This book examines how global policies designed to prevent extremism have shaped religious and security governance in Tunisia in recent years, focusing on local programs for training imams.
This book examines how global policies designed to prevent extremism have shaped religious and security governance in Tunisia in recent years, focusing on local programs for training imams.
By tracing the evolution of security measures in Tunisia from the colonial era to today, the book highlights how transnational security policiesparticularly those promoted after 2011have reinforced state control over religion. While many studies explore religions role in politics, this work shows how international security agendas influence religious institutions and discourse locally. Through interviews with religious leaders and civil society organizations, the book uncovers how Tunisian institutions have strategically used international counter-extremism frameworks to justify increased security measures. It also sheds light on the evolving role of imams as security actors. By linking past and present, the book challenges the idea that counter-extremism policies are neutral, showing instead how they often echo colonial-era policing.
This book will be of interest to students of countering violent extremism, securitization, African studies, and International Relations in general.
Introduction
Chapter 1: Security in Postcolonial Settings: The
Transnational Management of Dangerous Populations
Chapter 2: Reproducing
Colonial Logics: International Actors and the Assessment of Transnational
Threats
Chapter 3: Between International and National Discourses: Managing
Islam in Postcolonial Tunisia
Chapter 4: International Development and
Violent Extremism: Multiple Actors in Local Programmes
Chapter 5:
Vernacular Security, Religion and Local Imams Conclusions: International
P/CVE Programmes and the Continuation of Colonial Policing
Fabrizio Leonardo Cuccu is Alumni Research Fellow at the Merian Centre for Advanced Studies in the Maghreb (MECAM), University of Tunis, Tunisia, and Research Assistant in the School of Law and Government, Dublin City University, Ireland. His research focuses on security, development, and migration policies in postcolonial settings. His work has been published in the Cambridge Review of International Affairs, LAnnée du Maghreb and Surveillance & Society.