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Arab Spring, 2010 --- -Arab Spring, 2010 --- -Arab Spring, 2010-
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Mass media --- Arab Spring, 2010 --- -Mass media --- Arab Spring, 2010-
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Democracy --- Arab Spring, 2010 --- -Democracy --- Arab Spring, 2010-
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« On retrouve la révolution au centre même de l’histoire et de l’imaginaire propres au monde arabe, comme composante de la pensée et comme vecteur de l’action. Elle s’est construite dans un rapport à l’autre, extérieur, fait d’emprunts, de fascination parfois, et de rejet aussi. De par sa localisation, de par son histoire et sa situation de carrefour culturel, l’espace arabe a été un lieu privilégié d’élaboration d’une pensée révolutionnaire, d’effervescence des idées contestataires. On ne s’étonnera pas que, dans un contexte de mondialisation, il devienne un espace privilégié de production révolutionnaire et que le “Printemps arabe” ait ainsi très vite gagné ce statut de laboratoire d’idées et de formes de mobilisation renouvelée. »Extrait de l’introduction de Bertrand Badie.Ont contribué à cet ouvrage : Farah Kamel Abdel Hadi, Tarek Moustafa Abdel-Salam, Mayada Adil, Kaouther Adimi, Lama Ali, Zahra Ali, Tammam al Omar, Mehdi Annassi, Iasmin Omar Ata, Christophe Ayad, Bertrand Badie, Benjamin Barthe, Nazim Baya, Akram Belkaïd, Radia Belkhayat, Mounia Bennani-Chraïbi, Myriam Benraad, Sonia Bensalem, Raja Ben Slama, Karim Emile Bitar, Mehdi Boubekeur, Ichraq Bouzidi, Marwan Chahine, Tracy Chahwan, Leyla Dakhli, Zakya Daoud, Delou, Brecht de Smet, Yasmine Diaz, Pauline Donizeau, Tarek El-Ariss, Alaa El Aswany, Moaz Elemam, Salma El-Naqqash, Khaled Fahmy, Mona Fawaz, Jean-Pierre Filiu, Ganzeer, Dalia Ghanem, Kinda Ghannoum, Salah Guemriche, Noha Habaieb, Patrick Haimzadeh, Halim, Narmeen Hamadeh, Sarah B. Harnafi, Ali Hassan, Sulafa Hijazi, Coline Houssais, Incrusted, Intibint, Joseph Kai, Lena Kassicieh, Mazen Kerbaj, Bahgat Korany, Abir Kréfa, Stéphane Lacroix, Ibticem Larbi, Pierre-Jean Luizard, Ziad Majed, Zarifi Haidar Marín, Hind Meddeb, Meen One, Sabrina Mervin, Merieme Mesfioui, Rania Muhareb, Mostafa M Najem, Aude Nasr, Nime, Mohamed Omran, Marc Pellas, Victor Salama, Sara Saroufim, Enas Satir, Alexandra Schwartzbrod, Isabela Serhan, Rima Sghaier, Leïla Shahid, Bahia Shehab, Leïla Slimani, Laila Soliman, ST4 The project, Hamid Sulaiman, Anna Sylvestre-Treiner, Abdellah Taïa, Fawwaz Traboulsi, Willis from Tunis, Sana Yazigi, Ali Mohamed Zaid, Salim Zerrouki.La collection « Araborama », créée par l’Institut du monde arabe et le Seuil, rassemble journalistes, intellectuels, écrivains, artistes et illustrateurs pour explorer ses réalités présentes, sa pluralité et son histoire.
Arab Spring, 2010 --- -Arab Spring, 2010 --- -Hirak (mouvement ; Algérie ; 2019-....)
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Why do some individuals choose to protest political grievances via non-violent means, while others take up arms? What role does whom we trust play in how we collectively act? This book explores these questions by delving into the relationship between interpersonal trust and the nature of the political movements that individuals choose to join. Utilizing the examples of the Arab Spring uprisings in Egypt, Libya and Syria, a novel theoretical model that links the literature on social capital and interpersonal trust to violent collective action is developed and extended. Beyond simply bringing together two lines of literature, this theoretical model can serve as a prism from which the decision to join terrorist organizations or violent movements may be analyzed. The implications of the theory are then examined more closely through an in-depth look at the behavior of members of political movements at the outset of the Arab Spring, as well as statistical tests of the relationship between interpersonal trust and terrorism in the Middle East and globally.
Terrorism --- Arab Spring, 2010 --- -Terrorism --- Arab Spring, 2010-
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This book, edited by Rosita Di Peri and Daniel Meier, explores the intersection of space, power, and identity in the Mediterranean region, particularly following the Arab revolts of 2011. It examines the spatial dynamics in urban areas, the significance of borders, migration patterns, and geopolitical shifts. The authors aim to highlight the overlooked variable of space in political science analyses of Middle Eastern and Mediterranean issues. The book is divided into sections focusing on mobilizations, migrations, and places, providing insights into how public spaces are reclaimed, the impact of EU migration policies, and the role of film and architecture in post-conflict Lebanon. It targets scholars and students interested in political science, geography, and Middle Eastern studies.
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This book, edited by Rosita Di Peri and Daniel Meier, explores the intersection of space, power, and identity in the Mediterranean region, particularly following the Arab revolts of 2011. It examines the spatial dynamics in urban areas, the significance of borders, migration patterns, and geopolitical shifts. The authors aim to highlight the overlooked variable of space in political science analyses of Middle Eastern and Mediterranean issues. The book is divided into sections focusing on mobilizations, migrations, and places, providing insights into how public spaces are reclaimed, the impact of EU migration policies, and the role of film and architecture in post-conflict Lebanon. It targets scholars and students interested in political science, geography, and Middle Eastern studies.
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