1st Edition

Islamisms Navigations between the Nation-State and the Caliphate

By Samantha May Copyright 2026
230 Pages
by Routledge

230 Pages
by Routledge

Islamisms: Navigations between the Nation-State and the Caliphate moves beyond viewing Islamism within the security/terrorism narrative by viewing Islamisms as various forms of postcolonial resistance to Westphalian models of governance, authority, and territorialisations. Islamist movements are in various ways denationalising key elements of the nation-state, including nation-state... Read more

Introduction.  1. The Westphalian Framework, Its Failures, and Contemporary Challenges  2. Categorising Islamism and Alternative Political Spaces 3. An Imperial Past: A Model for the Future?  4. Sovereignty and Violence in Sunni Islamist Groups: Egypt and Algeria  5. Sovereignty and Violence: Hizbullah  6. Re-imagining Islamised Spaces: Takfir w‘al Hijra and Hamas  7. Islamisms in Northern Nigeria—From the Sokoto Caliphate to Boko Haram 8. Recreating the Caliphate: The Islamic State Group Conclusion

Biography

Samantha May is a senior lecturer in politics and international relations at the University of Aberdeen, UK. As passionate about teaching as much as research, Dr May offers courses at both undergraduate and postgraduate levels. They previously authored Islamic Charity: How Charitable Giving Became Seen as a Threat to National Security, 2021, Bloomsbury.