This study investigates why and how Tunisian Islamist activists committed to new forms of socio-political engagement alongside, or as an alternative to, the Ennahda party since the fall of the authoritarian regime. Notably, thanks to the opening of social and political opportunities occurred in 2011, several militants of the Tunisian Islamist movement, developed in the 1970s and institutionalized as a party in 1989, have undertaken new pathways of engagement in faith-based associations and, more recently, in new political networks rooted in the social fabric. Based on this observation, the paper inquires how activists’ trajectories outside the Islamist party eventually transformed their relationship with the Ennahda party itself and, in mor...
The Tunisian Ennahda, party was the first Islamic party to win a free election after the Arab Spring...
Islamist political parties in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region have often faced inordi...
How does political commitment develop when actors are confronted with authoritarian processes? Under...
This article contributes to the debate on the transformation of Islamic activism in a context of pol...
First published online: 21 December 2020This article contributes to the debate on the transformation...
Research on Islamist movements in the Middle East and North Africa has tended to focus on leaders an...
none3noThis chapter examines the transformation of the mainstream Islamist party in Tunisia during t...
First published online: January 2020After the fall of Ben Ali's regime in 2011, the opening of socio...
In the wake of the Tunisian Revolution of 2011, Ennahda leader Rached Ghannouchi distanced his party...
For four decades Tunisia has been struggling with the question of whether to legalise political part...
The study aims to explore how Islamist parties mobilize citizens in electoral authoritarian systems....
Within the broader spectrum of Arab Islamist political parties, membership has taken on a deep meani...
The electoral rise of Islamist parties following the Arab uprisings has led to different political o...
The electoral rise of Islamist parties following the Arab uprisings has led to different political o...
Since the uprising in 2011, Tunisia is seen as a political lab whose experiences impact the entire r...
The Tunisian Ennahda, party was the first Islamic party to win a free election after the Arab Spring...
Islamist political parties in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region have often faced inordi...
How does political commitment develop when actors are confronted with authoritarian processes? Under...
This article contributes to the debate on the transformation of Islamic activism in a context of pol...
First published online: 21 December 2020This article contributes to the debate on the transformation...
Research on Islamist movements in the Middle East and North Africa has tended to focus on leaders an...
none3noThis chapter examines the transformation of the mainstream Islamist party in Tunisia during t...
First published online: January 2020After the fall of Ben Ali's regime in 2011, the opening of socio...
In the wake of the Tunisian Revolution of 2011, Ennahda leader Rached Ghannouchi distanced his party...
For four decades Tunisia has been struggling with the question of whether to legalise political part...
The study aims to explore how Islamist parties mobilize citizens in electoral authoritarian systems....
Within the broader spectrum of Arab Islamist political parties, membership has taken on a deep meani...
The electoral rise of Islamist parties following the Arab uprisings has led to different political o...
The electoral rise of Islamist parties following the Arab uprisings has led to different political o...
Since the uprising in 2011, Tunisia is seen as a political lab whose experiences impact the entire r...
The Tunisian Ennahda, party was the first Islamic party to win a free election after the Arab Spring...
Islamist political parties in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region have often faced inordi...
How does political commitment develop when actors are confronted with authoritarian processes? Under...