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Tripoli, Lebanon's 'Sunni City' is often presented as an Islamist or even Jihadi city. However, this misleading label conceals a much deeper history of resistance and collaboration with the state and the wider region. Based on more than a decade of fieldwork and using a broad array of primary sources, Tine Gade analyses the modern history of Tripoli, exploring the city's contentious politics, its fluid political identity, and the relations between Islamist and sectarian groups. Offering an alternative explanation for Tripoli's decades of political troubles - rather than emphasizing Islamic radicalism as the principal explanation - she argues that it is Lebanese clientelism and the decay of the state that produced the rise of violent Islamist movements in Tripoli. By providing a corrective to previous assumptions, this book not only expands our understanding of Lebanese politics, but of the wider religious and political dynamics in the Middle East.
Islam and politics. --- Political violence. --- Violence --- Political crimes and offenses --- Terrorism --- Islam --- Politics and Islam --- Political science --- Political aspects --- Tripoli (Lebanon) --- Politics and government. --- Tripolis (Lebanon) --- Ṭarābulus (Lebanon) --- Tarablous ech Cham (Lebanon) --- Tarâbloûss (Lebanon) --- Ṭarābulus al-Shām (Lebanon) --- Trâblous (Lebanon) --- Islam and politics --- Sunnites --- Political violence
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Tawhid was a militant Islamist group which implemented Islamic law at gunpoint in the Lebanese city of Tripoli during the 1980s. In retrospect, some have called it 'the first ISIS-style Emirate'. Drawing on two hundred interviews with Islamist fighters and their mortal enemies, as well as on a trove of new archival material, Raphaël Lefèvre provides a comprehensive account of this Islamist group. He shows how they featured religious ideologues determined to turn Lebanon into an Islamic Republic, yet also included Tripolitan rebels of all stripes, neighbourhood strongmen with scores to settle, local subalterns seeking social revenge as well as profit-driven gangsters, who each tried to steer Tawhid's exercise of violence to their advantage. Providing a detailed understanding of the multi-faceted processes through which Tawhid emerged in 1982, implemented its 'Emirate' and suddenly collapsed in 1985, this is a story that shows how militant Islamist groups are impacted by their grand ideology as much as by local contexts - with crucial lessons for understanding social movements, rebel groups and terrorist organizations elsewhere too.
Religious militants --- Islamic fundamentalism --- Islam and politics --- Islam and state --- History --- Ḥarakat al-Tawḥīd al-Islāmī (Lebanon) --- Mosque and state --- State and Islam --- State, The --- Ummah (Islam) --- Islam --- Politics and Islam --- Political science --- Fundamentalism, Islamic --- Islamism --- Religious fundamentalism --- Militants, Religious --- Religious terrorists --- Religious adherents --- Terrorism --- Political aspects --- Religious aspects --- Junbush-i Tavḥīd-i Islāmī (Lebanon) --- Islamic Unification Movement (Lebanon) --- Mouvement de Unification Islamique (Lebanon) --- Tawhid (Lebanon) --- Tawheed (Lebanon) --- حركة التوحيد الإسلامي --- Tripoli (Lebanon) --- Lebanon --- Social conditions. --- Politics and government --- Tripolis (Lebanon) --- Ṭarābulus (Lebanon) --- Tarablous ech Cham (Lebanon) --- Tarâbloûss (Lebanon) --- Ṭarābulus al-Shām (Lebanon) --- Trâblous (Lebanon)
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