This study examines the role of the judiciary in the political process after the Arab Uprising, focusing on a Constitutional Court and its judgements in a case where the popular will was rejected via a judicial ruling. In particular, I will analyse a case of Kuwait where the Constitutional Court declared election void and ordered the dissolution of parliament, after the opposition had won a stable majority. This case conjures images of legal mobilization by the regime; however, considering the political context where the government and parliament were in a serious ongoing conflict, the constitutional rulings by the Constitutional Court can be evaluated as a mediator intended to ease the stalemate and prevent a fall into a more serious crisi...
This article explains how judicial independence can develop in regimes that are not fully democratic...
This article analyses the evolution of the Islamist political associations and groups, both Shiites ...
When faced with threats to its rule, Jordan\u27s Hashemite monarchy has attempted to weather the st...
This study seeks to explain the paradoxical expansion of constitutional power in Egypt over the past...
This thesis offers an analytical study of constitutional and judicial development in Kuwait; beginni...
Prior to the Arab Spring uprisings of 2011, Arab liberals and international donors interested in pro...
The dissertation examines the origins of judicial power in transitions through the cases of Egypt an...
This paper examines the impacts of electoral reforms and the Arab Spring on the activities of the Mu...
The Karamat Watan (March of Dignity) was the largest protest mobilisation in Kuwaiti history. From l...
On January 25th 2011, following a popular uprising, president Hosni Mubarak of Egypt was forced to r...
Since the Islamic resurgence of the 1970s, many Muslim postcolonial countries have established and e...
In 2005, the people of Iraq ratified a permanent Constitution, a significant milestone in the journe...
The dissertation focuses on the stillborn Qatari Constitutional Court and the ambiguity behind the n...
This study stands on the fact that the judicial independence is a fundamental element to achieve the...
According to the so-called Insurance Theory of judicial empowerment, incumbent elites create indepen...
This article explains how judicial independence can develop in regimes that are not fully democratic...
This article analyses the evolution of the Islamist political associations and groups, both Shiites ...
When faced with threats to its rule, Jordan\u27s Hashemite monarchy has attempted to weather the st...
This study seeks to explain the paradoxical expansion of constitutional power in Egypt over the past...
This thesis offers an analytical study of constitutional and judicial development in Kuwait; beginni...
Prior to the Arab Spring uprisings of 2011, Arab liberals and international donors interested in pro...
The dissertation examines the origins of judicial power in transitions through the cases of Egypt an...
This paper examines the impacts of electoral reforms and the Arab Spring on the activities of the Mu...
The Karamat Watan (March of Dignity) was the largest protest mobilisation in Kuwaiti history. From l...
On January 25th 2011, following a popular uprising, president Hosni Mubarak of Egypt was forced to r...
Since the Islamic resurgence of the 1970s, many Muslim postcolonial countries have established and e...
In 2005, the people of Iraq ratified a permanent Constitution, a significant milestone in the journe...
The dissertation focuses on the stillborn Qatari Constitutional Court and the ambiguity behind the n...
This study stands on the fact that the judicial independence is a fundamental element to achieve the...
According to the so-called Insurance Theory of judicial empowerment, incumbent elites create indepen...
This article explains how judicial independence can develop in regimes that are not fully democratic...
This article analyses the evolution of the Islamist political associations and groups, both Shiites ...
When faced with threats to its rule, Jordan\u27s Hashemite monarchy has attempted to weather the st...