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The Palgrave Handbook of New Directions in Kashmir Studies provides
a comprehensive, interdisciplinary and transregional perspective on
the Kashmir dispute. Spanning South and Central Asia, Kashmir has
been at the center of geopolitical conflicts and rivalries among
India, Pakistan and China for decades, with members of
heterogeneous local communities negotiating the complexities of
regional state formations, national power assertions and
geopolitical competitions. Taken together, the chapters in this
handbook examine diverse people’s struggles to establish
processes of democratic accountability in relation to the
colonial-era state consolidations, postcolonial military
occupations, interstate wars, intrastate armed conflicts and cold
war and post-cold war politics that have shaped and transformed
social and political identities in the region. Contributors chart
out varied and bold new directions by attending to local
constellations of situated knowledges and practices through which
people living in different parts of the disputed region make sense
of the conditions and contingencies of their political lives. The
handbook further initiates a dialogue on the ways in which state
power and border regimes have shaped scholarship and undermined the
pursuit of shared intellectual and political projects across
physical and epistemological boundaries.
This book provides a fascinating look at the creation of
contemporary Muslim jihadists. Basing the book on her long-term
fieldwork in the disputed borderlands between Pakistan and India,
Cabeiri deBergh Robinson tells the stories of people whose lives
and families have been shaped by a long history of political
conflict. Interweaving historical and ethnographic evidence,
Robinson explains how refuge-seeking has become a socially and
politically debased practice in the Kashmir region and why this
devaluation has turned refugee men into potential militants. She
reveals the fraught social processes by which individuals and
families produce and maintain a modern jihad, and she shows how
Muslim refugees have forged an Islamic notion of rightsOCoa hybrid
of global political ideals that adopts the language of human rights
and humanitarianism as a means to rethink refugeesOCO positions in
transnational communities. Jihad is no longer seen as a collective
fight for the sovereignty of the Islamic polity, but instead as a
personal struggle to establish the security of Muslim bodies
against political violence, torture, and rape. Robinson describes
how this new understanding has contributed to the popularization of
jihad in the Kashmir region, decentered religious institutions as
regulators of jihad in practice, and turned the families of refugee
youths into the ultimate mediators of entrance into militant
organizations. This provocative book challenges the idea that
extremism in modern Muslim societies is the natural by-product of a
clash of civilizations, of a universal Islamist ideology, or of
fundamentalist conversion."
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