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Arab Spring and Peripheries : A Decentring Research Agenda

Huber, Daniela(Edited by)Kamel, Lorenzo(Edited by)
Part of the Routledge Studies in Mediterranean Politics series
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The emerging literature on the so-called ‘Arab Spring’ has largely focused on the evolution of the uprisings in cities and power centres.

In order to reach a more diversified and inner understanding of the ‘Arab Spring’, this edited book examines how peripheries have reacted and contributed to the historical dynamics at work in the Middle East and North Africa.

It rejects the idea that the ‘Arab Spring’ is a unitary process and shows that it consists of diverse Springs which differed in terms of opportunity structure, strategies of a variance of actors, and outcomes.

This book looks at geographical, religious, gender and ethnical peripheries, conceptualizing periphery as a dynamic structure which can expand and contract.

It shows that the seeds for changing the face of politics and polities are within peripheries themselves.

Focusing on the voices of peripheries can therefore be a powerful tool to ‘de-simplify’ the reading of the Arab Spring and to reshape the paradigmatic schemes through which to look at this part of the world. This book was published as a special issue of Mediterranean Politics.

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Product Details
Routledge
1138393223 / 9781138393226
Paperback / softback
18/10/2018
United Kingdom
English
160 pages
24 cm
Published as a special issue of Mediterranean politics.