Präsentiert durch Paradigm Publishing Services
Columbia University Press
Kapitel
Lizenziert
Nicht lizenziert
Erfordert eine Authentifizierung
Foreword
Sie haben derzeit keinen Zugang zu diesem Inhalt.
Sie haben derzeit keinen Zugang zu diesem Inhalt.
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Foreword ix
- Acknowledgments xi
- INTRODUCTION 1
-
PART I. WHY DIFFERENT DEMOCRATIZATION OUTCOMES IN TUNISIA AND EGYPT? Cross-Ideological Accommodations, Constitutions, Militaries, and the Content of International Assistance
- 1. ENNAHDA’S DEMOCRATIC COMMITMENTS AND CAPABILITIES: Major Evolutionary Moments and Choices 15
- 2. THE CHALLENGES OF DEMOCRATIZATION IN THE ARAB WORLD: Some Reflections on the Egyptian Case 29
- 3. MUTUAL ACCOMMODATION: Islamic and Secular Parties and Tunisia’s Democratic Transition 43
- 4. THE ROOTS OF EGYPT’S CONSTITUTIONAL CATASTROPHE: The Necessity of Marrying an Analysis of Context, Process, and Text 73
- 5. PURISTS AND PLURALISTS: Cross-Ideological Coalition Building in Tunisia’s Democratic Transition 91
- 6. PATTERNS OF CIVIL-MILITARY RELATIONS AND THEIR LEGACIES FOR DEMOCRATIZATION: Egypt Versus Tunisia 121
- 7. THE FAILURE OF THE INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY TO SUPPORT TUNISIA 149
-
PART II. RETHINKING OTHER DEMOCRACIES WITH LARGE MUSLIM POPULATIONS: What Policies Helped in Indonesia and India?
- 8. CRAFTING INDONESIAN DEMOCRACY: Inclusion-Moderation and the Sacralizing of the Postcolonial State 163
- 9. INDIAN DEMOCRACY AND THE WORLD’S LARGEST MUSLIM MINORITY 201
- Selected Bibliography 227
- Contributors 237
- Index 241
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Foreword ix
- Acknowledgments xi
- INTRODUCTION 1
-
PART I. WHY DIFFERENT DEMOCRATIZATION OUTCOMES IN TUNISIA AND EGYPT? Cross-Ideological Accommodations, Constitutions, Militaries, and the Content of International Assistance
- 1. ENNAHDA’S DEMOCRATIC COMMITMENTS AND CAPABILITIES: Major Evolutionary Moments and Choices 15
- 2. THE CHALLENGES OF DEMOCRATIZATION IN THE ARAB WORLD: Some Reflections on the Egyptian Case 29
- 3. MUTUAL ACCOMMODATION: Islamic and Secular Parties and Tunisia’s Democratic Transition 43
- 4. THE ROOTS OF EGYPT’S CONSTITUTIONAL CATASTROPHE: The Necessity of Marrying an Analysis of Context, Process, and Text 73
- 5. PURISTS AND PLURALISTS: Cross-Ideological Coalition Building in Tunisia’s Democratic Transition 91
- 6. PATTERNS OF CIVIL-MILITARY RELATIONS AND THEIR LEGACIES FOR DEMOCRATIZATION: Egypt Versus Tunisia 121
- 7. THE FAILURE OF THE INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY TO SUPPORT TUNISIA 149
-
PART II. RETHINKING OTHER DEMOCRACIES WITH LARGE MUSLIM POPULATIONS: What Policies Helped in Indonesia and India?
- 8. CRAFTING INDONESIAN DEMOCRACY: Inclusion-Moderation and the Sacralizing of the Postcolonial State 163
- 9. INDIAN DEMOCRACY AND THE WORLD’S LARGEST MUSLIM MINORITY 201
- Selected Bibliography 227
- Contributors 237
- Index 241