First published online: 03 Mar 2017This article examines how the Tunisian revolution and subsequent political transition has influenced the relationship between state power and Islam. It aims to provide an in-depth and historically informed analysis of these relations through an exploration of one specific case: The attempts by successive Ministers of Religious Affairs to reform the state’s management of Tunisian religious institutions after January 2011. The article builds on multiple fieldwork visits to Tunisia by both authors, in addition to an extensive set of primary and secondary sources. The authors argue that relations between state and religious authority have changed considerably throughout the 2011–2015 period, and that a wide va...
The swift victory of moderate Islamists at the first free elections in the historically secular Tuni...
The article charts the rise of the jihadi Salafi movement in Tunisia during the transitional period ...
The victory of a Tunisian Islamist party in the elections of October 2011 seems a paradox for a coun...
© 2017 Editors of Middle East Critique. This article examines how the Tunisian revolution and subseq...
What are the main factors explaining the dynamics of secularisation and de-(re)secularisation? In th...
AbstractHow are the characteristics of state–religion relations defined? The following paper provide...
The purpose of this article is to demonstrate that the wave of socio-political transformations that ...
First published online: 21 December 2020This article contributes to the debate on the transformation...
Defence date: 10 July 2017Examining Board: Professor Olivier Roy, European University Institute (sup...
Tunisia was the first country to have a revolution in the Arab Spring of 2010. The history of Tunisi...
This dissertation analyses the development of Tunisia’s Preventing and Countering Violent Extremism ...
The victory of a Tunisian Islamist party in the elections of October 2011 seems a paradox for a coun...
The article examines the complexity of Tunisian Salafism in the context of the Tunisian transition t...
The victory of a Tunisian Islamist party in the elections of October 2011 seems a paradox for a coun...
First published online: January 2020After the fall of Ben Ali's regime in 2011, the opening of socio...
The swift victory of moderate Islamists at the first free elections in the historically secular Tuni...
The article charts the rise of the jihadi Salafi movement in Tunisia during the transitional period ...
The victory of a Tunisian Islamist party in the elections of October 2011 seems a paradox for a coun...
© 2017 Editors of Middle East Critique. This article examines how the Tunisian revolution and subseq...
What are the main factors explaining the dynamics of secularisation and de-(re)secularisation? In th...
AbstractHow are the characteristics of state–religion relations defined? The following paper provide...
The purpose of this article is to demonstrate that the wave of socio-political transformations that ...
First published online: 21 December 2020This article contributes to the debate on the transformation...
Defence date: 10 July 2017Examining Board: Professor Olivier Roy, European University Institute (sup...
Tunisia was the first country to have a revolution in the Arab Spring of 2010. The history of Tunisi...
This dissertation analyses the development of Tunisia’s Preventing and Countering Violent Extremism ...
The victory of a Tunisian Islamist party in the elections of October 2011 seems a paradox for a coun...
The article examines the complexity of Tunisian Salafism in the context of the Tunisian transition t...
The victory of a Tunisian Islamist party in the elections of October 2011 seems a paradox for a coun...
First published online: January 2020After the fall of Ben Ali's regime in 2011, the opening of socio...
The swift victory of moderate Islamists at the first free elections in the historically secular Tuni...
The article charts the rise of the jihadi Salafi movement in Tunisia during the transitional period ...
The victory of a Tunisian Islamist party in the elections of October 2011 seems a paradox for a coun...