Religion Versus Ethnicity as a Source of Mobilisation: Are There Differences?

MICROCON Research Working Paper No. 18

55 Pages Posted: 28 Oct 2009

See all articles by Frances Stewart

Frances Stewart

University of Oxford - Department of Economics

Date Written: October 15, 2009

Abstract

The root causes of most violent conflicts lie in economic and political factors, often horizontal inequalities of various types. Yet people are organised, united and mobilised by identities, in particular ethnic or religious ones. Most conflict analyses treat religion as a subset of ethnicity. This paper explores differences between these two identities, both by reviewing literature and by analysis of some recent surveys of perceptions in a number of conflict-affected countries. It finds many similarities in mobilisation, with both identities used instrumentally by leaders, but both ‘essentialised’ and ‘believed in’ by those who are mobilised. Yet in both cases, leaders have to cultivate the identity of those mobilised, and that of the ‘other’, to induce violence on any scale. Religious organisation and external support are often stronger than in the case of ethnicity, but there is no evidence that religious conflicts are more deadly than ethnic ones. Preliminary evidence suggests that in the many cases where both identities are present and overlapping, the identity along which mobilisation occurs is determined by demographics and according to the identity which is perceived as being used politically in the allocation of government jobs and contracts. The need for both religious and ethnic leaders to work at mobilisation for some time preceding a conflict gives rise to possibilities of monitoring and intervention to prevent conflict occurring.

Keywords: Conflict, inequality, ethnicity, religion

Suggested Citation

Stewart, Frances, Religion Versus Ethnicity as a Source of Mobilisation: Are There Differences? (October 15, 2009). MICROCON Research Working Paper No. 18, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1495152 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1495152

Frances Stewart (Contact Author)

University of Oxford - Department of Economics ( email )

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