Religion and International Relations in the Middle East
A special issue of Religions (ISSN 2077-1444).
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (28 February 2020) | Viewed by 45069
Special Issue Editor
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
The de-secularization process has taken multiple courses and has made geopolitics of religion central in reshaping regional issues and in restructuring modes of international politics and international system’s intervention in the Middle East. The Religions Special Issue on “Religion and International Relations in the Middle East” encourages scholarship on these issues exploring at the same time the contribution of religion in reshaping modernity’s contour of international relations theories in the Middle East and beyond. This Religions Special Issue has a twofold purpose: first, to question main presuppositions and perceptions regarding religion and international politics in the Middle East and, second, to reflect on future role(s) of religion in the regional order.
The scope and purpose of the issue and its relationship to other literature on the topic
By the end of the 20th century, after great political upheavals, two World Wars, the decolonization process, and political, social, and most importantly scientific revolutions, it is hard to miss that the world is in a deep de-secularization process. In the Middle East, this process has taken multiple courses and has made geopolitics of religion central in reshaping regional issues and in restructuring modes of international politics and international system’s intervention in the Middle East. The Religions Special Issue on “Religion and International Relations in the Middle East” encourages scholarship on issues such as nation-state demise and the ascent of state-like nonstate actors (Hezbollah, ISIS), the role of religiously-legitimated transnational ideologies such as transnational Shiism and Salafism/Jihadism in the regional order, the enhanced role of religion and religious nationalism in shaping foreign policy and security strategies, the predicament of non-Muslim communities (Christians, Yezidis, etc.) and its impact on regional checks and balances, the role of religious diasporas in the formation of the international and regional politics, the relations between religion and political violence, and, last but not least, the contribution of religion to a post-Western turn in international relations by reshaping modernity’s contour of international relations theories in the Middle East and beyond. We also welcome contributions placing these changes in the role of religion in regional politics in a wider globalization/glocalization framework as well as papers exploring how spiritual life and its renewal and/or reform would inform narratives of regional order. This Religions Special Issue has a twofold purpose: first, to question main presuppositions and perceptions regarding religion and international politics in the Middle East and, second, to reflect on future role(s) of religion in the regional order.
Dr. Sotiris Roussos
Guest Editor
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- Islam
- Middle East
- International Politics
- nonstate actors
- political violence
- nation-state
- regional politics
- transnational ideologies
- non-Muslim communities
- religious nationalism
- international relations theories
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