Arab Fractures [Recurso electrónico] PDF Carnegie Endowment for International Peace : Citizens, States, and Social Contracts

By: Cammack, Perry | Dunne, Michele | Hamzawy, Amr | [et al.]Contributor(s): Carnegie Endowment for International Peace . Publications DepartmentMaterial type: TextTextSeries: Carnegie Endowment for International PeacePublication details: 1779 Massachusetts Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20036 Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Publications Department 2017Description: Recurso online, 120 pSubject(s): Geografía humana | Geografía política | Países ÁrabesOnline resources: Click here to access online Summary: Long-standing pillars of the Arab order—authoritarian bargains and hydrocarbon rents—are collapsing as political institutions struggle with the rising demands of growing populations. Pervasive socioeconomic deficiencies, polarization, and repression have resulted, leading to unprecedented state disintegration, particularly in Iraq, Libya, Syria, and Yemen. Tese forces are in turn fueling massive human displacement and geopolitical power plays. If any semblance of order is to return after the conflicts subside, citizens and states must forge new social contracts that establish accountability and energize systemic political and economic reform.
Item type: Monografías
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Centro de Análisis y Prospectiva de la Guardia Civil
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Long-standing pillars of the Arab order—authoritarian bargains and hydrocarbon
rents—are collapsing as political institutions struggle with the rising demands of growing
populations. Pervasive socioeconomic deficiencies, polarization, and repression have
resulted, leading to unprecedented state disintegration, particularly in Iraq, Libya, Syria,
and Yemen. Tese forces are in turn fueling massive human displacement and geopolitical
power plays. If any semblance of order is to return after the conflicts subside, citizens and
states must forge new social contracts that establish accountability and energize systemic
political and economic reform.

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