Shi'i Clerical Authority in Iraq

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A01=Harith Hasan
A01=Harith Hassan
Author_Harith Hasan
Author_Harith Hassan
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Category=JHB
Category=JP
Category=QRP
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Iraq
Marji'yya
political theology
religious authority transformation in Iraq
religious sociology
secularisation in Middle East
Shi'i
Shi'i Islamism
shrine administration
Sistani
state-religion relations

Product details

  • ISBN 9781041152651
  • Weight: 560g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 23 Apr 2026
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Sh’i Clerical Authority in Iraq: The Neo-Traditional Marji’yya and the Transformation of Political Order provides the first comprehensive analysis of the evolving relationship between Shi'i religious authority and the state in Iraq through a distinctive historical sociology framework that illuminates structural and contextual transformations.

Spanning decades of complex interaction, it examines the often tense coexistence and rivalry between the state apparatus and the transnational Shi'i Marji'iyya, revealing how their relationship has been fundamentally reshaped by broader historical processes. Through meticulously researched case studies, the volume traces how state-building initiatives, secularization efforts, and shifting conceptions of national community have continuously challenged and reconfigured traditional religious authority. The analysis centers on the watershed moment of 2003, when Saddam Hussein's authoritarian regime collapsed, creating space for Shi'i religious and Islamist actors to emerge as significant political forces amid weakening central authority and a shift from homogenization to communitarianism as the organizing principle of political community. The author introduces the innovative concept of "neo-traditional Marji'iyya" to theorize the transformation in the public presence, political agency, and institutional configuration of Shi'i religious authority in contemporary Iraq.

A significant contribution to the fields of Middle Eastern studies, political theology, and state-religion relations, this book offers essential insights for scholars and policymakers seeking to understand the complex interplay between religious institutions and political power in post-authoritarian contexts and fragile states.

Harith Hasan is an Associate Researcher at the Arab Centre for Research and Policy Studies. Previously, he was a non-resident senior fellow at the Carnegie Middle East centre (2019-2024); Director of Iraq’s Initiative at the Atlantic Council (2016-2018); Research Fellow at the Central European University (2017-2018), a Fellow at Radcliffe Institute-Harvard University (2014-2015). He has a PhD in political Science.

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