Dilemmas of Fundamentalist Non-state Actors in International Relations
This chapter addresses fundamentalism by placing it within international relations broadly and the interactive strategic environment more narrowly. By comparing the role played by fundamentalism within two ethno-nationalist groups and the development of their campaigns, this chapter challenges some of the long running assumptions around the topic of fundamentalism, including the role of religion and the simplistic answers which have been offered on the topic in the past. We present fundamentalism as a strategic choice which brings positive and negative consequences to those who embrace it. Arguing that adopting and maintaining, or eventually abandoning, a fundamentalist position is a strategic choice, we reposition the topic of fundamentalism away from a simplistic label of non-state actors and towards a more nuanced position within the wider strategic environment.
History
School affiliated with
- Department of Management (Research Outputs)
- College of Arts, Social Sciences, and Humanities (Research Outputs)
Publication Title
Mapping Non-State Actors in International RelationsPages/Article Number
53-71Publisher
SpringerExternal DOI
ISBN
9783030914622Date Submitted
2022-06-29Date Accepted
2022-05-25Date of First Publication
2022-05-25Date of Final Publication
2022-05-25Open Access Status
- Not Open Access