Benjamin Isakhan examines how Iraqis and Syrians respond to the Islamic State’s destruction of heritage. His interviews show how local residents perceive the trauma of such destruction and its impact on their sense of belonging, their attitudes toward return, and their opinions about reconstruction. This essay demonstrates the role of heritage in building community and how such ties can be broken by violence—but also its potential to support peacebuilding after conflict.
Benjamin Isakhan
Benjamin Isakhan is professor of international politics and founding director of Polis, a research network for politics and international relations in the Alfred Deakin Institute at Deakin University, Australia. He is also adjunct senior research associate, Department of Politics and International Relations in the Faculty of Humanities at the University of Johannesburg, South Africa and consulting scholar at the Penn Cultural Heritage Centre, University of Pennsylvania.