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TY - GEN
N1 - Recommendation for peer-reviewed journal submission would be appreciated
ID - cogprints3645
UR - http://cogprints.org/3645/
A1 - Gresham, Dr. JN
TI - Civil Society Iraq: Ethnic, Religious, and Location Influences on Outgroup Perception
Y1 - 2004/04//
N2 - Civil Society Iraq: Ethnic, Religious, and Location Influences on Outgroup Perception
Jon Gresham*
April 2004
A significant research question in the immediate post-war (May 2003) environment of Iraq
was: "How do Iraqis? ethnicity, religious affiliation, and location affect expressed perceptions of
threat from outgroups?"
We collected 479 surveys of Iraqi opinions, in five locations in Iraq, Jordan, and The
Netherlands, with a single page instrument. Religion, ethnic origin, and location alone had little direct
bearing on respondents? attitudes towards outgroups or change (another type of threat) in Iraq.
However, certain sets of interacting elements did reflect significant differences in perceptions of
threat. For example, Shi?a Muslims of urban Basra had very different expressions towards return of
expatriate Iraqis than did Baghdad residents.
A serendipitous innovation was that of publishing our research process onto a "wiki" web
page where visitors could add to or change contents of the documents. The wiki live publishing
helped fellow scientists, decision-makers, resource agencies, and Iraq fieldworkers participate in our
project.
Why Civil Society? The term describes both behavior and social systems and provides a
sociological framework from which to explore social interactions in Iraq.
Follow-up is warranted. We found, for example, that "moderate Arabs" in Iraq were the most
opposed to foreign involvement and were the most opposed to expatriate Iraqis returning to Iraq. This
finding is relevant to decision-makers and field workers in relief, development, and reconstruction in
Iraq.
This paper describes our research process in a post-regime-change environment. I would
welcome comments onto the web site: http://CivilSocietyIraq.seedwiki.com.
_____________
* Jon Gresham is a visiting scholar at the University of Utrecht, Netherlands. His work focuses on
the Cyprus-Syria-Iraq-Iran area. Special thanks are given to Hub Linssen, Assistant Professor at the
University of Utrecht, with interest in cross-national comparative survey methodology.
AV - public
KW - civil society
KW - Iraq social systems
KW - post-regime change
KW - democratization
KW - social network
KW - social capital
KW - appreciative inquiry
KW - ERCOMER
KW - repatriation
KW - ethnic conflict
KW - inter-ethnic
KW - tribalism
KW - nationalism
KW - inter-group
KW - ethnic identity
KW - refugee
KW - expatriate
KW - terrorism
KW - terrorist
KW - social psychology
KW - irak
KW - iran
KW - civil stability
KW - linked
KW - network analysis
KW - utrecht
KW - social network
KW - interethnic
KW - tribal
ER -