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LEVITSKY AND WAY (2) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   163763


Authoritarian resilience and regime cohesion in Morocco after the Arab Spring / Hill, J N C   Journal Article
Hill, J N C Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article argues that Morocco's competitive authoritarian regime is more resilient today in certain key respects than it was when the Arab Spring began. Drawing on Levitsky and Way's dimension of organisational power, the article contends the regime was sufficiently unnerved by the unrest to resort to the use of high intensity coercion as part of its response to the 20 February Movement. The article maintains that, in employing this force successfully, the regime has turned the protests into an important source of non-material cohesion for its security apparatus and thereby enhanced its ability to defend itself from similar challenges in the future.
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2
ID:   163080


Global international relations and the Arab Spring: the Maghreb’s challenge to the EU / Hill, J N C   Journal Article
Hill, J N C Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article contributes to the Global International Relations project by critically evaluating the roles ascribed to Europe and the EU by Levitsky and Way in their model for explaining regime transitions. Focusing primarily on their international dimensions of linkage and leverage, it assesses both the normative geopolitical underpinnings and explanatory power of their thesis, drawing on the North African cases of Tunisia and Mauritania at the start of the Arab Spring to illustrate and substantiate its observations and arguments. It concludes that the EU’s failure to discipline either country’s competitive authoritarian regime raises important questions about the validity of the privileged role in which they cast Europe.
Key Words EU  Mauritania  Tunisia  Leverage  Arab Spring  Linkage 
Global International Relation  Levitsky and Way 
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