Democracy and Reform in the Middle East and Asia: Social Protest and Authoritarian Rule After the Arab Spring

Democracy and Reform in the Middle East and Asia: Social Protest and Authoritarian Rule After the Arab Spring
Author/editor: Saikal, A., Acharya, A.
Publisher: I.B.Tauris & Co Ltd
Year published: 2013
Page no.: 279

Abstract

The protests that swept across the Middle East and North Africa in late 2010 and 2011 confounded long-time observers of the region, in both the media and academia. After addressing the conditions in the Middle East and North Africa that produced these attempts at revolution, Amin Saikal and Amitav Acharya explore the global impact of the protests, both in terms of their ideological influence on opposition groups and the prospects for democratic transition in a variety of authoritarian and semi-authoritarian governments. Democracy and Reform in the Middle East and Asia commences with a comprehensive attempt to understand the cultural, economic and political background out of which the uprisings in Egypt, Tunisia and Libya emerged. It then expands outwards investigating the impact of the Arab uprisings on a regional level in other Middle Eastern and north African states such as Iran, Morocco and Algeria, and on a more global level in the Asian states of China, Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia and the former Soviet Muslim republics.

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