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Understanding Revolutions Opening Acts In Tunisia Azmi Bishara

  • SKU: BELL-50235724
Understanding Revolutions Opening Acts In Tunisia Azmi Bishara
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Understanding Revolutions Opening Acts In Tunisia Azmi Bishara instant download after payment.

Publisher: I.B. Tauris
File Extension: PDF
File size: 8.23 MB
Author: Azmi Bishara
ISBN: 9781784532222, 9780755644858, 1784532223, 0755644859
Language: English
Year: 2022

Product desciption

Understanding Revolutions Opening Acts In Tunisia Azmi Bishara by Azmi Bishara 9781784532222, 9780755644858, 1784532223, 0755644859 instant download after payment.

On 17 December, 2010, in the sleepy, provincial town of Sidi Bouzid, a Tunisian street vendor, Mohamed Bouazizi, set himself on fire to protest the relentless harassment he faced at the hands of state officials. This politically driven suicide sparked protests that would engulf the Tunisian state, and spread throughout the region.
The Tunisian Revolution is the only revolt of the Arab Spring that is widely considered to have ‘succeeded’. In this book, Azmi Bishara's grapples with the specific political make-up of Tunisia, and how it determined the development and survival of the revolution. He begins by analysing the context of the revolt (including lagging economic development, high unemployment, authoritarian rule etc.) and compares this to the revolutionary setting within other Arab states. Bishara then carefully sets out the political contours specific to Tunisia and the formation of political parties within the country on the eve of the revolution. He unravels the gradual, daily dynamism of the events which left former President Zin El Abidine Ben Ali with no alternative but to flee the country. Bishara lucidly explains a dizzying series of developments, describing the path of the Tunisian revolution.
This book critically explores the issue of gradual democratic reform and the peaceful transfer of power within the Tunisian context, with implications for the wider region. Two important questions are raised: how must social movements deal with states which refuse to participate in the dialectic process of reform, and what happens when a regime leverages fissures in collective identity to threaten the breakup of not just the state, but the entire social fabric of a country? Bishara concludes that Arab democratic reformers must focus on these questions, pointing out the importance of a unified nation and the establishment of democracy based on equal citizenship for all.

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