1st Edition

Economic Development and Political Action in the Arab World

By M.A. Mohamed Salih Copyright 2014
    214 Pages
    by Routledge

    226 Pages
    by Routledge

    Analysis of North African revolt against authoritarianism, known as the ‘Arab Spring’, embraced reductionist explanations such as the social media, youth unemployment and citizens’ agitations to regain dignity in societies humiliated by oppressive regimes. This book illustrates that reductionist approaches can only elucidate some symptoms of a social problem while leaving unexplained the economic and political structures which contributed to it. One outcome of quiescence, resource-based ethnic and sectarian conflicts and faulty development paradigm is deepened inequality and a wedge between winners and losers or affluence, wealth and power vis-à-vis poverty and hunger among humiliated jobless and hope-less masses. The book blends theories of development and transition to explain the complex factors which contributed to North Africans’ revolt against authoritarianism and its long-term consequences for political development in the Arab World.

    This timely book is of great interest to researchers and students in Development Studies, Economics and Middle Eastern Studies as well as policy makers and democracy, human rights and social justice activists in the Arab world.

    1. An Alchemy of Economic and Political Action  2. State-Building and State-Society Relations  3. Elements of Resource Challenges  4. Politics of Resource Conflicts  5. Quiescence: Regime Type and Government Expenditure 6. Paradigm Error: Unemployment, Poverty and Food Insecurity  7. Whither Democracy and Human Rights: European-Mediterranean Partnership? 8. Divine Altruism: Politics of Islamic NGOs’ Interventions 9. Conclusions

    Biography

     

    M. A. Mohamed Salih is Professor of Politics of Development, both at the Institute of Social Studies at Erasmus University, Rotterdam, where he is Deputy Rector for Research, and the Department of Political Science, the University of Leiden in the Netherlands.