Youth in Sudan and the Reformation of the Public Sphere: A Study of the Dynamics of Social Action and the Potentialities for Public Involvement

Authors

  • Author

  • Ashraf Osman Mohammed Elhassan

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.12816/0049549

Keywords:

Sudan, Youth, Street protests, Social Movements, The public sphere

Abstract

Any attempts to interpret the Tunisian Revolution of 2011 through the prism of generational shifts raises four major questions. The first two concern the difficulty of attributing to young Tunisians any kind of generational or political consciousness, particularly before the outbreak of the revolution in 2011. The third and fourth questions relate to the concept of the "Generational Theory" itself and its ability (or otherwise) to explain a wide spectrum of social factors. Can the demographic approach sufficiently describe the Tunisian Revolution of 2011? This paper will demonstrate that a demographic approach can illuminate not only an understanding of the Tunisian Revolution, but also of the wider social and political changes which have shaped the country in recent times.

Author Biography

  • Ashraf Osman Mohammed Elhassan
    Professor of Political Science, Faculty of International Relations and Diplomatic Studies, National University, Khartoum.

Published

2018-05-01

Issue

Section

Articles

Cited once

  1. ثقافة الجماعات الشبكية وأثرها في الفعل السياسي في المغرب (2026)