This doctoral dissertation presents a comprehensive socioeconomic analysis of Christian persecution and community resilience in Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia from 2000 to 2025, addressing a critical gap in scholarly literature regarding the economic dimensions of religious persecution. Employing an explanatory sequential mixed-methods design, the study examined persecution data from Nigeria, Pakistan, and India—three nations representing the most severe contexts of anti-Christian persecution globally. Quantitative analysis integrated data from the Open Doors World Watch List, Pew Research Center indices, World Bank economic indicators, and UNHCR displacement statistics, while qualitative analysis examined documented incidents, legal restrictions, and resilience mechanisms. The findings reveal a crisis of unprecedented magnitude. Nigeria emerged as the epicenter of lethal anti-Christian violence globally, accounting for 72% of documented Christian martyrdoms in 2026, with over 19,100 churches destroyed and 2.2 million Christians displaced between 2019 and 2024. Pakistan demonstrated systematic economic discrimination, with Christian households earning only 54% of the national average income, while blasphemy laws have been weaponized for economic extortion. India showed a 335% increase in verified anti-Christian incidents from 2014 to 2024, correlating with rising Hindu nationalism and the formal exclusion of Dalit Christians from affirmative action benefits. Correlation analysis revealed a strong negative relationship (r = −0.92) between unemployment rates and persecution intensity, suggesting that economic stress significantly exacerbates religious tensions. Despite these devastating conditions, the study documented remarkable community resilience mechanisms, including underground church networks, legal advocacy organizations, mutual aid systems, and diaspora support networks. The research contributes theoretically by integrating religious economies theory, economic discrimination theory, and the sustainable livelihoods framework to conceptualize persecution as fundamentally an economic phenomenon with intergenerational consequences. Practical implications include recommendations for policy interventions, humanitarian programming, and advocacy strategies that address both immediate protection needs and systemic economic marginalization of persecuted communities.
Laszlo Pokorny Dr. Laszlo Pokorny (Mon,) studied this question.