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The territorial aspect of sectarianism in Iraq
- Source: International Journal of Contemporary Iraqi Studies, Volume 4, Issue 3, Dec 2010, p. 295 - 304
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- 01 Dec 2010
Abstract
This article examines the territorial aspect of sectarian relations in Iraq. The main argument is that such a territorial component is largely missing in Iraq and that historically, there have been very few attempts to connect sectarian identity in Iraq to specific, more restricted territories of the country. The article reviews the limited attempts in such a direction, both historically and in the post-2003 atmosphere. Today, federal options exist for governorates to merge into sectarian regions if they prefer to do so. So far, however, neither Sunnis or Shi'ites have demonstrated any great interest in the creation of such sectarian regions, which can be explained with the historical durability of the Iraq concept as a proto-region in late Ottoman times and the concomitant need to revise the near-omnipresent cliché of Iraq as a completely 'artificial' product lumped together solely thanks to the actions of industrious British imperialists.