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In-Sen! Identity and Violence: The Illusion of Destiny

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  • In-Sen! Identity and Violence: The Illusion of Destiny

    Asia Times Online, Hong Kong
    16 Sep 2006

    BOOK REVIEW

    In-Sen!

    Identity and Violence: The Illusion of Destiny by
    Amartya Sen

    Reviewed by Chan Akya

    I finally managed to finish reading Amartya Sen's Identity and
    Violence: The Illusion of Destiny, having had to put the book down out
    of sheer tedium more than once in the past few weeks. This article is
    not only a book review, though; having had enough time to work on the
    arguments, my attempt will be to define the illusion of illusions. As
    in previous posts, I will highlight the economic underpinnings of
    today's conflicts, which have long since crossed



    over from a sociological phenomenon.

    Given the number of world events that have occurred during recent
    years, including the daily bloodbath in Iraq, the Israel-Lebanon
    situation, a foiled terrorist attack in the United Kingdom, terrorist
    outrages in India and a hardening of US rhetoric, it would be fair to
    say that my attention was drawn back to this book a multitude of
    times. Hoping against experience, I expected later parts of the tome
    to put forward more cogent arguments than the "can't we all just get
    along" rhetoric that populates the first few pages.

    UK examples
    Sen's basic premise, repeated ad nauseam throughout the book, is that
    narrow definitions of identity help to foment violence. Using
    Jean-Paul Sartre's quote that "the anti-Semite makes the Jew", Sen
    goes on to explain that the prejudicial treatment of Muslims is the
    main cause of their turning to violence. That argument, which is
    specious on many counts prima facie, fails Sen in the most mundane
    fashion - by homogenizing the causes for Muslims to adopt violent
    means, Sen himself falls into an identity trap of tarring all the
    "oppressors" of Muslims with the same brush. Implicitly, he assumes
    that everyone treats Muslims badly, thereby eliciting a necessary
    backlash.


    That argument falls flat when you consider the relative freedoms
    offered in the West for Muslims to practice their religion. Using the
    UK as an example, Muslims enjoy substantial religious freedom, and can
    claim the protection offered to everyone else by the courts and the
    bureaucracy. Yet this is the same community that has been polarized
    and indeed galvanized into extremism over the past few years. Based
    in Cambridge, Sen had a singular opportunity to demonstrate the
    underlying frustrations that have pushed British Muslim youth toward
    extremism; it is quite sad that he misses the opportunity in the book.

    In study after study, [1, 2] British education authorities have
    pointed out that students from Caribbean, Pakistani and Bangladeshi
    backgrounds lag their peers from Indian and "white" backgrounds. The
    lagging communities have turned away from society as a result, with
    people from a Caribbean background more likely to commit petty crimes
    such as theft, and therefore 10 times as likely to be subjected to
    random stop and search. [3] The response from the other two
    communities has been jarringly different, with Bangladeshis more
    likely to become business people, particularly in sectors such as
    hotels and restaurants.

    While many British businesses are successfully managed by Pakistanis,
    that community also appears to contribute the greatest proportion of
    cannon fodder to extremist causes. One of the reasons given for
    Pakistanis to join extremist causes, by Sen and others, is that the
    British police are more likely to stop and search Asians than white
    people - even though the same statistics show that people of Caribbean
    descent have a worse experience.

    Unlike Sen, I believe the answer lies in assessing the opportunities
    for advancement and the sense of entitlement that people possess. Even
    if the UK (apparently) provides all ethnic groups with opportunities
    for advancement, some groups such as Armenians and Bangladeshis take
    these up better than other groups such as Pakistanis. This leaves us
    with the other part of the paradigm, namely entitlement and needs.

    Saudi Arabia and the need for Islamic reform Looking at Saudi society
    as a parallel example, basic needs of the population are well
    fulfilled. However, social structures do not allow for mobility, as
    the ruling family controls most physical wealth, access to capital and
    even the informational infrastructure. In essence, there is no upside
    for young people, and nothing to gain through hard work or innovation.

    To say that Saudi Arabia missed the greatest opportunity for
    development in recent decades would be trite, but also true. The
    ruling family's overarching greed to control all wealth restricted it
    from venturing into various business areas that could have easily been
    funded with oil wealth. Instead, the family may have allowed itself to
    be persuaded by economic "hitmen", [4] paying for projects that in
    essence repatriated oil profits to the United States.

    The result is that despite oil wealth, Saudi Arabia has neither the
    hardware talents of China nor the software exports of India that could
    supplement its oil revenues. Its population stands around, rich on oil
    wealth but poor in human-development terms. [5] Comparisons to the
    Spanish Empire, which plundered the world's gold without creating any
    industry to sustain its wealth and therefore imploded, seem too
    obvious from this point.

