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fundamentalism

New data from Pakistan published in the American Journal of Political Science suggests that the middle class there is more likely to support violent extremism than those who are less well off. The factor proposed for this difference is interesting:

the contextual factor that matters appears to be exposure to the externalities of militant violence. Leveraging a new dataset of violent incidents, we find first that violence is heavily concentrated in urban areas and second that dislike of militant groups is nearly three times stronger among the urban poor living in districts that have experienced violence than among the poor living in nonviolent districts. It is not that people are vulnerable to militants' appeals because they are poor and dissatisfied. Instead, it appears that the urban poor suffer most from militants' violent activities and so most intensely dislike them.

In other words, the people who have to deal with the consequences are those who don't like the violent extremism. It's not a surprising causal relationship, but it is emblematic of the habit among the better-off classes the world over to casually form hardened opinions over matters that have nothing whatsoever to do with them.

You can find parallels...More >>

"The people of this country know the value of education. I just had to assure them of their investment."

These were the words of Assadullah Kohistani, principal of the Ghulam Haider Khan High School for boys in Kabul, a school of some 9,000 students thirsty for a  future different from the past three decades of violence in Afghanistan, as reported in a beautiful essay by Afghan journalist Mujib Mashal for Al Jazeera here.

The 'education obsession' espoused by Afghans is inescapable to anyone who visits Afghanistan. The foremost issue on the minds of many Afghans is their own education or their children's. In a country that is mostly young-- 43.6% of the population is under 14 years of age and the median age is 18-- this embracing of education gives reason to hope that Afghanistan's upcoming generation may do things differently. The correlation between illiteracy, fundamentalism, poverty and conflict has not been lost on Afghans, and their hunch is confirmed by mounds of empirical data that point to a strong link between peace and quality education.

This was part of my message at...More >>

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