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GOBE, ERIC (2) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   118258


Of lawyers and samsars: the legal services market and the authoritarian state in Ben 'Ali's Tunisia (1987-2011) / Gobe, Eric   Journal Article
Gobe, Eric Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract The recent history of the Tunisian Bar was symptomatic of repeated attempts by President Ben 'Ali's authoritarian state to subjugate a profession which was meant to guarantee respect for the rule of law and defendants' rights. To this end, the state established an apparatus intended to control the workings of the legal services market and reduce the profession's capacity for self-regulation. This situation led to the development of illegal practices and influenced a majority of lawyers to support the mobilization against Ben 'Ali's regime.
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2
ID:   191803


We don’t want to be governed like this anymore: protest democracy as an expression of a crisis of governmentality in post-revolution Tunisia / Desrues, Thierry; Gobe, Eric   Journal Article
Gobe, Eric Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article analyses the political significance of the protests that have arisen in Tunisia since the ‘revolution’ and the establishment of a parliamentary regime. This is what the protests studied have in common: they belong to neglected regions in the country’s hinterland; that they mobilize young local populations; they claim rights over their territories’ soil and subsoil resources exploitation; they occupy a strategic location for a relatively long period of time; and they set up democratic mechanisms for these locations’ self-management, in the form of ‘coordinations’. The description of social logics and the way populations resist, as well as the authoritarian rationality of government action and the inability of elected officials to mediate conflicts, reveal differences between protesters who seek autonomy from state control, while others refer to a rent-centred understanding of the claim. It also shows the emergence of a ‘protest democracy’, itself an expression of a crisis of ‘governmentality’. These two phenomena are symptomatic of a demand for integrating populations and new ways of governing that break with the reeks of past authoritarianism and current representative democracy.
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