anderson, Imagined; Smith, The Ethnic.95 “Foreword,” Rumiyah 12 (August 2017): 5.96 “Foreword,” 2015, 4.97 “A Fatwa for,” 2015, 19.98 “Foreword,” 2015, 3.99 Michael D. Berdine, Redrawing the Middle East: Sir Mark Sykes, Imperialism and the Sykes-Picot Agreement (London: I. B. Tauris, 2018).100 “Wala’ and bara’,” 2015; “Be Patient,” 2017; “Why Do We Fight? The Most Important Goals of Jihad in the Path of God,” Al-Naba’ 25 (April 2016): 12–3; “The Kurds… and the Autumn of Nations,” Al-Naba’ 19 (February 2016): 3; “The Murtadd Taliban,” 2017; Islam Is the Religion of the Sword Not Pacifism,” Dabiq 7 (February 2015): 20–4.101 “Be Patient,” 2017, 28.102 Bruce Lawrence, Messages to the World: The Statements of Osama bin Laden, trans. James Howarth (London: Verso, 2005), 194.103 Paul Brykczynski, “Radical Islam and the Nation: The Relationship between Religion and Nationalism in the Political Thought of Hassan al-Banna and Sayyid Qutb,” History of Intellectual Culture 5 (2005): 9; P. J. Vatikiotis, Islam and the State (London: Routledge, 2017); “Hasan al-Banna,” in Princeton Readings in Islamist Thought: Texts and Contexts from al-Banna to Bin Laden, ed. Roxanne L. Euben and Muhammad Qasim Zaman (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2009), 56–78.104 Gail Minault, The Khilafat Movement: Religious Symbolism and Political Mobilization in India (New York: Columbia University Press, 1982), 6.105 David Held, Democracy and the Global Order: From the Modern State to Cosmopolitan Governance (Cambridge, UK: Polity, 1995).106 “The Revival of Jihad in Bengal: With the Spread of the Light of the Khilāfah,” Dabiq 12 (November 2015): 41.107 “For God MNot,” 2015, 8; “Kurds between,” 2016; Message to Our People in Kurdistan,” Al-Hayat Media Center, March 2015, https://jihadology.net/2015/03/23/al-%E1%B8%A5ayat-media-center-presents-a-new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-message-to-our-people-in-kurdistan/; “The Religion of Islam,” Rumiyah 1 (September 2016): 4–8; “Turkey and”, 2015.108 I use de-nationization here rather than terms like denationalization because the latter is mainly used in regard to moving ownership of an industry from public to private hands; or stripping one of citizenship; or forms of citizenship and belonging which are transnational or postnational as a result of processes of globalization. But the emphasis in de-nationization is on unraveling the nation and transforming it into another form of political community. On denationalization see, Linda Bosniak, “Citizenship Denationalized,” Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies 7, no. 2 (2000): 447–509; Saskia Sassen, “Towards Post-National and Denationalized Citizenship,” in Handbook of Citizenship Studies, ed. Engin F. Isin and Bryan S. Turner (London: Sage, 2002), 277–92.109 “Breaking of the Borders,” Al-I’tisam Media, June 2014, https://jihadology.net/2014/06/29/al-iti%e1%b9%a3am-media-presents-a-new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-of-iraq-and-al-sham-breaking-of-the-border/110 “Breaking of,” 2014; “Turkey and” 2015.111 “Khutbah and Jum’ah Prayer in the Grand Mosque of Musul,” Al-Furqan Media, July 2014, https://jihadology.net/2014/07/05/al-furqan-media-presents-a-new-video-message-from-the-islamic-states-abu-bakr-al-%E1%B8%A5ussayni-al-qurayshi-al-baghdadi-khu%E1%B9%ADbah-and-jumah-prayer-in-the-grand-mosque-of-mu/112 “The End of,” 2014.113 “The Structure of,” 2016.114 “The Birth of Two New Wilayat,” Dabiq 4 (October 2014): 18.115 “The Structure of,” 2016.116 Arseny Saparov, “The Alteration of Place Names and Construction of National Identity in Soviet Armenia,” Cahiers du monde russe. Russie-Empire russe-Union soviétique et États indépendants 44, no. 1 (2003): 179–98; Harold R. Isaacs, “Basic Group Identity: The Idols of the Tribe,” Reprinted from Ethnicity 1, no. 1 (1974): 15–41.117 Duri A. A., Gottschalk H. L., Colin G. S., Lambton A. K. S., and Bazmee Ansari A. S.,. “Dīwān,” in Encyclopaedia of Islam, ed. P. Bearman, Th. Banquis, C. E. Bowworth, E. van Donzel, and W. P. Heinrichs Bowworth, 2nd ed.; Khilafah, “Declared,” Dabiq 1 (July 2014): 6–11; “The structure of,” 2016.118 IS considers the Abbasid caliphate (775-1258 CE) as the last rightful caliphate and does not regard the Ottomans as a caliphate. See, “The Law of,” 2015: 59; “The Structure of,” 2016.119 Pinar Dinc, “The Kurdish Movement and the Democratic Federation of Northern Syria: An Alternative to the (Nation-)State Model?,” Journal of Balkan and Near Eastern Studies 22, no. 1 (2020): 47–67; Damian Gerber and Shannon Brincat, “When Öcalan Met Bookchin: The Kurdish Freedom Movement and the Political Theory of Democratic Confederalism,” Geopolitics 26, no. 4 (2018): 973–97; Milena Sterio, “Self-Determination and Secession under International Law: The Cases of Kurdistan and Catalonia,” American Society of International Law 22, no. 1 (2018).120 Harriet Allsopp and Wladimir van Wilgenburg, The Kurds of Northern Syria: Governance, Diversity and Conflicts (London: I. B. Tauris, 2019); David McDowall, A Modern History of the Kurds (London: I. B. Tauris, 2007); David Romano, The Kurdish Nationalist Movement: Opportunity, Mobilization, and Identity (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006); Abbas