This article is about decentralisation and social cohesion in religiously heterogeneous communities in times of political transition. Post?Mubarak Egypt is taken as a case study involving the informal devolution of power in managing sectarian relations between the majority Muslim and minority Christian populations between February 2011 and June 2012. On the surface, the process had features of a political decentralisation of power which holds promise of downward accountability. The Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) delegated the governance of local sectarian conflict to religious community leaders enjoying high popularity, a policy that was subsequently followed by the Muslim Brotherhood?led government. However, the process of loca...
Conflict or Accommodation? An analysis of the Transition to Multiparty System in Egypt and the Polit...
Amidst violent contestation across the Middle East leaving regimes facing – or fearing – popular pro...
In response to the increasingly authoritarian government of Hosni Muburak, Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhoo...
Pre-submitted version of article for IDS Bulletin 45.5This paper is about decentralisation and socia...
This article examines political sectarianism as institutionalized in the consociational power sharin...
This article investigates how and when regime transitions intensify minority discrimination through ...
The sectarian tensions, which characterised the Sadat (1970- 1981) and Mubarak (1981-2011) regimes,...
This article examines the interaction between authoritarianism and the instrumentalization of sectar...
The focus of this project will be on democratic institutional design in Egypt following the 2011 rev...
Violent fragmentation in the Middle East has often been reduced to a consequence of “ancient hatreds...
The purpose of this article is to demonstrate that the wave of socio-political transformations that ...
ArticleAnalysis paperearly two years after ousting President Muhammad Morsi, Egypt’s military contin...
In ethnic violence research, scholars tend to lump together different forms of ethnic violence. Prom...
Purpose of the study:Centrally, this article aims at exploring the effects of the convulsion toward ...
This paper seeks to explain the dramatic rise of sectarianism in the Middle East. It distinguishes t...
Conflict or Accommodation? An analysis of the Transition to Multiparty System in Egypt and the Polit...
Amidst violent contestation across the Middle East leaving regimes facing – or fearing – popular pro...
In response to the increasingly authoritarian government of Hosni Muburak, Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhoo...
Pre-submitted version of article for IDS Bulletin 45.5This paper is about decentralisation and socia...
This article examines political sectarianism as institutionalized in the consociational power sharin...
This article investigates how and when regime transitions intensify minority discrimination through ...
The sectarian tensions, which characterised the Sadat (1970- 1981) and Mubarak (1981-2011) regimes,...
This article examines the interaction between authoritarianism and the instrumentalization of sectar...
The focus of this project will be on democratic institutional design in Egypt following the 2011 rev...
Violent fragmentation in the Middle East has often been reduced to a consequence of “ancient hatreds...
The purpose of this article is to demonstrate that the wave of socio-political transformations that ...
ArticleAnalysis paperearly two years after ousting President Muhammad Morsi, Egypt’s military contin...
In ethnic violence research, scholars tend to lump together different forms of ethnic violence. Prom...
Purpose of the study:Centrally, this article aims at exploring the effects of the convulsion toward ...
This paper seeks to explain the dramatic rise of sectarianism in the Middle East. It distinguishes t...
Conflict or Accommodation? An analysis of the Transition to Multiparty System in Egypt and the Polit...
Amidst violent contestation across the Middle East leaving regimes facing – or fearing – popular pro...
In response to the increasingly authoritarian government of Hosni Muburak, Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhoo...