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DTSTART:20251102T020000
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DESCRIPTION:Darryl Li on Jihad in a World of Sovereigns: Rethinking the 'Fo
 reign Fighter' ProblemFor over a decade\, the enemy posited by U.S. foreig
 n policy has been the Islamist 'foreign fighter\,' seeking to wage jihad a
 broad without seeking the permission of any sovereign nation-state. Numero
 us studies have glossed this phenomena as 'radicalization' and attempted t
 o explain it through various psychological\, socio-economic\, or instituti
 onal variables. In contrast\, this presentation will emphasize transnation
 al jihads as experiences of intercultural encounter\, situated in deeper h
 istories of diaspora and empire\, which raise fundamental questions about 
 sovereignty and the international legal order.Darryl Li\, an anthropologis
 t and attorney\, is a Post-Doctoral Research Scholar at the Committee on G
 lobal Thought\, Columbia UniversityLunch Will Be Served.Sponsored by the M
 iddle Eastern Studies Program at the Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs
DTEND:20140228T183000Z
DTSTAMP:20260512T002429Z
DTSTART:20140228T173000Z
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SUMMARY:MES presents: Darryl Li
UID:RFCALITEM639141278697329661
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p></p><p><b>Darryl Li on Jihad in a World of 
 Sovereigns: Rethinking the 'Foreign Fighter' Problem</b></p><p>For over a 
 decade\, the enemy posited by U.S. foreign policy has been the Islamist 'f
 oreign fighter\,' seeking to wage jihad abroad without seeking the permiss
 ion of any sovereign nation-state. Numerous studies have glossed this phen
 omena as 'radicalization' and attempted to explain it through various psyc
 hological\, socio-economic\, or institutional variables. In contrast\, thi
 s presentation will emphasize transnational jihads as experiences of inter
 cultural encounter\, situated in deeper histories of diaspora and empire\,
  which raise fundamental questions about sovereignty and the international
  legal order.</p><p>Darryl Li\, an anthropologist and attorney\, is a Post
 -Doctoral Research Scholar at the Committee on Global Thought\, Columbia U
 niversity</p><p>Lunch Will Be Served.</p><p><b><i>Sponsored by the Middle 
 Eastern Studies Program at the Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs</i></b
 ></p><p></p>
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