Vali, Kurds and the State in Iran: The Making of Kurdish Identity (London: I. B. Tauris, 2014).121 Mohammed A. Salih, “How Islamic State Is Trying to Lure the Kurds to Its Ranks” Al-Monitor (2016), https://www.al-monitor.com/originals/2016/08/islamic-state-propaganda-video-kurds-iraq.html122 “Kurds between,” 2016; “Message to Our,” 2015.123 “Kurds between,” 2016; Jonathan Phillips, The Life and Legend of the Sultan Saladin (New Haven, Yale University Press, 2019).124 Allsopp and van Wilgenburg, The Kurds of; McDowall, A Modern History; Romano, The Kurdish.125 Kawa Abdulkareem Sherwani, “The Discourse of Kurdish Traditional Textiles,” Industria Textila 72, no. 6 (2021): 623–31.126 McDowall, A Modern History; Romano, The Kurdish. A Kurdistan province exists in Iran but as an administrative, not political, unit.127 “For God Not,” 2015: 8.128 Brass, Ethnicity and; Smith, The Ethnic.129 Smith, The Ethnic, 13.130 Ibid, 32.131 Brass, Ethnicity and.132 Gellner, Nations.133 Anderson, Imagined; Smith, The Ethnic; Sterio, “Self-Determination and”.134 Allsopp and van Wilgenburg, The Kurds of; “The structure of,” 2016.135 Ataman, “Islamic Perspective”; Sami Hanna and George H. Gardner, eds., Arab Socialism [Al-Ishtirakīyah al-’Arabīyah]: A Documentary Survey (Leiden, E. J. Brill, 1969).136 Nagata, “The Radical”; Cyrus Schayegh, The Middle East and the Making of the Modern World (Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 2017).137 Schayegh, The Middle East; Nazan Cicek, “The Role of Mass Education in Nation-Building in the Ottoman Empire and the Turkish Republic, 1870–1930,” in Mass Education and the Limits of State Building, c. 1870-1930, ed. Laurence Brockliss and Nicola Sheldon (Palgrave Macmillan, 2012); Erik J. Zürcher, The Young Turk Legacy and Nation Building: From the Ottoman Empire to Atatürk’s Turkey (London: I. B. Tauris, 2010).138 Kaneva and Stanton, “An Alternative”; Saunders, “The Umma”; Ruud Koopmans and Paul Statham, “Challenging the Liberal Nation-State? Postnationalism, Multiculturalism, and the Collective Claims Making of Migrants and Ethnic Minorities in Britain and Germany,” American Journal of Sociology 105, no. 3 (1999): 652–96; Yasemin Nuhoglu Soysal, Limits of Citizenship: Migrants and Postnational Membership in Europe (Chicago: Chicago University Press, 1994).139 “Iraq: ISIS Abducting, Killing, Expelling Minorities: Armed Group Targeting Christian Nuns, Turkmen, Shabaks, Yazidis,” Human Rights Watch, July 2014, https://www.hrw.org/news/2014/07/19/iraq-isis-abducting-killing-expelling-minorities#140 Mathilde Becker Aarseth, Mosul under ISIS: Eyewitness Accounts of Life in the Caliphate (London: I. B. Tauris, 2021); Mara Revkin, “The Legal Foundations of the Islamic State,” Brookings July, 2016, https://www.brookings.edu/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/Brookings-Analysis-Paper_Mara-Revkin_Web.pdf; Mohammed A. Salih and Marwan M. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

“为了上帝而不是为了祖国”Al-Naba ' 5(2015年11月):8.50同上,8.51“Murtadd塔利班运动:在伊拉克和Shami Sahawat的足迹上”Rumiyah 10(2017年6月):42-3;“对好战基督徒的裁决”,《鲁米耶》9(2017年5月):4-11;“瓦拉和巴拉与美国种族主义”,达比克11(2015年9月):18-21.52;“瓦拉和巴拉”,2015年3月;“基地组织在沙姆的盟友”,达比克8(2015年3月):7-11;伊本·赫勒敦:《穆卡迪玛:历史导论》,n.j.达伍德主编,2015年4月译。弗朗茨·罗森塔尔(普林斯顿:普林斯顿大学出版社,2015).55伊本·赫勒敦,Muqadimah;Manzooruddin Ahmed,“乌玛:一个普世共同体的理念”,《伊斯兰研究》第14期,第2期。1 (1975): 27-54.56 Sayyid Abul A 'la Maududi, Nasyonalisme Eslami(伊斯兰民族主义),译。O. Asad (Qalam Library, 2017).57Jahiliyya是一个内涵丰富的词汇,在语义上意味着无知,指的是阿拉伯的前伊斯兰时代,那里多神论是常态。伊斯兰思想家和意识形态家赛义德·库特布(Sayyid Qutb)将jahiliyya定义为“蔑视神的指引”,即一个人统治其他人。参见:Sayyid Qutb, milestone, ed. a.b. al-Mehri (Maktaba Booksellers and Publishers, 2006), 79.58“For God”,第8页;Qawmi民族主义或qawmiyya指的是基于种族的民族主义,watani民族主义或wataniyya指的是基于国家的民族主义。在意识形态上,卡米族和瓦塔尼族的民族认同都强调了阿拉伯身份、语言和文化在其多民族、多语言和多元文化领土上的至高无上地位。watani民族主义者主要致力于现存的一战后民族国家,而qawmi民族主义者提倡一种泛阿拉伯主义的愿景,即将所有阿拉伯人占多数的国家统一在一个阿拉伯超级国家内。有关这方面的更多内容,请参阅Adeed Dawisha,《二十世纪的阿拉伯民族主义:从胜利到绝望》(普林斯顿:普林斯顿大学出版社,2016);阿尔伯特·胡拉尼,《自由时代的阿拉伯思想1798-1939》(剑桥:剑桥大学出版社,2013).59“Jahiliyya的党派之争”,Rumiyah 5(2017年1月):11;“我们不相信你”,Al-Naba ' 173(2019年3月):3;前言,《Dabiq》8(2015年3月):3-6.60“Wala ' and Bara '”,20;穆罕默德,《论。61》《前言》2015年第3期;穆罕默德杜,《论。62》“Irja:最危险的竞标”,Dabiq 8(2015年3月):39-56;《耐心》,2017;Maher Salafi-Jihadism.63“Rafidah:从ibn Saba到Dajjal”,Dabiq 13(2016年1月):34;“前言”,2015;“杀死西方库夫尔的伊玛目”,Dabiq 14(2016年4月):12;“我们与拉菲迪的战斗:这样就不会有叛乱”,Al-Naba ' 28(2016年4月):3;Jahiliyya的党派性,《鲁米耶》5(2017年1月):11;“是真主的法律还是人的法律:对Khilāfah叛教的战争”,Dabiq 10(2015年7月):55。IS对乌玛成员的理想形式的复杂概念不应被解释为意味着该组织在物理上排除任何不属于其狭隘的社区成员和团结概念的逊尼派。64 .虽然伊斯兰国对那些在战斗中被俘的人毫不留情,但它通常试图在乌玛的行列中容纳大量逊尼派穆斯林,并重新改变他们的宗教信仰和实践形式Ahm Ershad Uddin:《伊斯兰教法视角下的狂热ISIS》,《国际伊斯兰思想杂志》2017年第12期,第1 - 14页;迈克尔·克劳福德:《伊本·阿卜杜勒·瓦哈比:穆斯林世界的缔造者》(伦敦:寰世一家出版社,2014年);纳米拉·纳胡扎:《瓦哈比主义与新萨拉菲斯特的崛起:神学、权力与逊尼派伊斯兰教》(伦敦:i.b. Tauris, 2018);马赫,Salafi-Jihadism;<什叶派作为内部他人:萨拉菲派对“拒绝者”的拒绝>,《伊斯兰教与基督教-穆斯林关系》,28期。邓文辉,“伊斯兰教在麦地那的地位”,《中东研究》,2017年第4期。1 (1977): 39-47;66毛拉·侯赛因·艾哈迈德·马达尼:《复合民族主义与伊斯兰教》,译。穆罕默德·安瓦尔·侯赛因和哈桑·伊玛目(新德里:Manohar Publishers & Distributors);拉菲亚·尼萨尔,毛拉·侯赛因·艾哈迈德·马达尼与复合民族主义,《透视伊斯兰》2012年第12期,第67页David H. Warren,《海湾的竞争对手:优素福·卡拉达维、阿卜杜拉·本·巴耶和卡塔尔-阿联酋关于阿拉伯之春和海湾危机的竞赛》(伦敦:Routledge出版社,2021),第32页;Usaama A al-Azmi,《Abdulla¯h bin Bayyah与阿拉伯革命:反革命的新传统主义与伊斯兰主义的意识形态斗争》,《穆斯林世界》109期。