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Tribes as civil society organisations: the case of Iraq

journal contribution
posted on 2013-08-01, 00:00 authored by Ahmed Hassin
The socio-political discourse about civil society inclines to use Western models in coneptualising civil society both in Western and non-Western societies. Iraq is one of those countries where civil society is mostly discussed the formally organised type. This paper critiques the disengagement of literature and empirical studies with exploring social structures like tribe within the civil society arena. It contends that civil society organisations should be understood based on their functions rather than forms. This paper argues that studying civil society should be comprehensive by studying other non-Western theories like 14th century Ibn Khaldun’s Muslim/Arab theories in its indigenous Arab and Muslim societies. On the premise of two factors: the Khaldunian asabiya or olidarity concept and the function of tribes in peace-building, policy formulation and democratisation, this paper uncovers how tribes in Iraq can be regarded civil society organisations.

History

Journal

Journal of international scientific publications: language, individual & society

Volume

7

Season

Part 1

Pagination

19 - 32

Publisher

Info Invest Ltd

Location

Burgas, Bulgaria

ISSN

1313-2547

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

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