The persecution of Christians has intensified globally in the twenty-first century, yet systematic comparative research examining how different perpetrator types shape persecution modalities and outcomes remains absent from the scholarly literature. This dissertation addresses this critical gap through a mixed-methods comparative case study analyzing Christian persecution in Sub-Saharan Africa (Nigeria) and the Middle East (Iraq and Syria) during the period 2010-2025. The study integrates quantitative analysis of 15 years of persecution data from Open Doors, the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, Pew Research Center, and the Armed Conflict Location conversely, Iraq and Syria, where the quasi-state entity ISIS documented 1,389 Christian deaths, experienced 83-87% demographic collapse. This dissertation demonstrates that perpetrator organizational capacity—particularly territorial control and governance capability—matters more than absolute violence levels in determining persecution outcomes. The study's primary theoretical contribution is the Perpetrator Organizational Capacity (POC) Framework, which identifies five critical capacities that enable transition from episodic terrorism to systematic genocide. Findings reveal systematic international response gaps: frameworks effectively address clear genocide (ISIS) but fail against complex non-state terrorism producing higher casualties (Fulani militants: 25,000+ deaths without international designation). This research advances persecution typologies, integrates genocide and terrorism studies, and generates actionable policy recommendations for early warning systems, context-specific protection strategies, and reformed international monitoring frameworks. Keywords: Christian persecution, comparative analysis, persecution modalities, Boko Haram, ISIS, Nigeria, Iraq, Syria, genocide, religious terrorism, perpetrator organizational capacity, state capacity
Laszlo Pokorny Dr. Laszlo Pokorny (Sat,) studied this question.