C T Ethnicity, Nationalism/separatism: Auses of Errorism
C T Ethnicity, Nationalism/separatism: Auses of Errorism
Ethnicity, nationalism/separatism
Probably the most contested cause of terrorism is an aggrieved group resorting to violence
for nationalist or separatist reasons; depending on one's point of view, this can be
considered as resistance against an (external) oppressor. Thus far, only Mahatma Ghandi
and his followers of the freedom movement have managed to liberate themselves from
foreign occupation by peaceful means (Drewermann, 2001), whereas in most other
(previously) colonised states "nationalism movements commonly turned to terrorism", it
being "the resort of an extremist faction of this broader movement" within an ethnic
minority (Crenshaw, 1981:383). Williams (1994) provides an overview on the relation
between ethnic minorities and the likelihood of conflict, for example to establish or assert
language rights, religious beliefs and symbols (1994:59), but he also includes factors like
"civil and political rights and privileges, ..., regional-ethnic parity in the economy... What
then generates perceptions of unfairness is competition/rivalry when an ethny is
subordinated or disadvantaged in economic opportunity, social status, political voice and
rights, or cultural expressions." (Williams, 1994:59)
However, the cited factors are not unique for ethnic minorities. To generalize it further,
ethnic conflict arises from a "complex combination" of class, inequality, political opportunity,
mobilization resources and "ethnic strength" (Williams, 1994:49). How can 'ethnic strength'
be measured, and to what extend is ethnicity (and related nationalist separatist
movements) a constructed concept? (Nevertheless, the idea works for mobilizing people).
One note of caution on the importance of ethnic conflict is appropriate. Fearon and Laitin
(1996) assessed the ratio of actual versus potential communal violence in Africa from
independence through 1979, ranging from 0.0005 for actual ethnic violence to 0.0028 (or
0.28%) for ethnic civil war, thereby claiming that incidence of ethnic conflict is hugely
overestimated due to research bias. Worded more positively: most ethnic groups live in
peace with each other.
A more important factor may be the social stratification Williams is referring to and
inequalities in the distribution of scarce resources. Extensive contemporary media and
literature simplify this to the poverty argument (e.g. Murphy (2001) and Kristof (2002)):
when a group is absolutely or relatively deprived they rebel. A comprehensive evaluation of
the extant literature on the validity of this argument, the Economic Inequality - Political
Conflict (EI-PC) hypothesis, has been carried out by Lichbach (1989), who came to the
conclusion that "EI-PC studies have produced an equivocal answer about the EI-PC nexus"
(p440) regardless the research angle (statistics, rational actor and deprived actor
paradigms). Problems Lichbach identified were notions on the lack of exactly defined
economic factors influencing the decision to resort to political conflict and the "tolerance for
inequality" (p452), according to the Rational Actor (RA) approach shifting to behavioural
dissent only when absolute poverty is present, the Deprived Actor (DA) scientific research
program's undefined additional "intermediate psychological processes" (p459), and another
not fully explored factor of the (insignificant) influence of collective action (p465). Say, one
dismisses the inconclusive research results and assumes that it is a (major) cause fuelling
terrorism - proof by contradiction: roughly 15% of the population consumes 85% of the
resources, UN statistics show that citizens in the Third World are worse off now than 30
years ago, while a small faction in those countries enriched themselves, i.e. RA and DA are
both present as well as the statistics. If either one of them is true, the West ought to be
continuously subject to terrorist acts by (a small group representing) people from these
Third World countries. But there is no huge mass uprising of the vast majority of the world
population against the few in Western states, nor continuous terrorist attacks carried out by
Third World citizens against the West. In fact, the amount of terrorist incidents declined in
the 1990s. (Refer to e.g. 'Patterns of Global Terrorism' publications, downloadable from the
US State Department website at http://www.usemb.se/terror/).