3(2019) .68点休·肯尼迪,《哈里发:一种思想的历史》(纽约:Basic Books出版社,2016),第69页Jens Bartelson,主权作为象征形式(伦敦:Routledge出版社,2014),2.70参见Anderson, Imagined;Bartelson、主权;拉夫林,《防御》(In Defense);J。 106《圣战在孟加拉的复兴:随着Khilāfah之光的传播》,《达比克》12(2015年11月):41.107;《库尔德人之间》(Kurds between), 2016年;《致库尔德斯坦人民的信》,Al-Hayat媒体中心,2015年3月,https://jihadology.net/2015/03/23/al-%E1%B8%A5ayat-media-center-presents-a-new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-message-to-our-people-in-kurdistan/;“伊斯兰教的宗教”,Rumiyah 1(2016年9月):4-8;“土耳其和”,2015.108我在这里使用“去国有化”,而不是像“去国有化”这样的术语,因为后者主要用于将行业的所有权从公共转移到私人手中;或者剥夺公民身份;或者作为全球化进程结果的跨国或后国家的公民身份和归属形式。但去民族化的重点在于拆解国家,将其转变为另一种形式的政治共同体。关于非国家化,见Linda Bosniak,“公民非国家化”,《印第安纳全球法律研究杂志》第7期。2 (2000): 447-509;Saskia Sassen,“走向后国家和非国家化的公民身份”,载于《公民研究手册》,Engin F. Isin和Bryan S. Turner主编(伦敦:Sage, 2002), 277-92.109“打破边界”,Al-I 'tisam Media, 2014年6月,https://jihadology.net/2014/06/29/al-iti%e1%b9%a3am-media-presents-a-new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-of-iraq-and-al-sham-breaking-of-the-border/110“打破”,2014;“土耳其和”2015.111“穆苏尔大清真寺的胡特巴和朱姆阿祈祷”,Al-Furqan Media, 2014年7月,https://jihadology.net/2014/07/05/al-furqan-media-presents-a-new-video-message-from-the-islamic-states-abu-bakr-al-%E1%B8%A5ussayni-al-qurayshi-al-baghdadi-khu%E1%B9%ADbah-and-jumah-prayer-in-the-grand-mosque-of-mu/112“结束”,2014.113“结构”,2016.114“两个新维拉亚特的诞生”,Dabiq 4(2014年10月):18.115“结构”,2016.116阿尔谢尼·萨帕洛夫,“苏维埃亚美尼亚地名的变迁与民族认同的建构”,《俄罗斯世界报》俄罗斯-帝国-俄罗斯-联盟sovisamictique et États indsampendants 44, no。1 (2003): 179-98;哈罗德·r·艾萨克斯:《基本群体认同:部落的偶像》,转载自《种族》第1期。杜丽A. A. Gottschalk H. L., Colin G. S., Lambton A. K. S., Bazmee Ansari A. S.。“Dīwān,”在伊斯兰百科全书,编辑P. Bearman, Th。Banquis, C. E. Bowworth, E. van Donzel和W. P. Heinrichs Bowworth,第2版;Khilafah,“宣布”,Dabiq 1(2014年7月):6-11;IS认为阿巴斯哈里发(公元775-1258年)是最后一个合法的哈里发,而不认为奥斯曼帝国是哈里发。参见《The Law of》,2015:59;Pinar Dinc,“库尔德运动与叙利亚北部民主联邦:(民族-)国家模式的替代方案?”,《巴尔干和近东研究杂志》,第22期。1 (2020): 47-67;Damian Gerber和Shannon Brincat,“当Öcalan遇到Bookchin:库尔德自由运动和民主邦联主义的政治理论”,《地缘政治》第26期。4 (2018): 973-97;米莱娜·斯特里奥,《国际法下的自决与分离:库尔德斯坦与加泰罗尼亚的案例》,《美国国际法学会》第22期。1 (2018) .120哈里特·奥尔索普和弗拉基米尔·范·威尔根伯格:《叙利亚北部的库尔德人:治理、多样性和冲突》(伦敦:金牛座出版社,2019年);大卫·麦克道尔:《库尔德人的现代史》(伦敦:i.b.金牛座出版社,2007年);大卫·罗马诺,库尔德民族主义运动:机会,动员和身份(剑桥:剑桥大学出版社,2006年);阿巴斯·瓦利:《伊朗的库尔德人和国家:库尔德人身份的形成》(伦敦:i.b.金牛座出版社,2014),第121页Mohammed A. Salih,“伊斯兰国如何试图引诱库尔德人加入其行列”Al-Monitor (2016), https://www.al-monitor.com/originals/2016/08/islamic-state-propaganda-video-kurds-iraq.html122“库尔德人之间”,2016;《给我们的信息》,2015;乔纳森·菲利普斯,《苏丹萨拉丁的生平与传奇》(纽黑文,耶鲁大学出版社,2019年)Allsopp和van Wilgenburg,库尔德人;麦克道尔:《现代史》;Kawa Abdulkareem Sherwani,“库尔德传统纺织品的话语”,《工业纺织品》72期,第125期。麦克道尔:《现代历史》;罗马诺,库尔德人。库尔德斯坦省在伊朗存在,但作为一个行政单位,而不是政治单位《For God Not》,2015:8.128黄铜、种族和;史密斯,种族。129史密斯,种族,13.130同上,32.131黄铜,种族和132格尔纳,《国家》,133安德森,《想象》;史密斯,《种族》;立体音响,"自决和" 134页Allsopp和van Wilgenburg,库尔德人;《结构》,2016.135阿塔曼,《伊斯兰透视》;萨米·汉纳和乔治·h·加德纳编。《阿拉伯社会主义:文献调查》(莱顿,E. J. Brill, 1969)。 136永田,《激进派》;赛勒斯·沙耶格:《中东与现代世界的形成》(剑桥,哈佛大学出版社,2017年),第137页沙耶格,中东;Nazan Cicek,“1870-1930年奥斯曼帝国和土耳其共和国的大众教育在国家建设中的作用”,《大众教育和国家建设的限制》,约1870-1930年,Laurence Brockliss和Nicola Sheldon主编(Palgrave Macmillan出版社,2012);埃里克·j·扎尔彻,《青年土耳其人的遗产与国家建设:从奥斯曼帝国到atatrk的土耳其》(伦敦:i.b.t uris, 2010).138卡内瓦和斯坦顿,《另一种选择》;桑德斯,《乌玛》;鲁德·库普曼斯和保罗·斯坦森,《挑战自由民族国家?《后民族主义、多元文化主义与英国和德国移民和少数民族的集体诉求》,《美国社会学杂志》,第105期。3 (1999): 652-96;Yasemin Nuhoglu Soysal,公民身份的限制:移民和欧洲的后国籍成员(芝加哥:芝加哥大学出版社,1994).139“伊拉克:ISIS绑架、杀戮、驱逐少数民族:武装团体以基督教修女、土库曼人、沙巴克人、雅兹迪人为目标”,人权观察,2014年7月,https://www.hrw.org/news/2014/07/19/iraq-isis-abducting-killing-expelling-minorities#140 Mathilde Becker Aarseth, ISIS统治下的摩苏尔:哈里发国生活的目击者描述(伦敦:I. B. Tauris, 2021);玛拉·雷夫金,《伊斯兰国的法律基础》,布鲁金斯学会,2016年7月,https://www.brookings.edu/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/Brookings-Analysis-Paper_Mara-Revkin_Web.pdf;Mohammed A. Salih和Marwan M. Kraidy,“伊斯兰国和妇女:一个生物政治分析”,国际传播杂志14(2020):1933-50。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Islamic State’s Visions of Political Community and Statehood and Their Articulation Vis-à-Vis Nationalism
AbstractThis article explores the Islamic State (IS)’s discursive construction of ideal forms of political community and statehood, i.e. the umma and caliphate, and their articulation in relation to the dominant forms of political community and statehood in the modern world, i.e. the nation and nation-state. Studying a large corpus of data from IS primary sources in multiple languages and mediums, I propose that IS’s discourse espouses a vision of umma-caliphalism that entails a thorough process of, what I call, de-nationization. On the material level, de-nationization results in dismantling the nation-state and its apparatus of sovereignty. At the symbolic level, de-nationization mandates derecognizing the political community of the nation and treating it as no more than a form of ethnic cultural unit, or ethnie, whereby ethnic symbols are not allowed to become the basis of political mobilization and demands. This expansionist umma-caliphalist vision centered on highly exclusionary notions of communal membership and solidarity is important to making sense of IS’s violent tendencies. Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.Notes1 Shiraz Maher, Salafi-Jihadism: The History of an Idea (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016).2 Mohammad-Mahmoud Ould Mohamedou, A Theory of ISIS: Political Violence and the Transformation of the Global Order (London: Pluto Press, 2018).3 William McCants, The ISIS Apocalypse: The History, Strategy, and Doomsday Vision of the Islamic State (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 2015); Masaki Nagata, “The Radical Nation-State and Contemporary Extremism,” Middle East Law and Governance 11, no. 3 (2019): 319–45; David J. Wasserstein, Black Banners of ISIS: The Roots of the New Caliphate (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2017).4 Nadia Kaneva and Andrea Stanton, “An Alternative Vision of Statehood: Islamic State’s Ideological Challenge to the Nation-State,” Studies in Conflict & Terrorism (2020): 1–19; Ben Caló, David Malet, Luke Howie, and Pete Lentini. “Islamic Caliphate or Nation State? Investigating the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant’s Imagined Community,” Nations and Nationalism 26 no. 3 (2020): 727–42.5 Amaryllis Maria Georges, “ISIS Rhetoric for the Creation of the Ummah,” in Religion and Theology: Breakthroughs in Research and Practice (IGI Global, 2020), 429–49; James Piscatori and Amin Saikal, Islam Beyond Borders: The Umma in World Politics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2019).6 Ibid.7 Kaneva and Stanton, “An Alternative”; Caló et al., “Islamic Caliphate”; Masaki Nagata (2019); Piscatori and Saikal, “Islam Beyond”; L. Carl Brown, Religion and State: The Muslim Approach to Politics (New York: Columbia University Press, 2000); Souran Mardini, “Fundamental Religio-Political Concepts in the Sources of Islam” (PhD diss., University of Edinburgh, 1984). https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/12813523.pdf8 Benedict Anderson, Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism (London: Verso, 2006); Karl W. Deutsch, Political Community at the International Level: Problems of Definition and Measurement (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1953); Igor Filibi, Noe Cirnago, and Justin O. Frosini, eds., Democracy With(out) Nations? Old and New Foundations for Political Communities in a Changing World (Universidad del País Vasco-Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea, 2011); Ernest Gellner, Nations and Nationalism (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1983); Anthony D. Smith, The Ethnic Origins of Nations (Oxford: Blackwell Publishing, 1988); Ferdinand Tonnies, Community and Civil Society (J. Harris, ed.) (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001).9 Martin Loughlin, “In Defense of Staatslehre,” Der Staat 48 no. 1 (2009): 5.10 See, for example, Paul W. Kahn, Political Theology: Four News Chapters on the Concept of Sovereignty (New York: Columbia University Press, 2011); Loughlin, “In Defense”.11 Max Weber, “Politics as a Vocation,” in The Vocation Lectures, ed. David Owen and Tracy B. Strong, trans. Rodney Livingstone (Indianapolis & Cambridge: Hackett Publishing, 2004), 33.12 Kamaran Palani, Kurdistan’s De Facto Statehood: A New Explanatory Framework (London: Routledge, 2022); Kenneth McRoberts, Catalonia: The Struggle over Independence (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2022).13 Anderson, Imagined; Filibi et al., Democracy.14 Muhittin Ataman, “Islamic Perspective on Ethnicity and Nationalism: Diversity or Uniformity?,” Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs 23, no. 1 (2003): 89–102; Mark Juergensmeyer, “Religious Terrorism as Performance Violence,” in The Oxford Handbook of Religion and Violence, ed. Mark Juergensmeyer, Margo Kitts, and Michael Jerryson (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013), 1–15; Nathan C. Mikami, “Among the Believers are men: The Role of Religious-Nationalist Identity and Religious Literacy in Islamic State Recruitment Efforts in the West” (PhD diss., Washington State University, 2019), https://rex.libraries.wsu.edu/esploro/outputs/doctoral/AMONG-THE-BELIEVERS-ARE-MEN-THE/99900581419201842; Robert A. Saunders, “The Ummah as Nation: A Reappraisal in the Wake of the ‘Cartoon Affair’,” Nations and Nationalism 12, no. 2: 303–21; Kaneva and Stanton, “An Alternative”; Caló et al., “Islamic Caliphate”.15 Anderson, Imagined; Paul R. Brass, Ethnicity and Nationalism (London: Sage, 1991); Loughlin, “In Defense”; Kaneva and Stanton, “An Alternative”; Gellner, Nations; Kahn, Political Theology; Nagata, “The Radical”; Xavier Márquez, “Models of Political Community: The Nation State and Other Stories,” in Democracy With(out) Nations? Old and New Foundations for Political Communities in a Changing World, ed. Igor Filibi, Noe Cirnago, and Justin O. Frosini (Universidad del País Vasco-Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea, 2011); Smith, The Ethnic.16 For Turkish items, I relied on their Arabic subtitles provided by IS production houses.17 Rudolf de Cillia, Martin Reisigl, and Ruth Wodak, “The Discursive Construction of National Identities,” Discourse and Society 10, no. 2 (1999), 149–73; Ruth Wodak, The Politics of Fear: What Right-Wing Populist Discourses Mean (London: Sage, 2015); Ruth Wodak, “The Semiotics of Racism: A Critical Discourse-Historical Analysis,” in Discourse, of Course: An Overview of Research in Discourse Studies, ed. Jan Renkema (Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2009), 311–26.18 De Cillia et