This study of Magreb's highly erratic encounter with democratization illuminates the complex and diverse encounters between civil society and the authorities in Tunisia, Algeria and Morocco. As opposition has built up in each society, those in power have confronted the pressures for democratization. The author examines the role of the media in particular - both within these countries and internationally - as contested, but often compliant, terrain between governments and dissidents. She uses a dynamic systems model, incorporating the existence of fundamental conflict, to show how democratic institutions can become institutionalized, and the constant possibility of any democratic transition being reversed.
| Limba | Engleza |
| Cuprins | Preface by Clovis Demers Introduction PART 1: THE PUBLIC ARENA IN THE MAGHREB: CONVERGENCES AND DIVERGENCES 1. Tunisia: The Domination of Plato's Cave - The Tunisian Transition to Democracy Will Not Take Place - 'I am the State' - A Police State - A Legal System in Captivity - Alternation in Office Impossible 2. Tunisia: The Submission to Plato's Cave - Tunisian Civil Society before Its Collapse - The Fatal Alliance - The Destruction of Al-Nahdha - The Undermining of the Tunisian League for Human Rights 3. Tunisia: Locking Up Plato's Cave - Disadvantaged Media - How the Tunisian Media Were Neutralized - Survival Strategies - Relations with the Foreign Press - Banning International Human Rights Monitoring 4. Algeria: The Children of Jocasta - The Birth of Civil Society - The Oedipus Temptation - The Unfinished Business of Remaking the Public Arena - The Press and Its Role in Political Developments - Between Open Dissidence and 'Moderate' Opposition: Prospects for a Rebir |
| Data Publicarii | 1 June 03 |
| Format | Paperback |
| Paginare | 224 |
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