Why did Hosni Mubarak\u27s rule in Egypt last thirty years, and why did it fall in a mere eighteen days? This dissertation uses Mubarak\u27s Egypt as a case study for understanding how autocratic regimes can use formally democratic institutions, such as multiparty elections, to trap their opponents and thereby enhance their durability, and also investigates the extent to which this strategy may undermine regime durability. Through over 200 interviews conducted in the months preceding and following the 2011 Egyptian uprising, I find that autocratic regimes can manipulate legal opposition parties to coopt their opponents and thereby prevent them from revolting. But over time, the strict limits under which regimes permit their trapped part...
The Egyptian authoritarian regime is a mammoth machine created and headed by President Hosni Mubarak...
After the first revolution, Egypt did not have enough time to adequately form new political parties ...
At the beginning of 2011, after two weeks of contentious protests setting off from Cairo and spreadi...
Why did Hosni Mubarak\u27s rule in Egypt last thirty years, and why did it fall in a mere eighteen d...
Why did Hosni Mubarak\u27s rule in Egypt last thirty years, and why did it fall in a mere eighteen d...
Dissertations. Paper 711. Trapped and Untrapped: Mubarak's Opponents on the Eve of His Ouster W...
textSeveral scholars have examined how Middle East states preserve their autocratic character. Some ...
textSeveral scholars have examined how Middle East states preserve their autocratic character. Some ...
The main concern of this thesis is to examine how the Mubarak authoritarian regime survived for thre...
On February 11, 2011 following eighteen days of protest in Tahrir Square, Liberation Square in Egypt...
The recent Arab Spring movement in the Middle East and North Africa has been heralded as a transiti...
The main concern of this thesis is to examine how the Mubarak authoritarian regime survived for thre...
In this thesis, the role of non-competitive multi-party legislative elections in Mubarak's Egypt is ...
The Egyptian authoritarian regime is a mammoth machine created and headed by President Hosni Mubarak...
The Egyptian authoritarian regime is a mammoth machine created and headed by President Hosni Mubarak...
The Egyptian authoritarian regime is a mammoth machine created and headed by President Hosni Mubarak...
After the first revolution, Egypt did not have enough time to adequately form new political parties ...
At the beginning of 2011, after two weeks of contentious protests setting off from Cairo and spreadi...
Why did Hosni Mubarak\u27s rule in Egypt last thirty years, and why did it fall in a mere eighteen d...
Why did Hosni Mubarak\u27s rule in Egypt last thirty years, and why did it fall in a mere eighteen d...
Dissertations. Paper 711. Trapped and Untrapped: Mubarak's Opponents on the Eve of His Ouster W...
textSeveral scholars have examined how Middle East states preserve their autocratic character. Some ...
textSeveral scholars have examined how Middle East states preserve their autocratic character. Some ...
The main concern of this thesis is to examine how the Mubarak authoritarian regime survived for thre...
On February 11, 2011 following eighteen days of protest in Tahrir Square, Liberation Square in Egypt...
The recent Arab Spring movement in the Middle East and North Africa has been heralded as a transiti...
The main concern of this thesis is to examine how the Mubarak authoritarian regime survived for thre...
In this thesis, the role of non-competitive multi-party legislative elections in Mubarak's Egypt is ...
The Egyptian authoritarian regime is a mammoth machine created and headed by President Hosni Mubarak...
The Egyptian authoritarian regime is a mammoth machine created and headed by President Hosni Mubarak...
The Egyptian authoritarian regime is a mammoth machine created and headed by President Hosni Mubarak...
After the first revolution, Egypt did not have enough time to adequately form new political parties ...
At the beginning of 2011, after two weeks of contentious protests setting off from Cairo and spreadi...