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Journal Article

IDS Bulletin Vol. 43 Nos. 1

The Political Economy of the Egyptian and Arab Revolt

Published on 20 January 2012

This article advances a framework for understanding the political economy of the Egyptian and Arab revolts.

After almost three decades of implementing neoliberal economic policies, the Egyptian economy was nevertheless stagnating in the early 2000s and political unrest was increasing. In response two key policy decisions were undertaken by the ruling elite, one to embark on a programme of further liberalisation and privatisation in the hope of attracting foreign direct investment and the other to use the global war on terror framework as a means of repressing internal dissent. While these decisions ‘succeeded’ in the short term, they also created the conditions which led to the uprisings.

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This article comes from the IDS Bulletin 43.1 (2012) The Political Economy of the Egyptian and Arab Revolt

Cite this publication

Dahi, O., S. (2012) The Political Economy of the Egyptian and Arab Revolt. IDS Bulletin 43(1): 47-53

Authors

Omar S. Dahi

Publication details

published by
Institute of Development Studies
authors
Dahi, Omar S.
doi
10.1111/j.1759-5436.2012.00289.x

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About this publication

Region
Egypt

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