This text introduces the special issue that examines the opinions and political behaviour of young people in the three Maghreb countries - Algeria, Tunisia and Morocco - over the last ten years, after the so-called >Arab Spring>. The assumption is that, although young North Africans do not form a homogeneous category and may even defend antagonistic outlooks on society, there are underlying trends that structure this emerging generation. The contributions of this special issue are articulated around three main topics: the construction and the representations of Youth as a social and political category; the political attitudes of young people and their perception of their respective societies in general and of political actors in particular;...
This article examines the youth cultural circuits and the institutional channels of political partic...
This chapter examines the youth cultural circuits and the institutional channels of political partic...
Young people are the majority in many developing or less economically advanced countries such as Moz...
This text introduces the special issue that examines the opinions and political behaviour of young p...
The overarching objective of this special issue is to gain a more in-depth understanding of the vari...
After the mobilisations of the so-called Arab Spring, in which the young were the main players, the ...
The youth were central actors during the 2011 revolution in Tunisia that resulted in the toppling of...
All over Africa young people face serious economic, social and emotional challenges in their everyda...
Faced with the general period of political demobilisation since 2011, there is a need to look beyond...
This paper presents evidence from interviews in 2015–2016 with a nationally representative sample of...
Morocco has long maintained stability in a region historically known for fluctuating sociopolitical ...
International audienceFrom an empirical data collection from five local urban observatories (Agadir,...
The majority of young people in Africa are today living in waithood, a prolonged, difficult, and dyn...
Through an ethnographic fieldwork conducted in 2016-2017 within activist groups in the University of...
Translated from French by Setra planetFrench version available in IDRC Digital LibraryForty-one inte...
This article examines the youth cultural circuits and the institutional channels of political partic...
This chapter examines the youth cultural circuits and the institutional channels of political partic...
Young people are the majority in many developing or less economically advanced countries such as Moz...
This text introduces the special issue that examines the opinions and political behaviour of young p...
The overarching objective of this special issue is to gain a more in-depth understanding of the vari...
After the mobilisations of the so-called Arab Spring, in which the young were the main players, the ...
The youth were central actors during the 2011 revolution in Tunisia that resulted in the toppling of...
All over Africa young people face serious economic, social and emotional challenges in their everyda...
Faced with the general period of political demobilisation since 2011, there is a need to look beyond...
This paper presents evidence from interviews in 2015–2016 with a nationally representative sample of...
Morocco has long maintained stability in a region historically known for fluctuating sociopolitical ...
International audienceFrom an empirical data collection from five local urban observatories (Agadir,...
The majority of young people in Africa are today living in waithood, a prolonged, difficult, and dyn...
Through an ethnographic fieldwork conducted in 2016-2017 within activist groups in the University of...
Translated from French by Setra planetFrench version available in IDRC Digital LibraryForty-one inte...
This article examines the youth cultural circuits and the institutional channels of political partic...
This chapter examines the youth cultural circuits and the institutional channels of political partic...
Young people are the majority in many developing or less economically advanced countries such as Moz...