Young generation awakening : economics, society, and policy on the eve of the Arab Spring Edited by Edward A. Sayre and Tarik M. Yousef - New York : Oxford University Press, c2016. - xvi, 241 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.



The street protests that erupted in Tunisia in December 2010 and spread quickly throughout the Middle East surprised not only the entrenched dictators of the region but also international observers who collectively had taken for granted the durability of Middle Eastern authoritarianism. Specifically, the Arab Spring uprisings debunked the prevailing notion that youth were disengaged from political life by their economic exclusion and tight regime control of their mobilization. Indeed, the one consistent feature across the uprisings, whether peaceful or violent, was the key role played by young people.

What has remained unclear is why youth became the vanguards of the Arab Spring protests and why they have not played a more prominent role in the transitions that followed. To address these questions, the authors in this volume use updated data sets on demography, employment, education, inequality, social media and public sentiment to examine the underlying socioeconomic conditions of young people in the Middle East at the time of the uprisings and offer a mosaic of analytical explanations linking those conditions from 2009-2011 to the revolts of 2010-2012.

9780190224615

2016008352


Youth--Economic conditions--21st century--Arab countries
Youth--Social conditions--21st century--Arab countries
Arab Spring, 2010---Economic aspects

909.097492708342 YO UN

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