Vol. 4 No. 018 (2016): Issue 018

​ACRPS has published issue 18 of the bi-monthly peer-reviewed academic journal Siyasat Arabia, a journal devoted to political science and international relations. This issue devotes this edition to debate the Arab revolutions five years on, the difficult transition stages, and the transformation of some of them into violence and internal conflict. The issue includes the following studies, articles, and testimonies: “Tunisia Between Support for Democracy and Dismantlement of the State” (Hamadi Redissi); “Transformation of the Egyptian Revolution over Five Years” (Abdulfattah Madi); “Arab Islamists Five Years On from the Arab Spring: Questions of Project, Ideology, and Organization” (Khalil al-Anani); “Why did the Syrian Revolution turn Violent?” (Radwan Zyada); “Revolution and Conflict in Syria: Implications of the Failure in the Game of International Balances” (Marwan Kabalan); “Transitional Justice and Democratic Transition in the Arab Context” (Habib Belkouch); “Outcomes of the Liberation Tendency in the Arab World” (El-Houcine Akhdouche); “Elections, Armed Conflict, and Oil in the Competition for Power in Libya after Gaddafi” (Virginie Collombier); “The New Tunisian Constitution: Contextual Analysis” (Zaid al-Ali); and a Testimony by Rached Ghannouchi, “Tunisia from Revolution to Constitution” (Salah Eddin Al-Jourchi), as well as the AOI on the Arab Revolutions Five Years On.The issue also includes reviews of important books and literature: “Facts of the Televised Revolution: Presence of Sight and Absence of Insight in Reading the Events of the Arab Spring Revolutions” (Abdelwahab Alaffandi); “Israeli Knowledge Production on the Arab Spring between Ideological Stance and Orientalist Act” (Muhannad Mustafa); “A reading of the book: Civil-Military Relations and the Democratic Transformation in Egypt after the January 25 revolution” (Shamsuddin al-Kilani); and “How Interests Destroy Principles in Washington? A Review of America and the Egyptian Revolution” (Abdou Moussa). There are also two reports. The first is about the workshop held in Doha “The Future of the Revolutions in the Arab World from the Perspective and Experience of Youth” and the second on the conference “The Arab Revolutions Five Years On: The Arduous Road of Democratization and Future Prospects”. The journal also includes the two regular sections covering the most important milestones of democratic transformation in the Arab world and events in Palestine during November and December 2015.

Original Website (English) | Original Website (Arabic)

Published: 2016-01-01

Articles

  • Tunisia: Strengthening Democracy and Unravelling the State

    Author: Hamadi Redissi
    5-17
    Discussions regarding the relative success of Tunisia's democratic transition, argues Ladrissi, remain premature. His paper examines the extent to which particular Tunisian specificities could...
  • The Egyptian Revolution: Five Years of Transformation Cited once

    Author: Abdel-Fattah Mady
    18-40
    Why did the January 25, 2011 revolution in Egypt descend into a state of violent oppression of the revolutionaries on the grounds of securing stability and fighting terrorism? This paper examines...
  • Arab Islamists Five Years into the Arab Spring: Agenda, Ideology and Regimentation

    Author: Khalil al-Anani
    41-51
    This paper examines those Arab Spring states in which political Islamists are actively engaged. Specifically, it looks at the cases of Tunisia and Egypt, in which political Islamists were involved...
  • Why Did the Syrian Revolution become Violent?

    Author: Radwan Zyada
    52-63
    The major turning points of the Syrian revolution, beginning with the earliest public demonstrations on March 15, 2011, are here examined. The author revisits speeches made by President Bashar Al...
  • The Syrian Revolution/the Conflict over Syria: Fallout from an Imbalance of Regional Powers Cited once

    Author: مروان قبلان
    64-76
    This paper adopts the assumption that the series of foreign interventions which served to transform the Syrian crisis from a domestic revolution into a regionalized, and later globalized, conflict...
  • Arab Transitional Justice and the Transition to Democracy Cited once

    Author: Habib Belkouch
    77-83
    The question of post-revolutionary transitional justice is a novel feature of Arab political and legal culture. During the early stages of what came to be known as the “Arab Spring”, human rights...
  • Outcomes of the Liberation Tendency in the Arab World

    Author: Akhdouche
    84-94
    From a purely political perspective, tyranny and oligarchic rule have continued to be the dominant characteristic of Arab politics. Authoritarianism has “strangled” the Arab citizen. Will an...
  • Elections, Armed Conflict, and Oil in the Competition for Power in Libya after Gaddafi Cited once

    Author: Virginie Collombier
    95-102
    This paper presents a survey of political developments in Libya since the fall of Muamar Gaddafi. The author argues that, today, social and economic tensions have driven Libya to the edge of a...
  • Tunisia from Revolution to Constitution

    Author: Rached Ghannouchi
    105-116
    ​In this interview, Cheikh Rached Ghannouchi recounts his experiences of working with his “brothers” in the Ennahda movement,who, he claims, criticized his “ad hominem” attacks on ousted president...
  • A Contextual Analysis of the 2014 Tunisian Constitution Cited once

    Author: Zaid al-Ali
    119-131
    Examined in this article are a number of aspects of Tunisia's 2014 constitution, specifically, the relationship between the presidency and the parliament; the status of the newly created...
  • The Arab Revolutions: Five Years On

    Author: Public Opinion Polling Unit
    135-158
    This paper presents Arab public attitudes towards the popular revolutions which arose in 2011. The results, adapted from a series of Arab public opinion surveys conducted in a number of countries...
  • Milestones in Democratic Transition in Arab World

    161-167
    ​This report highlights some of the major milestones of the Arab democratic transition during 1/11/2015- 27/12/2015
  • Palestine Over Two Months

    168-172
    This report chronicles some of the most significant developments relating to the Arab-Israeli conflict during 1/11/2015 -30/12/2015​
  • The Future of the Revolutions in the Arab World from the Perspective and Experience of Youth(workshop )

    211-222
    ​Five years prior, the Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies brought together a group of young activists whose dedication and courage gave ris eto what would become the Arab Spring. The group...
  • The Arab Revolutions Five Years On: The Arduous Road of Democratization and Future Prospects

    223-236
    In association with the Issam Fares Institute at the American University of Beirut, the Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies held a three-day conference (January 21-23, 2016) to study the...
  • Writing the Televised Revolution Facts: Visibility but no Insight in Reading the Arab Revolutions Facts

    Author: Abdelwahab El Affendi
    175-185
    ​Five years prior, the Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies brought together a group of young activists whose dedication and courage gave ris eto what would become the Arab Spring. The group...
  • Israeli Knowledge Production about the Arab Spring

    Author: Muhannad Mustafa
    186-195
    In association with the Issam Fares Institute at the American University of Beirut, the Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies held a three-day conference (January 21-23, 2016) to study the...
  • Civil-military Relations and the Democratic Transformation in Egypt after the January 25 Revolution Cited once

    Author: Shamsuddin al-Kilani
    196-202
    A literature review of the major writings that covered the Arab Spring during the last five years
  • America and the Egyptian Revolution from January 25 to after July 3: A Testimony from Washington [Arabic]

    Author: Abdou Moussa
    203-208
    This review covers selected samples of Israeli writings on the Arab Spring produced by think tanks, academic centers, universities in Israel