The militarization of these ethnic and religious identities, rather than the failure of perfectly placed state borders to alleviate tension between them, explains much of violence in the Middle East today. Blaming imperialism is usually sound politics and good comedy. But in this case, focusing on bad borders risks taking perpetual identity-based violence as a given, resulting in policies that ultimately exacerbate the conflicts they aim to solve. 

Source: www.theatlantic.com

"The militarization of these ethnic and religious identities, rather than the failure of perfectly placed state borders to alleviate tension between them, explains much of violence in the Middle East today. Blaming imperialism is usually sound politics and good comedy. But in this case, focusing on bad borders risks taking perpetual identity-based violence as a given, resulting in policies that ultimately exacerbate the conflicts they aim to solve."

See on Scoop.itCultures, Identity and Constructs


Discover more from Cornellian Perspectives

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Leave a comment

Trending

Discover more from Cornellian Perspectives

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading