Faculty Research Forum: Vigilante Islamists with Joshua White
Description
Professor Joshua White presents his new book, [Vigilante Islamists: Religious Parties and Anti-State Violence in Pakistan](Vice Dean for Faculty Affairs Peter M. Lewis), in conversation with Professor Devesh Kapur, with introductory remarks by Vice Dean for Faculty Affairs Peter M. Lewis.
Vigilante Islamists investigates the role that Pakistan's Islamist political parties have played since the 1990s as both collaborators and competitors with violent anti-state movements. Drawing on dozens of interviews with party insiders, Urdu-language publications, and internal documents, White explains the ways in which these small-but-influential parties have navigated between their interests in championing an ever-more expansive vision of Islamic law and continuing their legitimate participation in democratic politics.
The book argues that the decisions of Islamist parties about whether to embrace violent anti-state movements or countenance vigilantism within their own ranks are shaped in part by their religious and ideological traditions, but more so by their own vulnerabilities—both to radical fringe groups and to Pakistan's own powerful security services. The book's five case studies, spanning three decades, map these vulnerabilities and motivations within the country's leading Islamist parties.
This analysis provides insights into the inner workings of prominent Islamist organizations and the strategies that they select to endorse, or quietly undermine, anti-state militants. More broadly, the book sheds light on how and when Islamist parties in South Asia, Southeast Asia, and the Middle East might decide to collaborate with radical movements that violently challenge the existing political order.
A light lunch will be provided.
Who can attend?
- General public
- Faculty
- Staff
- Students