Religious Minorities, Social Vulnerability, and Informal Religious Enforcement in Contemporary Egypt
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.14738/assrj.1303.20146Keywords:
Egypt, religious minorities, Islamic normativity, sectarian violence, bureaucratic discriminationAbstract
This paper examines the overlapping systems of legal marginalization, bureaucratic discrimination, and extrajudicial enforcement that render religious minorities structurally vulnerable in contemporary Egypt. Drawing on constitutional and statutory analysis, human rights documentation, and field-based scholarship, it argues that Egypt maintains a coherent, albeit largely informal, apparatus of religious social control that operates through four interlocking mechanisms: a legal framework that formally protects freedom of belief while encoding Sunni Islamic normativity; a bureaucratic order (including religious designation on identity cards, discriminatory educational curricula, and unequal application of church construction law) that converts legal ambiguity into everyday disadvantage; community-level enforcement through customary reconciliation sessions (jalsaat ʿurfiyya) that immunize perpetrators of sectarian violence from criminal accountability; and a state-managed discourse of "national unity" that delegitimizes minority rights claims while outsourcing coercive enforcement to local and communal actors. The communities affected include Coptic Christians, Baha'is, Shia Muslims, Ahmadis, and atheists. Each group faces distinct vulnerabilities calibrated to their legal recognition and social position. The paper argues that vulnerability, internalized across these communities, functions as a mechanism of compliance, and that meaningful reform requires not symbolic gestures but structural change, including the repeal of the blasphemy statute, elimination of religious designation on identity documents, and genuine prosecutorial accountability for sectarian violence.
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Copyright (c) 2026 Shaul M. Gabbay

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