Thomas Pierret

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Thomas Pierret is a senior researcher at the University of Aix-Marseille, CNRS, IREMAM, in Aix-en-Provence, France.

All work from Thomas Pierret

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Islamic Institutions in Arab States: Mapping the Dynamics of Control, Co-option, and Contention

The complex relations between the state and Islamic institutions in Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Syria, Libya, Egypt, Algeria, and Morocco shed light on evolving governance and have important implications for Western policies of countering violent extremism and conflict resolution.

· June 7, 2021
event
The Sunni Religious Establishment of Damascus: When Unification Creates Division
June 24, 2020

The 2011 uprising in Syria totally transformed the religious establishment in Damascus. The regime sent into exile many prominent, influential religious figures who, forced to work from abroad, formed a religious opposition group called the Syrian Islamic Council.

  • Laila Alrefaai
  • Thomas Pierret
  • Mounir Al Fakir
article
Brothers in Alms: Salafi Financiers and the Syrian Insurgency

Gulf-based Salafi financiers have had a diminished role in the Syrian civil war recently, but their influence will linger in the country's religious sphere.

  • Thomas Pierret
· May 18, 2018
commentary
The Struggle for Religious Authority in Syria

Divisions over the formation of the Syrian Islamic Council suggest that the Syrian opposition will have to wait to see the emergence of a unified Sunni religious authority within its ranks. However, these divisions are revealing of fault lines that may play a major role in Syria’s future.

  • Thomas Pierret
· May 14, 2014
commentary
The Syrian Islamic Council

The establishment of the Syrian Islamic Council may be an important step toward the goal of consolidating a moderate Islamic axis within the opposition in the face of the large Salafi military factions.

  • Thomas Pierret
· May 13, 2014
commentary
No Stability in Syria Without Political Change

Attempts to resolve the conflict by focusing only on its regional dimension will be doomed to fail. Any credible peace effort requires negotiations that deal with the root problem and the demand for real political transition.

  • Thomas Pierret
· February 12, 2014