The Middle East is frequently portrayed as a collection of stubbornly
authoritarian states, whose behaviour can only be changed by the
table-thumping or even the military intervention of the US government.
But as Jeremy Jones uncovers in this fascinating book, the region is
in fact engaged in a profound and tumultuous process of political
change. The movements seeking democracy and reform that have emerged
are rooted in local cultures and political traditions. And because of
this, they are overlooked, obstructed, or even undermined by the US's
pursuit of a one-size fits all Western democratic model. A veteran
Harvard Middle East analyst, Jeremy Jones travels from Morocco to
Oman, from Egypt to Iran listening to grassroots activists, and
interviewing major political leaders, such as Turkish Prime Minister
Erdogan. He provides a vivid picture of the changing political
cultures of the Middle East. He looks at new forms of political Islam,
from Hamas in the West Bank to the Justice and Development Party in
Turkey to Hizballah in Lebanon, demonstrating how each movement grew
out of its local context. He meets women politicians in the Gulf,
Hamas leaders in Ramallah and democracy activists in Jordan and Syria,
seeking to understand how these new forces relate to each other, to
their societies, and to Western policies. In a trenchant critique of
the much-vaunted US 'democratisation agenda', Jones concludes that a
participatory and accountable political culture is slowly emerging in
spite, not because of Western foreign policies.
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The New Politics of the Middle East
Product details
ISBN
9780857715067
Published
2015
Edition
1. edition
Publisher
Bloomsbury UK
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Author