This paper presents evidence from interviews in 2015–2016 with a nationally representative sample of Tunisia’s 15–29 year olds. We focus on the sample’s political participation and orientations during the revolution of 2011 and subsequently. We find that just 6.6 percent of those aged 15–24 at the time played any direct part in the ‘events of 2011’. Political engagement then and subsequently is shown to have been influenced most strongly by a university education and growing up in a politically engaged family. In 2015–2016, young people were overwhelmingly pro-democracy, supported equal opportunities and status for the sexes, and endorsed values of self-expression, but attached equal importance to economic security and betterment, felt that...
The educated have figured prominently in protests and elections in several Middle East and North Afr...
This dissertation has sought to develop new ways of understanding democratization, and by extension ...
The story of the ‘Arab Spring’ as a revolt of young people against autocracy does not stand up to su...
This paper presents evidence from interviews in 2015–2016 with a nationally representative sample of...
This paper presents evidence from interviews in 2015–2016 with a nationally representative sample of...
Tunisia, the birthplace of the ‘Arab Spring’, has emerged as the only credible story of political tr...
The youth were central actors during the 2011 revolution in Tunisia that resulted in the toppling of...
Tunisia was the first domino in the Arab Spring where people rose up against dictatorship. Despite f...
This study aims to investigate why young people in Tunisia participate less in formal and informal p...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/136005/1/muwo12180.pd
In the wake of the Tunisian Revolution, young people in Tunisia have become very interested in polit...
In the post-2011 euphoria, ‘Youth’ were taken to embody dynamism and positive change, often presente...
Tunisia is a country with a rich and diverse historical and cultural background that has absorbed ma...
none1noThe narrative of the ‘Tunisian success story’, which often portrayed the country as a model, ...
The political turmoil in Tunisia at the end of 2010 opened the door to the democratization of Arab c...
The educated have figured prominently in protests and elections in several Middle East and North Afr...
This dissertation has sought to develop new ways of understanding democratization, and by extension ...
The story of the ‘Arab Spring’ as a revolt of young people against autocracy does not stand up to su...
This paper presents evidence from interviews in 2015–2016 with a nationally representative sample of...
This paper presents evidence from interviews in 2015–2016 with a nationally representative sample of...
Tunisia, the birthplace of the ‘Arab Spring’, has emerged as the only credible story of political tr...
The youth were central actors during the 2011 revolution in Tunisia that resulted in the toppling of...
Tunisia was the first domino in the Arab Spring where people rose up against dictatorship. Despite f...
This study aims to investigate why young people in Tunisia participate less in formal and informal p...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/136005/1/muwo12180.pd
In the wake of the Tunisian Revolution, young people in Tunisia have become very interested in polit...
In the post-2011 euphoria, ‘Youth’ were taken to embody dynamism and positive change, often presente...
Tunisia is a country with a rich and diverse historical and cultural background that has absorbed ma...
none1noThe narrative of the ‘Tunisian success story’, which often portrayed the country as a model, ...
The political turmoil in Tunisia at the end of 2010 opened the door to the democratization of Arab c...
The educated have figured prominently in protests and elections in several Middle East and North Afr...
This dissertation has sought to develop new ways of understanding democratization, and by extension ...
The story of the ‘Arab Spring’ as a revolt of young people against autocracy does not stand up to su...