French anthropologist Alain Bertho’s new book, The Age of Violence: The Crisis of Political Action and the End of Utopia, offers a simple premise: the increasing global incidence of urban strife in the world today is attributable to the failure of representative democracy as we know and practise it. Elections might be able to ignite violence, but they fail to enthuse voters, if we were to examine global polling turnout trends. The youth have grown weary of democracy’s inability to improve lives and so, are turning towards violence to bring about the change they wish to see in the world around them.
For Bertho, governments’ duplicity plays a part here. Politicians’ lip service to delivery, but failure to do much, has caused the public to view all official information with incredulity. Today’s politicos find it more important to be seen to act, rather than actually deliver on manifesto promises. Speeches and statements by politicians are designed so carefully that more important than content is the words chosen, so that they make for good publicity. At the same time, the internet has exposed the youth to so much information outside of what they learn in formal education, that they have lost faith in what is taught in schools as the ‘truth’, and become prone to conspiracy theories that abound on social media — the ‘alternative facts’ that pedagogy fails to talk about.
But is that why the youth are rapidly losing faith in government as an institution? Not entirely, for the author identifies globalisation as the leading culprit here. As the world shrinks further and further, the legitimacy of the state becomes compromised in the minds of the public (think how demonstrators in Pakistan often blame international actors for decisions ostensibly taken in Islamabad). Globalisation thus furthers the youth’s belief that their elected government is useless; conspiracy theories and ministers’ doublespeak add fuel to the fire. Consequently, young people turn to violence.
A French anthropologist argues that rising global urban unrest is mainly because of a waning of public trust in traditional civic relations
Bertho is unequivocal that religion is not to be blamed for modern violent acts. Rather, he alleges that the youth find refuge — and meaning — in radicalism after despairing of the entire system of voting in representatives. Citing the example of the 2005 riots in France that stretched over three weeks and led to over 2,000 arrests, he says the riots were initially believed to have stemmed from radical interpretations of Islam, but later research found unemployment, lack of social integration of ethnic minorities and police tactics to be more culpable.
The author talks extensively about the rise of the militant group Islamic State (IS) and its ability to attract Muslim youth born and brought up in the West owing to their disillusionment with politics as a means of organising relations between people and governments. France has been particularly affected: Bertho quotes rather shocking research from 2014, according to which almost a sixth of French citizens had a favourable view of IS — considerably more than their counterparts in Germany and the United Kingdom.
Developments in the French-speaking world are understandably the focus of much of the author’s discussion, though events taking place outside the Francosphere are discussed as well. Bertho believes the French hijab ban to be a classic example of policy backfire: instead of mainstreaming the ethnic Muslim minority, it marginalised them even more because women — forced to leave the public education system owing to their inability to cover their heads — ended up marrying and staying home instead of joining the workforce, as they might have. The principle of liberty simply became a tool of oppression in the right wing’s hand, he alleges.