Tunisia’s transition away from authoritarianism has been shaped by a politics of consensus, which has brought together representatives of the former regime with their historic adversary, the Islamist movement al-Nahda. This article argues that consensus politics was a legacy of the authoritarian regime that was re-produced during a democratizing transition. The politics of consensus was encouraged and enabled by al-Nahda, which prioritized its inclusion within this elite settlement to provide political security for itself and the broader transition. However, this came at a cost, engineering a conservative transition, which did not pursue significant social or economic reform. The Tunisian case shows that historical legacies, such as consens...
The compromise that was reached between the Tunisian Islamists of Ennahda and old regime players in ...
For four decades Tunisia has been struggling with the question of whether to legalise political part...
Research on Islamist movements in the Middle East and North Africa has tended to focus on leaders an...
When Islamists found their political ambitions frustrated by semi-authoritarian regimes, they retrea...
The political turmoil in Tunisia at the end of 2010 opened the door to the democratization of Arab c...
The swift victory of moderate Islamists at the first free elections in the historically secular Tuni...
The article examines the complexity of Tunisian Salafism in the context of the Tunisian transition t...
The article charts the rise of the jihadi Salafi movement in Tunisia during the transitional period ...
This article attempts to further the understanding of the EU’s democratisation of Tunisia and to ass...
The Tunisian Ennahda, party was the first Islamic party to win a free election after the Arab Spring...
Though the Tunisian transition to democracy faces challenges seven years following the 2011 revoluti...
According to The Economist Democracy Index, Tunisia was at 2.79 during 2010 and by the end of 2011 t...
International audienceThis chapter examines the transformation of the mainstream Islamist party in T...
The working paper examines the complexity of Tunisian Salafism and its role in the process of transi...
Abstract: The protest movements of the Arab Spring prompted a major reevaluation amongst policymaker...
The compromise that was reached between the Tunisian Islamists of Ennahda and old regime players in ...
For four decades Tunisia has been struggling with the question of whether to legalise political part...
Research on Islamist movements in the Middle East and North Africa has tended to focus on leaders an...
When Islamists found their political ambitions frustrated by semi-authoritarian regimes, they retrea...
The political turmoil in Tunisia at the end of 2010 opened the door to the democratization of Arab c...
The swift victory of moderate Islamists at the first free elections in the historically secular Tuni...
The article examines the complexity of Tunisian Salafism in the context of the Tunisian transition t...
The article charts the rise of the jihadi Salafi movement in Tunisia during the transitional period ...
This article attempts to further the understanding of the EU’s democratisation of Tunisia and to ass...
The Tunisian Ennahda, party was the first Islamic party to win a free election after the Arab Spring...
Though the Tunisian transition to democracy faces challenges seven years following the 2011 revoluti...
According to The Economist Democracy Index, Tunisia was at 2.79 during 2010 and by the end of 2011 t...
International audienceThis chapter examines the transformation of the mainstream Islamist party in T...
The working paper examines the complexity of Tunisian Salafism and its role in the process of transi...
Abstract: The protest movements of the Arab Spring prompted a major reevaluation amongst policymaker...
The compromise that was reached between the Tunisian Islamists of Ennahda and old regime players in ...
For four decades Tunisia has been struggling with the question of whether to legalise political part...
Research on Islamist movements in the Middle East and North Africa has tended to focus on leaders an...