AMPG 23A10 - States and Societies in the Middle East

This course focuses on the political sociology of the State and State-Society relations in the contemporary Arab World. Putting the broader theories of the State in conversation with the empirical reality of the Arab world, it describes how a particular pattern developed in the Arab region in the 19th and 20th centuries, as a result of both external influences and internal factors. It discusses some of the dominant features of this pattern (authoritarianism, rentierism, corporatism, etc.) and shows how the pattern has been transformed during the last few decades. By identifying their "strengths" and "weaknesses" the course explains why the Arab States and regimes have been so resilient throughout the 20th century, and why, with the ‘Arab revolutions', some of them have been challenged. Main subjects: Political science, Sociology of the State, Constitutionalism.
François CECCALDI,Amr ABDELRAHIM
Cours magistral seul
English
Spring 2024-2025
1/ Book review on a book chosen from the selected bibliography (due for session n°9) – 50% 2/ Final exam – 50%
Asef Bayat, Life as Politics : How ordinary people change the Middle East, Stanford University Press, 2009
Laura Guazzone, Daniela Pioppi, The Arab State and Neo-Liberal Globalization : The Restructuring of State Power in the Middle East. Ithaca Press, 2010
Fred Halliday, The Middle East in International Relations, Cambridge: CUP, 2005.
Marc Lynch, The Arab Uprisings Explained – New Contentious Politics in the Middle East, Columbia University Press, 2014
Robert Springborg, Political Economies of the Middle East and North Africa, Wiley, 2020
Kjetil Selvik, Stig Stenslie, Stability and Change in the Modern Middle East, I.B. Tauris, 2011.