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STRUGGLES UNDER AUTHORITARIANISM: REGIMES, STATES, AND PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATIONS IN THE ARAB WORLD

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 March 2007

Pete W. Moore
Affiliation:
Pete Moore is Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science, Case Western Reserve University, 11201 Euclid Avenue, #111, Cleveland, Ohio 44106, USA; e-mail: pete.moore@case.edu.
Bassel F. Salloukh
Affiliation:
Bassel F. Salloukh is Assistant Professor in the Social Science and Education Division, Lebanese American University, P.O. Box 13-5053, Chouran Beirut 1102 2801, Lebanon; e-mail: bassel.salloukh@lau.edu.lb.

Extract

The failure of social science expectations that several Arab states would democratize in the 1980s and 1990s forced a reappraisal. The belief that chronic fiscal crisis and waning popular support would lead regimes to loosen authoritarian controls and thus possibly lead to democratization proved disappointingly unfounded. Instead, regimes that launched liberalizations in the 1980s reversed or halted most political-reform components in the following decade. Given that rising oil and commodity prices since 2003 have eased budgetary constraints for many states (especially in the Gulf), the emerging pattern is political change and shifts under authoritarian regimes over time, not democratization. A number of recent works have responded by quantitatively and qualitatively assessing factors that account for regional imperviousness to democratization as well as change in different directions. The purpose of this essay is to contribute to these responses in two ways: one, conceptualizing important change in state–society relations short of democratization; and two, comparatively analyzing the cases of Jordan, Kuwait, and Syria to propose ways of explaining these outcomes.

Type
ARTICLES
Copyright
© 2007 Cambridge University Press

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