Broadening the perspective to globalisation, Galtung (2002) blames the Third World - First
World dichotomy as a new version of class conflict based on structural violence. This
assertion in itself may provide an explanation as to why widespread social upheaval has not
occurred. Proving injustice being done by structural violence is considerably more difficult
than an overt assault on a country or discrimination of a target group, and even if one
succeeds in convincing one's own group, they will likely stumble upon resorting to terrorist
methods, not possessing sufficient assets to purchase and develop so-called 'weapons of
mass destruction'. This is an example of a wider gap between means and ends. Guelke
(1995) explores globalisation, inequality and the Third World from another direction and
explores the possible links between economic affluence and a stable liberal democracy,
thereby assuming that it would reduce incidence of terrorism. However, at the same time he
asserts that a liberal democracy "has proved little more successful than other forms of
political systems in overcoming the relative weakness of the state in many Third World
societies" (p135) and that economic development is a more important factor to maintain law
and order. Guelke is more concerned with intra-Third World conflicts than world wide
international terrorism as "there has been relatively little spill-over from political violence
within Third World states into the international arena" (p142) and in addition to economic
development, the possible effects a "debilitated" liberal democracy in Third World countries
may induce and facilitate, but without formulating a sound conclusion on the matter either.
(non)democracy
Disaffected intelligentsia
Dehumanisation
Opposite the concept of disaffected intelligentsia is the assertion that it is not intelligentsia,
but simpleminded people who are easy to indoctrinate that are perceived to be 'the cause'
(Rathbone and Rowley, 2002) prevalent in more recent popular literature. They, and others,
are essentially trying to dehumanise terrorists, thereby confirming terrorist's core reasons
they are fighting for: being heard, recognised and treated as equal human beings. In this
context, Midgley (2002) has put forward an interesting explanation for the increased levels
of dehumanisation: "a continuation of the frozen, abstract hatreds made possible by the
cold war... this suspending of normal human relations is supposed to be just a temporary
expedient ... The corrupt thing about the Cold War idea was that it legitimised acceptance of
this evil as a normal, permanent condition of life. It domesticated tribal hatred."
Thus obfuscating the distinction between literal and metaphorical wars, where the negative
mindset of people caused by the Cold War continues to live on, and feed, terrorism and the
violent responses on terrorism, made possible by disregarding the idea that an opponent is
a human being too. However, a closer examination of this argument reveals that the implied
cause of the violence is within us, having internalised dehumanisation, not the 'illiterate
stupid other'.
Religion
In line with either dehumanisation, or with previously outlined ethnicity and democracy or
both, is religion as a cause for terrorism put forward, 'Muslim fanatics in the Middle East' in
particular. Michael Radu (2001), senior fellow at the Foreign Policy Research Institute in the
US, provides a simplification: democracy is declared un-Islamic by all ideologues of Islamic
terrorism, Islamists hate capitalism and believe in a new Caliphate (who will lead the
community of Muslims worldwide) and oppose individualism. Statistics reveal two relevant
intriguing facets. One is religious revival in general, with the US at the top (Doyle, 2003),
the other is statistics on killings (including from one murder to world wars) gathered and
analysed by Lewis Fry Richardson (referenced in Hayes, 2001), among other factors, on the
causality of violence and religion: "The one social factor that does have some detectable
correlation with war is religion. ... nations that differ in religion are more likely to fight than
those that share the same religion. Moreover, some sects seem generally to be more
bellicose (Christian nations participated in a disproportionate number of conflicts). But these
effects are not large." (Hayes, 2002:15)
Bear in mind though, that there are also a 'disproportionate' amount Christians. In turn, it
can be argued that there are many Christians exactly because they 'seem generally to be
more bellicose'.
Notwithstanding the above, all religions emphasise that one should treat others as we wish
to be treated, and that one should not kill another human being (the latter with a few
exceptions, e.g. Just War Theory). From an Islamic perspective, there are scholars who
consider Western society, which is based on Christian theology, as the main cause of
terrorism, and Darwinism and materialism in particular (Yahya, (1)), including Malthus'
theory of ruthlessness, also known under the definition of social Darwinism. Last, New Age -
as a religion - considers the perceived cause of terrorism the "modern society", being "too
stressful and uncreative" (Ridgley, 1999), i.e. a problem within oneself.
Summarizing,
Among the multitude of causes that may lead a person to resort to terrorism, there is none
that conclusively links a sole cause to the act. Ethnicity, nationalism/separatism, poverty
and economic disadvantage, globalisation, (non)democracy, Western society, disaffected
intelligentsia, dehumanisation, and religion all have arguments confirming a possible
existing link, as well reservations against a causal relation.