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 The People WantA Radical Exploration of the Arab Uprising
Achar, GilbertPublisher:  University of California Press Date Written:  03/09/2013
 Year Published:  2013
 Pages:  328pp   ISBN:  978-0520280519
 Resource Type:  Book
 
 "The people want . . .": This first half of slogans chanted by millions of Arab protesters since 2011 revealed a long-repressed craving for democracy. But huge social and economic problems were also laid bare by the protestors' demands.
 
 Abstract:  "The people want . . .": This first half of slogans chanted by millions of Arab protesters since 2011 revealed a long-repressed craving for democracy. But huge social and economic problems were also laid bare by the protestors' demands.
 
 Simplistic interpretations of the uprising that has been shaking the Arab world since a young street vendor set himself on fire in Central Tunisia, on 17 December 2010, seek to portray it as purely political, or explain it by culture, age, religion, if not conspiracy theories. Instead, Gilbert Achcar locates the deep roots of the upheaval in the specific economic features that hamper the regions development and lead to dramatic social consequences, including massive youth unemployment. Intertwined with despotism, nepotism, and corruption, these features, produced an explosive situation that was aggravated by post-9/11 U.S. policies. The sponsoring of the Muslim Brotherhood by the Emirate of Qatar and its influential satellite channel, Al Jazeera, contributed to shaping the prelude to the uprising. But the explosions deep roots, asserts Achcar, mean that what happened until now is but the beginning of a revolutionary process likely to extend for many more years to come.
 
 The author identifies the actors and dynamics of the revolutionary process: the role of various social and political movements, the emergence of young actors making intensive use of new information and communication technologies, and the nature of power elites and existing state apparatuses that determine different conditions for regime overthrow in each case. Drawing a balance-sheet of the uprising in the countries that have been most affected by it until now, i.e. Tunisia, Egypt, Yemen, Bahrain, Libya and Syria, Achcar sheds special light on the nature and role of the movements that use Islam as a political banner. He scrutinizes attempts at co-opting the uprising by these movements and by the oil monarchies that sponsor them, as well as by the protector of these same monarchies: the U.S. government. Underlining the limitations of the Islamic Tsunami that some have used as a pretext to denigrate the whole uprising, Gilbert Achcar points to the requirements for a lasting solution to the social crisis and the contours of a progressive political alternative.
 
 
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 Table of Contents
 
 Figures and Tables
 Acknowledgments
 Preliminary Notes
 
 On the Arab Countries and the Middle East and North Africa (MENA)
 On Transliteration of Arabic
 
 Introduction: Uprisings and Revolutions
 1. Fettered Development
 The Facts
 Poverty, Inequality, Precarity
 Informal Sector and Unemployment: The Bouazizi Syndrome
 Youth Underemployment
 Female Underemployment
 Graduate Unemployment
 Fetters on Development
 
 2. The Peculiar Modalities of Capitalism in the Arab Region
 The Problem of Investment
 Public and Private Investment
 A Specific Variant of the Capitalist Mode of Production
 1. Rentier and Patrimonial States
 2. A Politically Determined Capitalism: Nepotism and Risk
 The Genesis of the Specific Regional Variant of Capitalism: An Overview
 
 3. Regional Political Factors
 The Oil Curse
 From Arab Despotic Exception to Democracy Promotion
 The Muslim Brothers, Washington, and the Saudis
 The Muslim Brothers, Washington, and Qatar
 Al Jazeera and the Upheaval in the Arab Mediascape
 
 4. Actors and Parameters of the Revolution
 Overdetermination and Subjective Conditions
 The Workers Movement and Social Struggles
 New Actors and New Information and Communications Technologies
 States and Revolutions
 
 5. A Provisional Balance Sheet of the Arab Uprising
 Coups dÉtat and Revolutions
 Provisional Balance Sheet No. 1: Tunisia
 Provisional Balance Sheet No. 2: Egypt
 Provisional Balance Sheet No. 3: Yemen
 Provisional Balance Sheet No. 4: Bahrain
 Provisional Balance Sheet No. 5: Libya
 Provisional Balance Sheet No. 6: Syria
 
 6. Co-opting the Uprising
 Washington and the Muslim Brothers, Take Two
 Nato, Libya, and Syria
 The Islamic Tsunami and the Difference between Khomeini and Morsi
 Conclusion: The Future of the Arab Uprising
 The Difference between Erdogan and Ghannouchi . . .
 . . . And the Difference between Erdogan and Morsi
 Conditions for a Genuine Solution
 
 Notes
 References and Sources
 Index
 
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