al., “The Discursive”; Wodak, The Politics; Wodak, The Semiotics.19 Norman Fairclough, Media Discourse (Edward Arnold, 1995); Wodak, The Politics; Wodak, The Semiotics.20 Wodak, The Politics.21 De Cillia et al., The Discursive, 160.22 De Cillia et al., The Discursive, 161.23 Caló et al., “Islamic”; Kaneva and Stanton, “An Alternative”; Nagata, “The Radical”; Piscatori and Saikal, Islam Beyond.24 “Be Patient for Indeed the Promise of Allah Is True,” Rumiyah, no. 9 (May 2017): 26–35; “Imamah Is from the Millah of Ibrahim,” Dabiq, no. 1 (July 2014): 20–9.25 “From Hijrah to Khilāfa,” Dabiq, 1 (July 2014): 34–41; “Interview with the Amir of the Khilāfah Soldiers in Bangal Shaykh Abu Ibrahim al-Hanif,” Dabiq 14 (April 2016): 58–66; “IS Spokesman Muhammad al-Adnani: This Is the Promise of Allah,” al-Furqan Media, June 2014, https://jihadology.net/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/shaykh-abc5ab-mue1b8a5ammad-al-e28098adnc481nc4ab-al-shc481mc4ab-22this-is-the-promise-of-god22.mp3; Maher, Salafi-Jihadism; Joana Cook and Shiraz Maher, eds., The Rule Is for None but Allah: Islamist Approaches to Governance (Hurst Publishers, 2022).26 Abul-Hassan al-Mawardi, Al-Ahkam as-Sultaniyyah: The Laws of Islamic Government, trans. Asadullah Yate (London: Ta-Ha Publishers, 1996); Patricia Crone, God’s Rule: Government and Islam (New York: Columbia University Press, 2004).27 “Establishing the Islamic State: Between Prophetic Methodology and the Paths of Deviants, Part 1,” Rumiyah 7 (March 2017): 6–9; “The Position of Imamah in the Religion,” Rumiyah 13 (September 2017): 14–20.28 “IS Spokesman”, 2014.29 “From Hijrah”, 2014; “Interview with the Amir”, 2016; “IS Spokesman”, 2014; “The End of Sykes-Picot,” Al-Hayat Media Center, June, 2014, https://jihadology.net/2014/06/29/al-%e1%b8%a5ayat-media-center-presents-a-new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-of-iraq-and-al-sham-the-end-of-sykes-picot/30 “Foreword,” Dabiq, no. 8 (March 2015): 6.31 “Inside the Caliphate 1,” Al-Hayat Media Center, July 2017. https://jihadology.net/2017/07/28/new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-inside-the-caliphate/32 “Be Patient,” 2017: 27.33 “And what is after impotence except surrender,” Al-Naba’, no. 170: 3.34 “Be Patient,” 2017: 28.35 “Turkey and the Fire of Nationalism,” Al-Hayat Media Center, November 2015, https://jihadology.net/2015/11/21/new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-turkey-and-the-fire-of-nationalism/36 “Khilafah Declared,” Dabiq, no. 1 (July 2014): 7.37 “Foreword,” 2015: 4.38 “Turkey and the Fire,” 2015.39 “From the “Pages of History: The Flags of Jahiliyya,” Dabiq, no. 9 (May 2015): 22.40 “The End of Sykes-Picot,” 2014.41 “Khilafah Declared,” 2014: 9.42 Anderson, Imagined; Gellner, Nations; Smith, The Ethnic.43 Michèle Lamont and Virág Molnár, “The Study of Boundaries in the Social Sciences,” Annual Review of Sociology 28, no. 1 (2002): 168; Márquez, Models of Political.44 Anderson, Imagined; Lamont and Molnár, “The Study of”; De Cillia et al., “The Discursive”; Wodak, The Semiotics.45 “Be Patient”, 27.46 “Imamah Is From”, 24.47 “The Commander of the Faithful to the Jews, Crusaders and Apostates: So Wait; Indeed We, Along with You, Are Waiting,” Al-Naba’ 11 (December 2015): 3; “Inside the Caliphate 1,” Al-Hayat Media Center, July 2017, https://jihadology.net/2017/07/28/new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-inside-the-caliphate/48 “Turkey and the Fire of Nationalism,” Al-Hayat Media Center, November 2015, https://jihadology.net/2015/11/21/new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-turkey-and-the-fire-of-nationalism/49 “For God Not for the Homeland,” Al-Naba’ 5 (November 2015): 8.50 Ibid., 8.51 “The Murtadd Taliban Movement: On the Footsteps of the Iraqi and Shami Sahawat,” Rumiyah 10 (June 2017): 42–3; “The Ruling on the Belligerent Christians,” Rumiyah 9 (May 2017): 4–11; “Wala’ and Bara’ Versus American Racism,” Dabiq 11 (September 2015): 18–21.52 “Wala’ and Bara’”, 2015.53 “The Allies of al-Qa’idah in Sham,” Dabiq 8 (March 2015): 7–11; “For God Not”, 2015.54 Ibn Khaldun, The Muqadimah: An Introduction to History, ed. N. J. Dawood, trans. Franz Rosenthal (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2015).55 Ibn Khaldun, The Muqadimah; Manzooruddin Ahmed, “Umma: The Idea of A Universal Community,” Islamic Studies 14, no. 1 (1975): 27–54.56 Sayyid Abul A’la Maududi, Nasyonalisme Eslami (Islamic Nationalism), trans. O. Asad (Qalam Library, 2017).57 Jahiliyya is a highly loaded term that semantically means ignorance and refers to the pre-Islamic age in Arabia where polytheism was the norm. Islamist thinker and ideologist Sayyid Qutb defined jahiliyya as the “defiance of divine guidance” where one man is lord over others. See: Sayyid Qutb, Milestones, ed. A. B. al-Mehri (Maktaba Booksellers and Publishers, 2006), 79.58 “For God”, 8; Qawmi nationalism or qawmiyya refers to ethnic-based nationalism, and watani nationalism or wataniyya refers to state-based nationalism. Ideologically, both qawmi and watani national identities emphasized the supremacy of Arab identity, language, and culture in their multi-ethnic, multilingual, and multicultural territories. While watani nationalists are