    Attempts to circumvent social strictures have put Saudis against both
    the ruling family and religious institutions. This mixture of
    feudalism with ecclesiastical orthodoxy disallows social reforms in
    the most violent fashion. Thus an attempt to provide democracy within
    traditional Bedouin society is bound to fail, while railing against
    the world's Jews conforms to the establishment's policy of channeling
    anger externally.

    Here then is a case where people could define themselves as any number
    of things - Saudi citizen, Arab, Sunni Muslim, religious worker,
    government employee, etc - but choose instead the label of
    anti-Semite. After the events of September 11, 2001, provided Arabs
    with a sense of the possibility to wage asymmetric warfare on the
    West, other targets such as the United States and Europe have been
    added to the list. It is my contention that Arabs have chosen the
    label of "anti-West", rather than having had it foisted on them.

    Going back to the British example, the unemployed Pakistani is likely
    to hail from an economically backward area. Poverty, rather than
    ethnic background, acts as the key incitement of race hatred. [6] When
    you mix people with nothing to lose (British Pakistanis) and those
    with nothing to gain (Saudi youth), the result is such tragedies as
    the London transit-system bombings in July last year, and the (foiled)
    plot to blow up airliners this year. The common thread to the misery
    is unfortunately provided by the shared religion, hence the phrase
    "Islamic extremists".

    My points in a previous article [7] about Islam failing its followers
    centered on extremists hijacking the moderate agenda. Instead of
    focusing on measures that could free pent-up social frustrations, the
    extremist agenda of focusing on external threats has taken center
    stage, with disastrous consequences. Religious reform would remove
    the link, which is why extremists target moderates more aggressively.

    What about Garfield?
    All that about Sen's putative victim to one side, where does the
    United States fit into all this?

    As I wrote in a previous article, [8] the US has lost its competitive
    edge in manufacturing. Ford contemplates dismembering itself, while
    General Motors mulls an alliance with the French (mon Dieu!). The
    simple fact is that after the Cold War ended, US innovation stopped
    dead in its tracks. Evaluate the engineering aspects of any American
    car, and you are likely to walk away completely unimpressed. A
    six-liter engine used by US car companies produces the same power as
    an engine half that size from the Germans, and one-third of the size
    by the Japanese (tuned, admittedly). Leave out engineering, and simple
    design dynamics don't work either - Detroit has not produced a single
    desirable car in the past decade.

    The United States came to the forefront of righting human-rights
    wrongs such as racism, but only when its economic prosperity was
    threatened by the status quo. Now, America's lost competitiveness in
    manufacturing come alongside its declining demographics (when keeping
    immigrants out of calculations), and rising threats from the likes of
    India and China in all areas of the global economy that it currently
    dominates. In this high-pressure economic environment, rising
    geopolitical risks argue for an unwelcome acceleration of the
    country's transition. Much like a worker who becomes a wife-beater
    when threatened with losing his job, the US lashes out, with its anger
    directed toward garnering any resource advantage that it can to
    lengthen its reign at the top.

    Sen's book fails because he refuses to evaluate the impact of
    underlying economic imperatives on social behavior, instead looking at
    prejudices as a "given". The United States is fated to relinquish its
    position as an economic superpower sooner rather than later. The
    Middle East has no institutions to support the transition of its
    society from oil-based wealth to that derived from competitive
    products and services. The countries that have the skills to become
    the next economic superpowers, namely China and India, should stay on
    the sidelines as the tragedy unfolds.

    Notes
    [1] "Educational Inequality" by David Gillborn and
    Heidi Safia Mirza, November 2000.
    [2] "Ethnic Segregation and Educational Performance at
    Secondary School in Bradford and Leicester" by Ron
    Johnston et al, March 2006.
    [3] British Crime Survey 2002/03.
    [4] Confessions of an Economic Hit Man by John
    Perkins; see also Usinfo.state.gov for the US
    government's denial.
    [5] United Nations Development Program Human
    Development Report, 2005. [6] The Economist, December
    13, 2001. [7] See Islam and the absence of Chinese
    terrorists, Asia Times Online, August 26, 2006.
    [8] Garfield with guns, Asia Times Online, September
    2, 2006.

    Identity and Violence: The Illusion of Destiny by
    Amartya Sen. W W Norton (March 27, 2006). ISBN:
    0393060071. Price US$24.95, 224 pages.

    (Copyright 2006 Asia Times Online Ltd. All rights
    reserved.
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