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The Arab Spring And The Involvement Of External Actors In Democratization Processes
Author(s) -
Stefania Negri
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
soft power
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2539-2239
pISSN - 2389-8232
DOI - 10.17450/150214
Subject(s) - democratization , spring (device) , political science , political economy , development economics , democracy , politics , sociology , economics , physics , law , thermodynamics
In 2011, more than two decades after the momentous events that swept across Eastern Europe, a massive popular revolution against authoritarian regimes, ignited by the protests erupted in Tunisia in December 2010, put down roots throughout the Middle East and North Africa – from Egypt, Libya, Algeria and Morocco to Syria, Yemen, Bahrain and Jordan – and brought democratization processes back under the spotlight of the international community. This major movement towards democracy in the Arab world, known as the ‘Arab Spring’, marked a new wave of popular quest for pro-democratic changes in State governance that revitalized the “global democratic revolution”, heralded at the beginning of the Nineties as the “the most profound event of the twentieth century and,

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