Political events in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) have dominated news headlines for the past two years. Since the revolution in Tunisia in December 2010, one dictatorship after the next has appeared on the verge of collapse, as citizens gather en masse to voice their demands for democratic governance. In countries such as Libya and Egypt, though relatively successful democratic elections were held following the collapse of long-standing dictatorships, it is uncertain whether the new political system being installed will be democratic or autocratic. When looking to the future of the region beyond the Arab Spring, one thing seems clear: the Middle East’s monarchies do not appear to be going away any time soon
The consequences of the political turmoil that swept across the Middle East in 2011 support the clai...
For years now political scientists have been asking questions about why the Middle East remains one ...
After the 2011 Arab Spring, a pressing concern is to understand why some authoritarian regimes remai...
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 106-110).As the third wave of democratization recedes, m...
Inspired by the outcome of the 2010 Arab uprisings, this project explores the causal mechanisms behi...
It is still too early to know whether or not the extraordinary events earlier this year in Egypt, Tu...
All too often, people view Islam as the reason for repressive governments in the Middle East and Nor...
What happened in the Middle East and North Africa after 2011? Did the millions of people in the MENA...
Beyond Tunisia, Libya and parts of the Middle East, the wave of protests emboldened by North African...
The hope and disappointment that accompanied the 2011 Arab uprisings have demonstrated the centralit...
Abstract: The protest movements of the Arab Spring prompted a major reevaluation amongst policymaker...
What accounts for continuing authoritarian success in the Arab world today? In light of the “Arab Sp...
From the Introduction. Arab revolutions have sparked real hopes for democracy, but the situation var...
The survival of eight monarchies during the "Arab Uprisings" has put centre stage the fundamental qu...
Arab political regimes are both unusually undemocratic and unusually stable. A series of nested stat...
The consequences of the political turmoil that swept across the Middle East in 2011 support the clai...
For years now political scientists have been asking questions about why the Middle East remains one ...
After the 2011 Arab Spring, a pressing concern is to understand why some authoritarian regimes remai...
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 106-110).As the third wave of democratization recedes, m...
Inspired by the outcome of the 2010 Arab uprisings, this project explores the causal mechanisms behi...
It is still too early to know whether or not the extraordinary events earlier this year in Egypt, Tu...
All too often, people view Islam as the reason for repressive governments in the Middle East and Nor...
What happened in the Middle East and North Africa after 2011? Did the millions of people in the MENA...
Beyond Tunisia, Libya and parts of the Middle East, the wave of protests emboldened by North African...
The hope and disappointment that accompanied the 2011 Arab uprisings have demonstrated the centralit...
Abstract: The protest movements of the Arab Spring prompted a major reevaluation amongst policymaker...
What accounts for continuing authoritarian success in the Arab world today? In light of the “Arab Sp...
From the Introduction. Arab revolutions have sparked real hopes for democracy, but the situation var...
The survival of eight monarchies during the "Arab Uprisings" has put centre stage the fundamental qu...
Arab political regimes are both unusually undemocratic and unusually stable. A series of nested stat...
The consequences of the political turmoil that swept across the Middle East in 2011 support the clai...
For years now political scientists have been asking questions about why the Middle East remains one ...
After the 2011 Arab Spring, a pressing concern is to understand why some authoritarian regimes remai...