Image from Google Jackets

The new Arab revolutions that shook the world / Farhad Khosrokhavar.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Boulder, Colorado : Paradigm Publishers, c.2012.Description: xi, 351 p. ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781612050836 (hardcover : alk. paper)
  • 1612050832 (hardcover : alk. paper)
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 22 956.054 KHO
Contents:
The Iranian Green movement -- The Tunisian Revolution of dignity and freedom -- Egypt's Revolution -- The Arab Spring through historical precedents in other countries -- The "would-be middle class" -- Characteristics of the demo-movements -- Obstacles to democracy -- Social and state actors and new technologies -- The new social actor and demographics -- Types of activists, old and new -- The symbolic dimensions of the Arab Spring -- The geopolitical actors.
Summary: Long considered overwhelmingly resilient, Arab authoritarian regimes have begun to fall in surprising manner. While the future of governance in these countries is unclear, the new Arab movements, largely secular and youthful, reveal a vital and ambitious new Arab generation. For these youth, radical Islam has lost its seductive appeal and religion is being marginalized. Women now are far more visibly active in societies long bound by tradition. The participants in the new movements prefer peaceful means, but are prepared to fight if necessary to change the future. They are motivated by a new global awareness from the internet and the means provided by Facebook and other new media to quickly build massive, powerful movements. Khosrokavar's compares the different countries shaken by the protest movements and he contextualizes of the demands and claims of the determined, democratically minded participants. He also looks beyond the Arab world to show how the Arab revolutions are leaving a deep imprint on countries like Iran, where unsuccessful democratic movements began months before Tunisia and Egypt. The new revolutions change the geo-politics of the region and shed light on new dynamics in which the citizen's dignity takes precedence over religion, community or even regional issues like pan-Arabism. The movements reveal the true democratic spirit of this new Arab generation which is largely unsympathetic to the aims of Jihadi terrorist actions. Looking to the future, Khosrokavar discusses how the new movements may change the world.
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
Star ratings
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Vol info Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Book - Borrowing Book - Borrowing Central Library Second Floor Baccah 956.054 KHO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 26102 Available 000033037
Total holds: 0

Glossary : p. 301-302.

Bibliography : p. 303-350.

The Iranian Green movement -- The Tunisian Revolution of dignity and freedom -- Egypt's Revolution -- The Arab Spring through historical precedents in other countries -- The "would-be middle class" -- Characteristics of the demo-movements --
Obstacles to democracy -- Social and state actors and new technologies -- The new social actor and demographics --
Types of activists, old and new -- The symbolic dimensions of the Arab Spring -- The geopolitical actors.

Long considered overwhelmingly resilient, Arab authoritarian regimes have begun to fall in surprising manner. While the future of governance in these countries is unclear, the new Arab movements, largely secular and youthful, reveal a vital and ambitious new Arab generation. For these youth, radical Islam has lost its seductive appeal and religion is being marginalized. Women now are far more visibly active in societies long bound by tradition. The participants in the new movements prefer peaceful means, but are prepared to fight if necessary to change the future. They are motivated by a new global awareness from the internet and the means provided by Facebook and other new media to quickly build massive, powerful movements. Khosrokavar's compares the different countries shaken by the protest movements and he contextualizes of the demands and claims of the determined, democratically minded participants. He also looks beyond the Arab world to show how the Arab revolutions are leaving a deep imprint on countries like Iran, where unsuccessful democratic movements began months before Tunisia and Egypt. The new revolutions change the geo-politics of the region and shed light on new dynamics in which the citizen's dignity takes precedence over religion, community or even regional issues like pan-Arabism. The movements reveal the true democratic spirit of this new Arab generation which is largely unsympathetic to the aims of Jihadi terrorist actions. Looking to the future, Khosrokavar discusses how the new movements may change the world.

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.