Fr. 236.00

Altered States - The Remaking of the Political in the Arab World

English · Hardback

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Description

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Building on Timothy Mitchell's seminal 1991 exploration of the "Limits of the State," this book brings together contributions on the state in the Arab world from the past and present in an edited volume.

Altered States views the state less as a matter of people and institutions and more as sets of practices, regimes of truth, and capabilities of power, and the effects they have on those under their control. Through analysing case studies - including Tunisia, Syria, Lebanon, Egypt, Palestine, UAE, Rojova, and the Islamic State - the concept of the state is applied and questioned. This book examines the roots of policies that led to the uprisings, focusing on how the "authoritarian bargain", which helped define Arab politics, broke down with the rise of neoliberalism. It also assesses how boundaries between state and society have been redrawn, as various dynamics have brought state forces into more open conflict with citizens and each other.

The rapid pace of change in the Arab world has necessitated constant modification of themes and theoretical lens of analysis. This book will, therefore, be of interest to practitioners, graduate students and academics of the Arab world, statehood, and political science.

List of contents










Introduction: The Remaking of the Political in the Arab World since 2010, 1. State-crafting and Modes of Governance in the United Arab Emirates, 2. Community Organizing and the Limits of Participatory Democracy in Lebanon, 3. Archiving in an Age of (Counter)Revolutions, 4. Class Power, the State and Contentious Politics in the age of Globalization: The case of Egypt, 5. Same Different? A Comparative Study of Kurdish-Led Rojava and Opposition-Held Syria, 6. Postcolonial State-ness and the Case of Rawabi, 7. Lebanon's Wadi Khaled and Challenge of Sovereignty, 8. Egyptian State and Culture, 9. How Diplomatic Practices Make the Fuzzy State of Palestine Visible, 10. Daesh and the "Effect of the State", 11. Conclusion: The Westphalian State Effect


About the author

Sune Haugbolle is Professor of Global Studies at Roskilde University, Denmark.
Mark LeVine is Professor of Modern Middle Eastern History at the University of California, Irvine, USA.

Summary

Building on Timothy Mitchell's seminal 1991 exploration of the "Limits of the State," this book brings together contributions on the state in the Arab world from the past and present in an edited volume.

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