Maghrib in Past & Present | Podcasts
Education
Episode 86: The Arab Transformations Project
In this podcast, Professor Andrea Teti discusses the findings of the Arab Transformations Project. Led by Aberdeen University, the project carried out public surveys in seven Arab countries in late 2014 and compiled a longitudinal database. According to the survey data, Professor Andrea Teti examines the economic, social and political transformations in the region. The survey observations indicate challenging popular perceptions in relation to a broad range of topics such as: corruption, youth, democracy, migration, gender, religion, security and stability, and Eu-MENA relations.
The analysis of the surveys data shows that, contrary to popular belief, the 2011 Uprisings weren’t “youth revolution” but were rather carried out by protesters from all age groups and all sorts of social backgrounds. Data also reveals that people in the Arab world, have a holistic conception of democracy which extends its perception beyond narrow definitions based on free and fair elections to include both civil-political and socio-economic rights. Of all the factors associated with democracy, corruption is one of the most important variables that people are concerned with. In addition, the 2011 Uprisings provided a framework for examining issues that have been long linked to the Orientalist stereotypes about how the region is not suited to democracy, shifting attention to how effective the ongoing mass mobilization can be putting governments under pressure. The survey concludes that claims for both socio-economic and political inclusion are at the heart of the Arab Uprisings.
Andrea Teti is Associate Professor of International Relations at the University of Aberdeen, Scotland. He is author of The Arab Uprisings in Egypt, Tunisia and Jordan: Social, Political and Economic Transformations (2018) with Pamela Abbott and Francesco Cavatorta, and his book Democratization Against Democracy: How the EU failed to learn from the Arab Uprisings with Pamela Abbott, Valeria Talbot and Paolo Maggiolini is forthcoming in 2020 by Palgrave.
CEMAT Director, Dr. Laryssa Chomiak, led this interview, which was recorded on June 20, 2019, at the Centre d'Études Maghrébines à Tunis (CEMAT).
Posted by Hayet Lansari, Librarian, Outreach Coordinator, Content Curator (CEMA).
Memoirs, Memory, and the History of the Tunisian Left
Conversation with Lisa Anderson and Tarek Kahlaoui: Reflections on Tunisia's State Building History and Contemporary Democratization Experience
"Willis from Tunis, 10 ans et toujours vivant!" - Entretien avec Nadia Khiari
Constitution-Making Processes During Democratization: Egypt and Tunisia after the 2010/11 Uprisings
Oran, The Plague and COVID 19
En hommage à feu Pr. Abdelkader Lakjaa
Maghrébins en Méditerranée: Complicités corsaires maghrébines à l'époque moderne entre Méditerranée et Atlantique
Why is the "everywhere war" mostly in the Middle East and North Africa?
Medieval Ifriqiya & the Emergence of the Hafsid Dynasty
The “Student Question” in Tunisia: Between the Attraction of Leftism and the Steamroll of Authoritarian Paternalism (1963-1979)
The Transmission and Effectivity of the Ma’luf Tradition, an Andalusian Music within Tunisia and Libya
The Buffalo Agency: Maghribi Ibadis in Cairo, 1850-1950
L'anthropologie des pratiques langagières dans le contexte maghrébin
Economic Justice and Global Political Trends: Framing the Fight over Populism
France's Shattered Empire: Fascism and Republicanism in Colonial Tunisia, 1931-1944
Rencontre autour de l’ouvrage : La scientificité de l’empirisme en sociologie
Building Habitat: The Atelier des Bâtisseurs in North Africa and Beyond
No Country for Young Men
Algérie, une autre histoire de l’indépendance. Trajectoires révolutionnaires des partisans de Messali Hadj
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The No-Frills Teacher Podcast
Heal, Survive & Thrive!
Summarize | رادیو سامرایز
The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast
The Mel Robbins Podcast