ABSTRACT
Despite being a Muslim-majority society, Kosovo increasingly securitizes practising Muslims by politicizing the ostentatiously pious among them as a threat to Europe’s security and Kosovar identity. Given the EU’s significant discursive and political power in Kosovo, this article pursues the question of how European representatives conceive of pious Kosovar Muslims, and whether this image might explain their securitization. On the basis of 24 semi-structured interviews with various European officials conducted in 2018, I argue that they predominantly imagine pious Kosovar Muslims as influenced by foreign powers through indoctrination, material incentives or appeals to identity, which does condone their securitization. However, this image is in fact shaped by local Kosovar elites who instil such conceptions in European officials because such an image helps them in the pursuit of their own political agendas. The article exposes the intricate mechanism and power relations that underlie this process of policy-relevant knowledge production.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.
Notes
1. A more detailed overview can be found in the appendix.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Friedrich Püttmann
Friedrich Püttmann is an incoming PhD student at the European Institute of the London School of Economics. He previously worked as a political analyst for the think tank European Stability Initiative (ESI) in Berlin. Friedrich holds Master’s degrees in Sociology and European Studies from Oxford University and the London School of Economics, where he was awarded the Michael Oakeshott Prize for Best Dissertation. Previous publications appeared in the Journal of Muslims in Europe and Südosteuropa Mitteilungen.