Title: Demographic Radicalization
1Demographic Radicalization
- The Religiosity-Fertility Nexus and Politics
2Demographic Radicalization
- The demographic increase of the conservative
religious population at the expense of moderate
or secular groups - Why radical? Enlarges the pool of suppliers of,
or recruits to, religious violence unless
totally quietist (ie Amish) - May alter alliance behaviour and foreign policy
3Demography and Ethnic Conflict Northern Ireland
- "The basic fear of Protestants in Northern
Ireland is that they will be outbred by the Roman
Catholics. It is as simple as that." - Terence
O Neill, Unionist PM of Northern Ireland after
resigning, 1969
4Religious Demographic Advantage
Fertility Gap, Women Aged 40-60 (Children Ever Born) in GSS 1972-2006 Fertility Gap, Women Aged 40-60 (Children Ever Born) in GSS 1972-2006 Fertility Gap, Women Aged 40-60 (Children Ever Born) in GSS 1972-2006 Fertility Gap, Women Aged 40-60 (Children Ever Born) in GSS 1972-2006
Biblical Literalist Homosexuality Abortion
1972-85 1.15 1.11 1.22
1986-96 1.21 1.16 1.28
1997-2006 1.25 1.21 1.38
- USA religious restructuring more intense have
higher fertility (Hackett 2008) - Europe Religious have stable or increasing
fertility advantage (Adsera 2004 Regnier-Loilier
2008, etc) - Conservative Muslim and Christian immigration to
Europe
5Source The Moment of Truth, Haaretz, 8
February 2007
6Israel Ultra-Orthodox Jewish Growth
- TFR of 6.49 in 1980-82 increasing to 7.61 in
1990-96 Other Israeli Jews decline 2.61 to 2.27 - Proportion set to more than double, to 17 by
2020 - No indication of major outflows
- Majority of Israeli Jews after 2050?
7- UK A Tale of Two Cities Salford v Leeds
- US
- American Jews have TFR of 1.43. In 2000-6 alone,
Haredim increase from 7.2 to 9.4 pc of total. - Kiryas Joel, in Orange Co., New York, nearly
triples in population to 18000 between 1990 and
2006
8Decline of Liberal Protestants
9Source WVS 1999-2000. N 2796 respondents in
towns under 10,000 and 1561 respondents in cities
over 100,000. Asked in Algeria, Bangladesh,
Indonesia, Jordan, Pakistan, Nigeria and Egypt.
10European Islam A Reflection of Things to Come?
Source Westoff and Frejka 2007
11Religion and Extremist Politics
- Amish or jihadis?
- Israel
- Haredi quietism and pragmatism
- Growing split between Jerusalem and Tel-Aviv
- Haredi settlers/battalions, religious zionism,
Yigal Amir
12USA
- Mainly individualistic and focused on domestic
policy - Support Republican Party
- Christian Zionism
- Messianic foreign policy (rapture, end times)
- Anti-abortion violence
- From quietism to activism
13Muslim World
- Most are quietist
- No connection between orthodoxy and violence in
surveys - Yet religion is least quietist
- Jihadism and Saudi-funded pan-Islamism
- Ambiguity of caliphatist groups like
Hizb-ut-Tahrir, Salafis - Violent element is a minority, is selective and
reactive, but a small slice of a growing pie will
enlarge pool of suppliers - All jihadis are fundamentalist, though recruits
may be religiously illiterate
14A More Violent World?
- Rise in religious civil wars as proportion of
total - Only a quarter are intra-faith, 9/10 Islamic
- More conservative religious societies will
probably produce more religious-type violence,
less secular violence - Conflict sacralized, harder to reach settlements
and agree common interests