mainly committed to the extant post-WWI nation states, qawmi nationalists advocate a vision of pan-Arabism that would unify all Arab-majority states within an Arab super state. For more on this see, Adeed Dawisha, Arab Nationalism in the Twentieth Century: From Triumph to Despair (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2016); Albert Hourani, Arabic Thought in the Liberal Age 1798-1939 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013).59 “Partisanship of Jahiliyya,” Rumiyah 5 (January 2017): 11; “We Disbelieve in You,” Al-Naba’ 173 (March 2019): 3; “Foreword,” Dabiq 8 (March 2015): 3–6.60 “Wala’ and Bara’”, 20; Mohamedou, A Theory of.61 “Foreword,” 2015, 3; Mohamedou, A Theory of.62 “Irja’: The Most Dangerous Bid’ah,” Dabiq 8 (March 2015): 39–56; “Be Patient”, 2017; Maher, Salafi-Jihadism.63 “The Rafidah: From ibn Saba’ to the Dajjal,” Dabiq 13 (January 2016): 34; “Foreword,” 2015; “Kill the Imams of Kufr in the West,” Dabiq 14 (April 2016): 12; “Our Battle with the Rafidhis: So There Will Be No Sedition,” Al-Naba’ 28 (April 2016): 3; Partisanship of Jahiliyya,” Rumiyah 5 (January 2017): 11; “The Law of Allah or the Laws of Men: IS Waging War against the Khilāfah Apostasy,” Dabiq 10 (July 2015): 55. IS’s complex conception of the ideal form of umma membership should not be construed as meaning that the group physically eliminates any Sunni who does not fall under its narrow conception of communal membership and solidarity. While it was merciless toward those captured in combat against it, IS generally attempted to accommodate large sections of Sunni Muslims within the ranks of its umma and re-proselytize them into its exclusionary form of religious belief and practice.64 Ahm Ershad Uddin, “The Fanatical ISIS through the Lens of Islamic Law 1,” International Journal of Islamic Thought 12 (2017): 1–14; Michael Crawford, Ibn ‘Abd al-Wahhab: Makers of the Muslim World, (London: Oneworld Publications, 2014); Namira Nahouza, Wahhabism and the Rise of the new Salafists: Theology, Power and Sunni Islam (London: I. B. Tauris, 2018); Maher, Salafi-Jihadism; “Shia as Internal Others: A Salafi Rejection of the ‘Rejecters’,” Islam and Christian–Muslim Relations 28, no. 4 (2017): 409–30.65 Frederick M. Denny, “Ummah in the Constitution of Medina,” Journal of Near Eastern Studies 36, no. 1 (1977): 39–47; Piscatori and Saikal, Islam Beyond.66 Maulana Husain Ahmad Madani, Composite Nationalism and Islam, trans. Mohammad Anwar Hussain and Hasan Imam (New Delhi: Manohar Publishers & Distributors); Rafiya Nisar, Maulana Hussain Ahmad Madani and Composite Nationalism, Insight Islamicus 12 (2012).67 David H. Warren, Rivals in the Gulf: Yusuf al-Qaradawi, Abdullah Bin Bayyah, and the Qatar-UAE Contest over the Arab Spring and the Gulf Crisis (London: Routledge, 2021), 32; Usaama A al-Azmi, “Abdulla¯h bin Bayyah and the Arab Revolutions: Counter-revolutionary Neo-traditionalism’s Ideological Struggle against Islamism,” Muslim World 109, no. 3 (2019).68 Hugh Kennedy, Caliphate: The History of an Idea (New York: Basic Books, 2016).69 Jens Bartelson, Sovereignty as Symbolic Form (London: Routledge, 2014), 2.70 See, for example, Anderson, Imagined; Bartelson, Sovereignty; Loughlin, “In Defense”; J. Samuel Barkin and Bruce Cronin, “The State and the Nation: Changing Norms and the Rules of Sovereignty in International Relations,” International Organization 48, no. 1 (1994): 107–30.71 Giorgio Agamben, Homo Sacer: Sovereign Power and Bare Life, trans. Daniel Heller-Roazen (Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press, 2005); Giorgio Agamben, State of Exception, trans. Kevin Attell (Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 2005); Kahn, Political Theology.72 Asma Kounsar, “The Concept of Tawhid in Islam: In the Light of Perspectives of Prominent Muslim Scholars,” Journal of Islamic Thought and Civilization (JITC) 6, no. 2 (2016): 94–110; Maher Salafi-Jihadism; “The Rule of the Sharia Not the Rule of Jahiliyya,” Rumiyah 13 (September 2017): 6–8; “Tawhid of Allah in His Rule,” Rumiyah 3 (November 2016): 27.73 “Tawhid of”, 2016.74 Sayyid Abul A’la Maududi, Jihad in Islam (Islamic Publications, 1976); Qutb, Milestones.75 Qutb, Milestones.76 Qutb’s ideas played an important role in the birth of the Salafi-Jihadi movement through its fusion with Wahhabism as many Qutbists fled from the oppression of Gamal Abd al-Nasser’s government in Egypt to Saudi Arabia, see Marc Lynch, “Islam Divided Between Salafi-jihad and the Ikhwan,” Studies in Conflict & Terrorism 33, no. 6 (2010): 467–87.77 “A Fatwa for Khurasan,” Dabiq 10 (July 2015): 18–24; “Establishing the”, 2017; Wael B. Hallaq, Sharī’a: Theory, Practice, Transformations (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009); “The Position of”, 2017.78 “Imamah Is From”, 2014; “The structure of the Caliphate,” Al-Furqan Media, July 2016, https://jihadology.net/2016/07/06/new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-the-structure-of-the-caliphate/79 “The Position of”, 16.80 “Be patient,” 2017; “Foreword,” Dabiq 15 (July 2016): 4–7; “The Rule of,” 2017.81 See, for example, Bartelson, Sovereignty; Kahn, Political Theology.82 “Legislation Is Only for Allah,” Wilaya ar-Raqqah, October 2015, https://jihadology.net/2015/10/30/new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-legislation-is-not-but-for-god-wilayat-al-raqqah/83 “Be Patient”, 2017.84 For instance, scholars such as Ataman, “Islamic Perspective”; Juergensmeyer, Religious Terrorism; Mikami, “Among the Believers”.85 “Foreword,” 2015.86 “A Fatwa for,” 2015; “Foreword,” 2015; Shadi Hamid and William McCants, Rethinking Political Islam (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017); “The Allies of,” 2015.87 From the “Pages of History: The Flags of Jahiliyya,” Dabiq 9 (May 2015): 21.88 “A Fatwa for,” 2015; “Foreword,” 2015.89 Warren, “Rivals in the Gulf”, 32; Bettina Gräf, “The Concept of Wasat.iyya in the Work of Yusuf al-Qarad.