The Tunisian uprisings of December 2010 are often depicted in negative terms, as lacking leadership, ideology, and political organization. Nahda (the Tunisian Islamist movement that, after decades of exile and repression, won 40 percent of the seats in the elections of October 2011) members are now accused of working to turn Tunisia into a “sharia state,” in which religious freedom, women’s rights, and freedom of expression would cease to exist. While the fears of individuals and groups who disagree with Islamists have to be taken seriously, discussion of current changes needs to be based on a real engagement, not on caricature..
Since the uprising in 2011, Tunisia is seen as a political lab whose experiences impact the entire r...
Abdellatif Hermessi, Islamic Fundamentalism and the Tunisian State In deciding to impose social cha...
While over three years ago Tunisia and Egypt experienced similar revolts in protest against decades ...
When Islamists found their political ambitions frustrated by semi-authoritarian regimes, they retrea...
none3noThis chapter examines the transformation of the mainstream Islamist party in Tunisia during t...
The process of revolutionary changes in the North African region in 2011 sparked the flame of hope f...
Research on Islamist movements in the Middle East and North Africa has tended to focus on leaders an...
Tunisia was the only country in the Arab world to undertake a serious attempt at democratic transit...
The swift victory of moderate Islamists at the first free elections in the historically secular Tuni...
Since the 2011 uprising, Tunisia's Islamist movement Ennahdha has proposed a political project based...
Tunisia was the first country to have a revolution in the Arab Spring of 2010. The history of Tunisi...
On October 23rd, Tunisians voted in their first democratic election in the state’s history with much...
In the new landscape of Tunisian politics shaped by the 2011 uprising it became commonplace to accus...
Tunisia in 2012: highs and lows of a never-ending transition By taking the leadership of a coalition...
The following report provides an in-depth and empirically focused overview of collective mobilizatio...
Since the uprising in 2011, Tunisia is seen as a political lab whose experiences impact the entire r...
Abdellatif Hermessi, Islamic Fundamentalism and the Tunisian State In deciding to impose social cha...
While over three years ago Tunisia and Egypt experienced similar revolts in protest against decades ...
When Islamists found their political ambitions frustrated by semi-authoritarian regimes, they retrea...
none3noThis chapter examines the transformation of the mainstream Islamist party in Tunisia during t...
The process of revolutionary changes in the North African region in 2011 sparked the flame of hope f...
Research on Islamist movements in the Middle East and North Africa has tended to focus on leaders an...
Tunisia was the only country in the Arab world to undertake a serious attempt at democratic transit...
The swift victory of moderate Islamists at the first free elections in the historically secular Tuni...
Since the 2011 uprising, Tunisia's Islamist movement Ennahdha has proposed a political project based...
Tunisia was the first country to have a revolution in the Arab Spring of 2010. The history of Tunisi...
On October 23rd, Tunisians voted in their first democratic election in the state’s history with much...
In the new landscape of Tunisian politics shaped by the 2011 uprising it became commonplace to accus...
Tunisia in 2012: highs and lows of a never-ending transition By taking the leadership of a coalition...
The following report provides an in-depth and empirically focused overview of collective mobilizatio...
Since the uprising in 2011, Tunisia is seen as a political lab whose experiences impact the entire r...
Abdellatif Hermessi, Islamic Fundamentalism and the Tunisian State In deciding to impose social cha...
While over three years ago Tunisia and Egypt experienced similar revolts in protest against decades ...