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Balkan Fighters in the Syrian War. By Tanja Dramac Jiries. Southeast European Studies. London: Routledge, 2022. xv, 184 pp. Notes. Bibliography. Illustrations. Index. Figures. Tables. $155, hard bound; $48.95 e-book.

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Balkan Fighters in the Syrian War. By Tanja Dramac Jiries. Southeast European Studies. London: Routledge, 2022. xv, 184 pp. Notes. Bibliography. Illustrations. Index. Figures. Tables. $155, hard bound; $48.95 e-book.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 November 2023

Darryl Li*
Affiliation:
University of Chicago
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Abstract

Type
Book Review
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies

The spectacular, if short-lived, rise of the self-declared Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) in the previous decade prompted a voluminous body of commentary, much of it devoted to “foreign fighters”—the label placed on the tens of thousands of sojourners from dozens of countries who found themselves under ISIS rule or even fighting within its ranks. As the adjective “foreign” implies, the conversation is structured by a kind of methodological nationalism whereby nation-states are the primary unit of analysis, treated as either sources or destinations of foreign fighters. Although this perspective may obscure the inherently transnational experiences of their subjects, it provides a convenient rubric for organizing knowledge production: there are now case studies on nearly every country from which individuals have traveled and ended up in ISIS.

In this context, the book under review is the first academic monograph in English to specifically address ISIS migration from Bosnia-Herzegovina (hereafter, Bosnia) and Kosovo—places hitherto treated as destinations rather than as sources of “foreign fighters” during their own wars from the 1990s. According to various police statistics, upwards of 1,000 people from the two countries traveled to Syria during the war there, a considerable fraction of whom were women and children. The figures do not specify whether these individuals were involved with ISIS as opposed to other armed groups, nor do they differentiate fighting from other activities. Investigating such questions is beyond the scope of the study. Instead, Tanja Dramac Jiries focuses on the processes and networks that impel and facilitate departure for Syria in the first place.

Dramac Jiries’ research is based on interviews conducted with four returned foreign fighters and thirteen family members of foreign fighters throughout Bosnia and Kosovo, as well as officials and journalists. She eschews any easy attempt to construct profiles of individuals recruited to ISIS and instead highlights the “dysfunctional elements in the family, community, or state” (86) that leave no satisfying alternatives. In the case of Bosnia, Dramac Jiries notes that most of the ISIS sojourners in her sample came from broken families and found meaning in faith communities dedicated to the Salafi orientation of Islam, which were also sources of informal work opportunities and forms of social solidarity such as food banks (120–22). In contrast, in Kosovo she argues that recruitment primarily took place through strong kinship networks (116). While these findings are broadly consistent with the literature on “radicalization” in which this study is situated, Dramac Jiries also usefully situates migration to ISIS as part of the broader “brain drain” afflicting the region (156).

Dramac Jiries also draws important distinctions between the ISIS sojourners in her study and those from western Europe who have been most prominent in the foreign fighter literature. In contrast to marginalized immigrant-origin Muslim populations in western Europe, Muslims in Bosnia and Kosovo are generally understood as autochthonous and not minoritized (47). Instead, marginalization and despair are experienced more as society-wide structures in these two “post-conflict” countries: both are locked into semiformal forms of Euro-American domination (euphemized as “externally driven democracies,” 39) and Bosnia's fragmented political system systematically privileges ethnonationalist secessionism. Dramac Jiries cogently points out that the gravest “radicalization” threat in the sense of anti-state violence stems from elected Serb and Croat secessionists—Salafi groups, in contrast, enjoy no significant presence in state institutions (102–3).

As noted above, Balkan Fighters in the Syrian War is very much emplaced in radicalization debates, rather than area studies conversations. It is not a study of the region's Salafi communities and it largely relies on secondary literature and journalistic sources on Salafis in its contextualization migration to ISIS. Moreover, the bulk of the study is dedicated to Bosnia, with Kosovo at times appearing as more of an afterthought. Finally, the book's structure also bears the hallmarks of a lightly revised dissertation: literature reviews, background information, and description of methods take up the first half, with much of the analysis being relegated to the final substantive chapter. Nonetheless, there are some fascinating observations buried in the interview data, especially a haunting anecdote about a Bosnian mother whose son was killed in Syria corresponding with the Yazidi woman who she insists on describing as her “daughter-in-law,” notwithstanding widespread reports of the sexual enslavement of Yazidi women by ISIS fighters (141). While Dramac Jiries uses family members to gain insights on those who went to Syria, her data are perhaps more compelling as an account of how the family members left behind make sense of those departures and their devastating consequences.