The key findings of the project have significantly advanced the understanding of contemporary transnational Twelver Shii Islam:
- A key concept in contemporary Twelver Shii Islam is the notion of “the guardianship of the jurisconsult” (wilayat al-faqih) which is usually attributed to the leader of the 1979 Islamic Revolution in Iran, Ayatollah Khomeini (1902-1989), and has served as the ideological foundation of Islamic Republic of Iran. Research produced by the project shows that the concept was articulated much earlier in the late 1950s by Shii clerics based in Iraq who might have influenced Khomeini during his exile in Iraq.
- The project has also significantly questioned the dichotomy created in academic scholarship between activist and quietist Shii clerics. The most important clerical leader in Iraq, Aytollah Sistani (b. 1930), is usually viewed as quietist and only making political interventions on rare occasions. Previous scholarship has overlooked how Sistani informally and outside of the public view influences Iraqi politics on a constant basis.
- The religious seminaries in the Iranian city of Qom emerged as the key site of clerical opposition to the ruling Pahlavi dynasty in Iran before the Islamic Revolution of 1979. Research on the institutional history of the seminaries before the revolution shows how their clerical leaders ensured the institutional autonomy of the seminaries against state control and thereby provided them with the necessary consolidation to act as a base for oppositional politics from the 1960s onwards.
- The project investigated the relationship between Iraq and its diaspora which emerged during the autocratic rule of the Baath party from 1968. Research of the project has shown how the Iraqi diaspora, in particular political actors exiled to London, played a key role in diapora politics and in the new political order in Iraq after-2003.
- One of consequences of the disillusionment with Islamist politics in the Middle East is the turn towards material culture and aesthetics. Art, poetry and religious rituals are not only means for political mobilisation but the very sites in which counter-hegemonic identities and discourses are formed and expressed.
The project has produced 33 research outputs to date among them 1 monograph, 2 edited volumes, 1 special issue of an academic journal as well as numerous other articles published in journals such as International Affairs, Cultural Anthropology, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, International Journal of Middle Eastern Studies, Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies, Die Welt des Islams and Material Religion. The project organised two major international conferences with around 50 participants each and 4 workshops at Kings College London, the University of Erfurt, Aarhus University and the Autonomous University of Barcelona.