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Event

BOOK LAUNCH: Prof. Khalid Mustafa Medani, "Black Markets and Militants: Informal Networks in the Middle East and Africa"

Tuesday, April 19, 2022 16:00to17:30
Morrice Hall TNC Theatre (017), 3485 rue McTavish, Montreal, QC, H3A 0E1, CA
medani_book_launch_poster.

The Department of Political Science and the Institute of Islamic Studies invite you to our book launch celebrating Prof. Khalid Mustafa Medani’s book (Cambridge University Press, 2021).

Tuesday, April 19, 2022, 4:00pm
Morrice Hall 017 (TNC Theatre)

3485 Rue McTavish

Speakers:

Michelle Hartman (Director, Islamic Studies)
Jacob T. Levy (Chair, Political Science)
Juan Wang (Political Science)
Malek Abisaab (History/Islamic Studies)
Khalid Mustafa Medani (Islamic Studies/Political Science)

Prof. Khalid Mustafa Medani is Chair of Ï㽶ÊÓƵ’s African Studies program, and Associate Professor in Political Science and Islamic Studies.

Black Markets and Militants: Informal Networks in the Middle East and Africa

Understanding the political and socio-economic factors which give rise to youth recruitment into militant organizations is at the heart of grasping some of the most important issues that affect the contemporary Middle East and Africa. In this book, Khalid Mustafa Medani explains why youth are attracted to militant organizations, examining the specific role of economic globalization, in the form of outmigration and expatriate remittance inflows, plays in determining how and why militant activists emerge. The study challenges existing accounts that rely primarily on ideology to explain militant recruitment. Based on extensive fieldwork, Medani offers an in-depth analysis of the impact of globalization, neoliberal reforms and informal economic networks as a conduit for the rise and evolution of moderate and militant Islamist movements and as an avenue central to the often, violent enterprise of state building and state formation. In an original contribution to the study of Islamist and ethnic politics more broadly, he thereby shows the importance of understanding when and under what conditions religious rather than other forms of identity become politically salient in the context of changes in local conditions.
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