Constructing the nation in opposition: human rights as strategic building blocks, a comparative analysis of Sinn Féin and the IRA, the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood, and Hamas.

Title:
Constructing the nation in opposition : human rights as strategic building blocks, a comparative analysis of Sinn Féin and the IRA, the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood, and Hamas
Creator:
Jones, Kimberly (Author)
Contributor:
Barreto, Amílcar Antonio (Advisor)
Passas, Nikos (Committee member)
Sullivan, Denis Joseph (Committee member)
Publisher:
Boston, Massachusetts : Northeastern University, 2010
Date Accepted:
December 2010
Date Awarded:
May 2011
Type of resource:
Text
Genre:
Dissertations
Format:
electronic
Digital origin:
born digital
Abstract/Description:
Scholars of nationalism contend the nation or national identity is an artificial construction and they acknowledge one cannot create something from nothing -- a kind of "building block" is required. For some socio-political movements, including those that use violence, human rights violations become building blocks. The power of violations as a building block is grounded in their real and perceived importance in both the domestic and international political and legal arenas.

This study examines Sinn Féin and the Irish Republic Army (Northern Ireland); the Muslim Brotherhood (Egypt); and Hamas (Israel and the occupied territories), and finds that all are examples of "nationalist" entrepreneurs. These movements strategically use human rights abuses as building blocks in their support-seeking narratives, defining and reinforcing in-group and out-group boundaries (i.e. the oppressed vs. the oppressors) in the domestic arena, justifying their actions -- from civil protest to violence -- and demonizing their opponents on the international stage.

Part of the theoretical underpinnings of this study are founded in the fact that the opposition and resistance groups herein are rational support maximizers that tap into the emotion-based preferences of their target populations. Groups strategically utilize grievances and emphasize their simultaneous roles of being oppressed and resisting the oppressor on behalf of the nation, whether it is Irish, Egyptian, or Palestinian. This both reinforces the ties between the organization and the larger community and serves as a vehicle of othering.

Othering relates to the other major theoretical girder of this study -- nationalism. Herein, the focus is on the process and formation of national identities. Human rights violations, as evidenced in the forthcoming case studies, are a tool used to cultivate group identity as the project of "nation" building requires attention to an underlying precept of nationalism: in order to have us you must also have them. In the discourse that follows, the us are the violated or the oppressed and the them are the violators and the oppressors.

If, as Benedict Anderson states, nations are imagined communities, there exists an opportunity to influence those who are doing the imagining. The nationalist entrepreneurs studied herein are rational actors who make choices and those choices exist in a context. Human rights building blocks can be used to create sustainable communities that embrace diversity or they can be used to craft narratives in opposition that enhance discordance and can encourage violence. Those who are concerned about ending state violations of human rights and resistance movement violence have an opportunity to influence that context.
Subjects and keywords:
IRA
Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood
analysis
Human rights
Ikhwa̅n al-Muslimu̅n
Nationalism
Sinn Fein
Hamas
Irish Republican Army
Political Science
Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.17760/d20002061
Permanent Link:
http://hdl.handle.net/2047/d20002061
Use and reproduction:
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