A Revolutionary Perspective on Social Movements: Fundamentalism in the Islamic World

In the last two decades, we have seen a significant surge in the number of Islamic fundamentalist movements, and there has not been a concise reason as to why. The main objective of this research is to determine the causes of Islamic fundamentalism, and, in so showing that an Islamic fundamentali...

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Main Author: Berna, D. Dustin
Format: Others
Published: ScholarWorks@UNO 2008
Online Access:http://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/650
http://scholarworks.uno.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1650&context=td
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spelling ndltd-uno.edu-oai-scholarworks.uno.edu-td-16502016-10-21T17:05:34Z A Revolutionary Perspective on Social Movements: Fundamentalism in the Islamic World Berna, D. Dustin In the last two decades, we have seen a significant surge in the number of Islamic fundamentalist movements, and there has not been a concise reason as to why. The main objective of this research is to determine the causes of Islamic fundamentalism, and, in so showing that an Islamic fundamentalist movement is inherently a social movement. To determine the causes of Islamic fundamentalism it is best to employ a labyrinth analogy, and it consists of four social movement conditions. The four conditions that make up my fundamentalist labyrinth can be found in the four social movement literatures, and they include: resources associated with resource mobilization theory; opening political institutions as associated with political process theory; socioeconomic inequality associated with Marxism; and the ideas, be they religious or freedom of thought, associated with new social movement theory. Not one of the four social movement literatures acknowledges, or is able to explain Islamic fundamentalism. Taken as a whole, each plays a vital role in my fundamentalist labyrinth. Social movement theorists have excluded Islamic social movements, specifically Islamic fundamentalism, from each of their respective sub-fields because they do not fit into any one of their theories. However, by merging the different theories to form a new theory in the social movement literature, I have been able to explain the causes of Islamic fundamentalism. Furthermore, I have created the first dataset that contains every Islamic fundamentalist movement that is or has been in operation from 1970 through 2006. The fundamentalist dataset has a total N (total number of fundamentalist groups) of 16,072 and a total number of unique fundamentalist movements of 983. With this dataset I was able to determine what state-level phenomena are positively associated with Islamic fundamentalism. Finally, to solidify this I developed three in-depth case studies: Hamas, Hezbollah, and Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood. 2008-05-16T07:00:00Z text application/pdf http://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/650 http://scholarworks.uno.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1650&context=td University of New Orleans Theses and Dissertations ScholarWorks@UNO
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description In the last two decades, we have seen a significant surge in the number of Islamic fundamentalist movements, and there has not been a concise reason as to why. The main objective of this research is to determine the causes of Islamic fundamentalism, and, in so showing that an Islamic fundamentalist movement is inherently a social movement. To determine the causes of Islamic fundamentalism it is best to employ a labyrinth analogy, and it consists of four social movement conditions. The four conditions that make up my fundamentalist labyrinth can be found in the four social movement literatures, and they include: resources associated with resource mobilization theory; opening political institutions as associated with political process theory; socioeconomic inequality associated with Marxism; and the ideas, be they religious or freedom of thought, associated with new social movement theory. Not one of the four social movement literatures acknowledges, or is able to explain Islamic fundamentalism. Taken as a whole, each plays a vital role in my fundamentalist labyrinth. Social movement theorists have excluded Islamic social movements, specifically Islamic fundamentalism, from each of their respective sub-fields because they do not fit into any one of their theories. However, by merging the different theories to form a new theory in the social movement literature, I have been able to explain the causes of Islamic fundamentalism. Furthermore, I have created the first dataset that contains every Islamic fundamentalist movement that is or has been in operation from 1970 through 2006. The fundamentalist dataset has a total N (total number of fundamentalist groups) of 16,072 and a total number of unique fundamentalist movements of 983. With this dataset I was able to determine what state-level phenomena are positively associated with Islamic fundamentalism. Finally, to solidify this I developed three in-depth case studies: Hamas, Hezbollah, and Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood.
author Berna, D. Dustin
spellingShingle Berna, D. Dustin
A Revolutionary Perspective on Social Movements: Fundamentalism in the Islamic World
author_facet Berna, D. Dustin
author_sort Berna, D. Dustin
title A Revolutionary Perspective on Social Movements: Fundamentalism in the Islamic World
title_short A Revolutionary Perspective on Social Movements: Fundamentalism in the Islamic World
title_full A Revolutionary Perspective on Social Movements: Fundamentalism in the Islamic World
title_fullStr A Revolutionary Perspective on Social Movements: Fundamentalism in the Islamic World
title_full_unstemmed A Revolutionary Perspective on Social Movements: Fundamentalism in the Islamic World
title_sort revolutionary perspective on social movements: fundamentalism in the islamic world
publisher ScholarWorks@UNO
publishDate 2008
url http://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/650
http://scholarworks.uno.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1650&context=td
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