āwī,” in Global Mufti: The Phenomenon of Yūsuf Al-Qarad.āwi ¯ (New York: Columbia University Press, 2009), 213–38.90 Warren, “Rivals in the Gulf”, 33.91 Peter J. Taylor, “The State as Container: Territoriality in the Modern World-System,” Progress in Human Geography 18, no. 2 (1994): 151.92 John Gerard Ruggie, “Territoriality and Beyond: Problematizing Modernity in International Relations,” International Organization 47, no. 1 (1993): 139–74; Saskia Sassen, Territory, Authority, Rights: From Medieval to Global Assemblages (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2008); Taylor, “The State”.93 Neil Brenner and Stuart Elden, “Henri Lefebvre on State, Space, Territory,” International Political Sociology 3, no. 4 (2009): 353–77.94 Anderson, Imagined; Smith, The Ethnic.95 “Foreword,” Rumiyah 12 (August 2017): 5.96 “Foreword,” 2015, 4.97 “A Fatwa for,” 2015, 19.98 “Foreword,” 2015, 3.99 Michael D. Berdine, Redrawing the Middle East: Sir Mark Sykes, Imperialism and the Sykes-Picot Agreement (London: I. B. Tauris, 2018).100 “Wala’ and bara’,” 2015; “Be Patient,” 2017; “Why Do We Fight? The Most Important Goals of Jihad in the Path of God,” Al-Naba’ 25 (April 2016): 12–3; “The Kurds… and the Autumn of Nations,” Al-Naba’ 19 (February 2016): 3; “The Murtadd Taliban,” 2017; Islam Is the Religion of the Sword Not Pacifism,” Dabiq 7 (February 2015): 20–4.101 “Be Patient,” 2017, 28.102 Bruce Lawrence, Messages to the World: The Statements of Osama bin Laden, trans. James Howarth (London: Verso, 2005), 194.103 Paul Brykczynski, “Radical Islam and the Nation: The Relationship between Religion and Nationalism in the Political Thought of Hassan al-Banna and Sayyid Qutb,” History of Intellectual Culture 5 (2005): 9; P. J. Vatikiotis, Islam and the State (London: Routledge, 2017); “Hasan al-Banna,” in Princeton Readings in Islamist Thought: Texts and Contexts from al-Banna to Bin Laden, ed. Roxanne L. Euben and Muhammad Qasim Zaman (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2009), 56–78.104 Gail Minault, The Khilafat Movement: Religious Symbolism and Political Mobilization in India (New York: Columbia University Press, 1982), 6.105 David Held, Democracy and the Global Order: From the Modern State to Cosmopolitan Governance (Cambridge, UK: Polity, 1995).106 “The Revival of Jihad in Bengal: With the Spread of the Light of the Khilāfah,” Dabiq 12 (November 2015): 41.107 “For God MNot,” 2015, 8; “Kurds between,” 2016; Message to Our People in Kurdistan,” Al-Hayat Media Center, March 2015, https://jihadology.net/2015/03/23/al-%E1%B8%A5ayat-media-center-presents-a-new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-message-to-our-people-in-kurdistan/; “The Religion of Islam,” Rumiyah 1 (September 2016): 4–8; “Turkey and”, 2015.108 I use de-nationization here rather than terms like denationalization because the latter is mainly used in regard to moving ownership of an industry from public to private hands; or stripping one of citizenship; or forms of citizenship and belonging which are transnational or postnational as a result of processes of globalization. But the emphasis in de-nationization is on unraveling the nation and transforming it into another form of political community. On denationalization see, Linda Bosniak, “Citizenship Denationalized,” Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies 7, no. 2 (2000): 447–509; Saskia Sassen, “Towards Post-National and Denationalized Citizenship,” in Handbook of Citizenship Studies, ed. Engin F. Isin and Bryan S. Turner (London: Sage, 2002), 277–92.109 “Breaking of the Borders,” Al-I’tisam Media, June 2014, https://jihadology.net/2014/06/29/al-iti%e1%b9%a3am-media-presents-a-new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-of-iraq-and-al-sham-breaking-of-the-border/110 “Breaking of,” 2014; “Turkey and” 2015.111 “Khutbah and Jum’ah Prayer in the Grand Mosque of Musul,” Al-Furqan Media, July 2014, https://jihadology.net/2014/07/05/al-furqan-media-presents-a-new-video-message-from-the-islamic-states-abu-bakr-al-%E1%B8%A5ussayni-al-qurayshi-al-baghdadi-khu%E1%B9%ADbah-and-jumah-prayer-in-the-grand-mosque-of-mu/112 “The End of,” 2014.113 “The Structure of,” 2016.114 “The Birth of Two New Wilayat,” Dabiq 4 (October 2014): 18.115 “The Structure of,” 2016.116 Arseny Saparov, “The Alteration of Place Names and Construction of National Identity in Soviet Armenia,” Cahiers du monde russe. Russie-Empire russe-Union soviétique et États indépendants 44, no. 1 (2003): 179–98; Harold R. Isaacs, “Basic Group Identity: