ID | 111731 |
Title Proper | Arab revolutions from a Palestinian perspective |
Language | ENG |
Author | Salem, Walid |
Publication | 2012. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Let me start with the following question: Have Arab countries started the transition to democracy or not? This is the question now being asked around the world. To address this question I will begin with a quotation from Professor Sa'ad Eddin Ibrahim, who suggested that the Arab region has the plight of a triangle of actors. These three actors are al-toghah, al-gulah and alghuzah. Toghah are the authoritarian regimes, gulah are the extremists and ghuzah are the invaders. The thesis of Ibrahim was that it was the toghah, the authoritarian regimes who created the gulah, the extremists, as another despotic response to the despotism of the authoritarian regimes. Despotism creates another form of despotism. Then together the toghah and the gulah, the authoritarians and the extremists, brought the ghuzah, the invaders to the region, such as what happened in Iraq. In order to have democracy in Iraq, you have to do it through an invasion from outside. |
`In' analytical Note | Palestine Israel Journal Vol. 18, No.1; 2012: p.93-97 |
Journal Source | Palestine Israel Journal Vol. 18, No.1; 2012: p.93-97 |
Key Words | Arab Revolutions ; Palestinian Perspective ; Democracy ; Extremists ; Arab World ; Gaddafi ; Al Qaeda ; Israel ; Liberalization |