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Visiting Speaker - Professor Gilbert Achcar, SOAS, University of London

What Happened to the "Arab Spring"

The Arab Spring of 2011 was but the beginning of a long-term revolutionary process, rendered much more complicated than other revolutionary processes by specific socio-political features - rentierism and patrimonialism - of the dominant Arab state system. Another complicating specific feature is the fact that counter-revolution in the Arab region is two-pronged: the revolutionary process confronts not only the established regimes, but also their fundamentalist contenders.


Event details

These peculiarities, combined with the intrinsic weakness of progressives in the region, provide the main explanation for the shift from the initial revolutionary phase to the ongoing counter-revolutionary phase that started in 2013.  The various dynamics of this shift will be assessed in the light of the particular conditions that prevail in the different key theatres of the 2011 uprising.

The region will find no new stability as long as no solution emerges for the explosive socio-economic factors behind the Arab Spring.

This talk will be based on Gilbert Achcar's new book: Morbid Symptoms: Relapse in the Arab Uprising (Saqi Books, 2016).  Review in the Guardian.

Attachments
Front_cover_Morbid_Symptoms.jpgMorbid Symptoms: Relapse in the Arab Uprising (5462K)
Gilbert_Achcar_A4_Poster.pdf (547K)

Location:

IAIS Building/LT1