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  • 1
    UID:
    (DE-627)1800726198
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (408 p.)
    ISBN: 9781474419277
    Content: Scrutinises the political strategies and ideological evolution of Islamist actors and forces following the Arab uprisingsWhat role does political Islam play in the genealogy of protests as an instrument to resist neo-liberalism and authoritarian rule? How can we account for the internal conflicts among Islamist players after the 2011/2012 Arab uprisings? How can we assess the performance of Islamist parties in power? What geopolitical reconfigurations have the uprisings created, and what opportunities have arisen for Islamists to claim a stronger political role in domestic and regional politics? These questions are addressed in this book, which looks at the dynamics in place during the aftermath of the Arab uprisings in a wide range of countries across the Middle East and North Africa.Key features22 case studies explain the diverse trajectories of political Islam since 2011 in Bahrain, Egypt, Iraq, Iran, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Qatar, Syria, Tunisia, Turkey and YemenProvides a comprehensive analysis of political Islam covering intra-Islamist pluralisation and conflict, governance and accountability issues, ‘secular-Islamist’ contention, responses to neo-liberal development and the resurgence of sectarianism and militancyOffers a set of innovative approaches to the study of political Islam in the post-Arab spring era that open new possibilities for theory development in the fieldContributorsIbrahim Al-Marashi, California State University San MarcosNazlı Çağın Bilgili, Istanbul Kultur UniversitySouhaïl Belhadj, Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies in GenevaFrancesco Cavatorta, Laval University, QuebecChérine Chams El-Dine, Cairo UniversityKaterina Dalacoura, London School of Economics and Political Science Jérôme Drevon, University of Oxford Vincent Durac, University College Dublin and Bethlehem UniversityLaura Ruiz de Elvira Carrascal, French Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD), ParisMelissa Finn, University of WaterlooCourtney Freer, London School of Economics and Political Science Angela Joya, University of OregonWanda Krause, Royal Roads UniversityMohammed Masbah, Chatham House and Brandeis UniversityAlam Saleh, Lancaster UniversityJillian Schwedler, City University of New York’s Hunter College Mariz Tadros, University of Sussex Truls Tønnessen, Georgetown UniversityMarc Valeri, University of Exeter Anne Wolf, University of CambridgeLuciano Zaccara, Qatar UniversityBarbara Zollner, Birkbeck College
    Note: Frontmatter , Contents , Abbreviations , Notes on the editors and contributors , Acknowledgements , 1 Political Islam and the Arab uprisings , Part I Islamists and issues of political and economic governance , 2 Participation not domination: Morsi on an impossible mission? , 3 Governing after protests: the case for political participation in post-2009 Iran , 4 The group that wanted to be a state: the ‘rebel governance’ of the Islamic State , 5 Islamic and Islamist women activists in Qatar post-Arab uprisings: implications for the study of refusal and citizenship , 6 Is Islamism accommodating neo-liberalism? The case of Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood , 7 A critique from within: the Islamic left in Turkey and the AKP’s neo-liberal economics , Part II Islamist and secular party politics , 8 Rise and endurance: moderate Islamists and electoral politics in the aftermath of the ‘Moroccan Spring’ , 9 Does participation lead to moderation? Understanding changes in the Egyptian Islamist parties post-Arab Spring , 10 Islamist political societies in Bahrain: collateral victims of the 2011 Popular Uprising , 11 Kuwait’s Islamist proto-parties and the Arab uprisings: between opposition, pragmatism and the pursuit of cross-ideological cooperation , 12 Secular forms of politicised Islam in Tunisia: the Constitutional Democratic Rally and Nida’ Tunis , 13 Political parties and secular–Islamist polarisation in post-Mubarak Egypt , Part III Intra-Islamist pluralisation and contention , 14 The complexity of Tunisian Islamism: conflicts and rivalries over the role of religion in politics , 15 The reconfiguration of the Egyptian Islamist Social Movement Family after two political transitions , 16 Iraq’s Shi‘a Islamists after the uprisings: the impact of intrasectarian tensions and relations with Iran , 17 The impact of Islamist trajectories on the international relations of the post-2011 Middle East , Part IV The Sunni–Shi‘a divide , 18 Islamism in Yemen: from Ansar Allah to al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula , 19 Sectarianism and civil confl ict in Syria: reconfi gurations of a reluctant issue , 20 Out of the ashes: the rise of an anti-sectarian discourse in post-2011 Iraq , Part V Conclusion , 21 Conclusion: new directions in the study of Islamist politics , Index , In English
    Additional Edition: 9781474419253
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als print 9781474419253
    Language: English
    URL: Cover
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