The Idols of the Tribe,” Reprinted from Ethnicity 1, no. 1 (1974): 15–41.117 Duri A. A., Gottschalk H. L., Colin G. S., Lambton A. K. S., and Bazmee Ansari A. S.,. “Dīwān,” in Encyclopaedia of Islam, ed. P. Bearman, Th. Banquis, C. E. Bowworth, E. van Donzel, and W. P. Heinrichs Bowworth, 2nd ed.; Khilafah, “Declared,” Dabiq 1 (July 2014): 6–11; “The structure of,” 2016.118 IS considers the Abbasid caliphate (775-1258 CE) as the last rightful caliphate and does not regard the Ottomans as a caliphate. See, “The Law of,” 2015: 59; “The Structure of,” 2016.119 Pinar Dinc, “The Kurdish Movement and the Democratic Federation of Northern Syria: An Alternative to the (Nation-)State Model?,” Journal of Balkan and Near Eastern Studies 22, no. 1 (2020): 47–67; Damian Gerber and Shannon Brincat, “When Öcalan Met Bookchin: The Kurdish Freedom Movement and the Political Theory of Democratic Confederalism,” Geopolitics 26, no. 4 (2018): 973–97; Milena Sterio, “Self-Determination and Secession under International Law: The Cases of Kurdistan and Catalonia,” American Society of International Law 22, no. 1 (2018).120 Harriet Allsopp and Wladimir van Wilgenburg, The Kurds of Northern Syria: Governance, Diversity and Conflicts (London: I. B. Tauris, 2019); David McDowall, A Modern History of the Kurds (London: I. B. Tauris, 2007); David Romano, The Kurdish Nationalist Movement: Opportunity, Mobilization, and Identity (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006); Abbas Vali, Kurds and the State in Iran: The Making of Kurdish Identity (London: I. B. Tauris, 2014).121 Mohammed A. Salih, “How Islamic State Is Trying to Lure the Kurds to Its Ranks” Al-Monitor (2016), https://www.al-monitor.com/originals/2016/08/islamic-state-propaganda-video-kurds-iraq.html122 “Kurds between,” 2016; “Message to Our,” 2015.123 “Kurds between,” 2016; Jonathan Phillips, The Life and Legend of the Sultan Saladin (New Haven, Yale University Press, 2019).124 Allsopp and van Wilgenburg, The Kurds of; McDowall, A Modern History; Romano, The Kurdish.125 Kawa Abdulkareem Sherwani, “The Discourse of Kurdish Traditional Textiles,” Industria Textila 72, no. 6 (2021): 623–31.126 McDowall, A Modern History; Romano, The Kurdish. A Kurdistan province exists in Iran but as an administrative, not political, unit.127 “For God Not,” 2015: 8.128 Brass, Ethnicity and; Smith, The Ethnic.129 Smith, The Ethnic, 13.130 Ibid, 32.131 Brass, Ethnicity and.132 Gellner, Nations.133 Anderson, Imagined; Smith, The Ethnic; Sterio, “Self-Determination and”.134 Allsopp and van Wilgenburg, The Kurds of; “The structure of,” 2016.135 Ataman, “Islamic Perspective”; Sami Hanna and George H. Gardner, eds., Arab Socialism [Al-Ishtirakīyah al-’Arabīyah]: A Documentary Survey (Leiden, E. J. Brill, 1969).136 Nagata, “The Radical”; Cyrus Schayegh, The Middle East and the Making of the Modern World (Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 2017).137 Schayegh, The Middle East; Nazan Cicek, “The Role of Mass Education in Nation-Building in the Ottoman Empire and the Turkish Republic, 1870–1930,” in Mass Education and the Limits of State Building, c. 1870-1930, ed. Laurence Brockliss and Nicola Sheldon (Palgrave Macmillan, 2012); Erik J. Zürcher, The Young Turk Legacy and Nation Building: From the Ottoman Empire to Atatürk’s Turkey (London: I. B. Tauris, 2010).138 Kaneva and Stanton, “An Alternative”; Saunders, “The Umma”; Ruud Koopmans and Paul Statham, “Challenging the Liberal Nation-State? Postnationalism, Multiculturalism, and the Collective Claims Making of Migrants and Ethnic Minorities in Britain and Germany,” American Journal of Sociology 105, no. 3 (1999): 652–96; Yasemin Nuhoglu Soysal, Limits of Citizenship: Migrants and Postnational Membership in Europe (Chicago: Chicago University Press, 1994).139 “Iraq: ISIS Abducting, Killing, Expelling Minorities: Armed Group Targeting Christian Nuns, Turkmen, Shabaks, Yazidis,” Human Rights Watch, July 2014, https://www.hrw.org/news/2014/07/19/iraq-isis-abducting-killing-expelling-minorities#140 Mathilde Becker Aarseth, Mosul under ISIS: Eyewitness Accounts of Life in the Caliphate (London: I. B. Tauris, 2021); Mara Revkin, “The Legal Foundations of the Islamic State,” Brookings July, 2016, https://www.brookings.edu/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/Brookings-Analysis-Paper_Mara-Revkin_Web.pdf; Mohammed A. Salih and Marwan M. Kraidy, “Islamic State and Women: A Biopolitical Analysis,” International Journal of Communication 14 (2020): 1933–50.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
10.00%
发文量
75
期刊介绍: Terrorism and insurgency are now the dominant forms of conflict in the world today. Fuelled by moribund peace processes, ethnic and religious strife, disputes over natural resources, and transnational organized crime, these longstanding security challenges have become even more violent and intractable: posing new threats to international peace and stability. Studies in Conflict and Terrorism aims to cast new light on the origins and implications of conflict in the 21st Century and to illuminate new approaches and solutions to countering the growth and escalation of contemporary sub-state violence.
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