Did the Arab Spring reduce MENA countries’ growth?
نویسندگان
چکیده
منابع مشابه
Demystifying the Arab Spring
In Tunisia, protesters escalated calls for the restoration of the country's suspended constitution. Meanwhile, Egyptians rose in revolt as strikes across the country brought daily life to a halt and toppled the government. In Libya, provincial leaders worked feverishly to strengthen their newly independent republic. It was 1919. That year's events demonstrate that the global diffusion of inform...
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goal words (e.g., ‘‘equality,’’ ‘‘thin’’) significantly predicted their success at pursuing those goals, and sometimes did so above and beyond participants’ explicit (i.e., intentional, conscious) ratings of the desirability of the goals (Ferguson, 2007). Together, these findings suggest that successful goal pursuit (e.g. refusing a fattening snack), may at times depend on people’s ‘‘snap’’ eva...
متن کاملThe United States and the Arab Spring
This article reveals, by studying correlative relationships between US regime support and regime properties, that the US foreign policy in the Middle East has traditionally helped governments to limit the political participation of Islamists, communists, enemies of Israel and populations that could be hostile to the US oil interests. This way the US economic and strategic security interests hav...
متن کاملThe Use of Social Networks in Achieving e-Democracy in the Arab Spring Countries
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متن کاملThe Roadmap to e-Democracy in Arab Spring Countries via Social Networks
Electronic democracy has been in use in many countries around the world with mixed success. With the power of the web 2.0 technologies, there are more opportunities to enhance the democratic process through the use of social networking tools. Social networks showed potential for facilitating democracy and democratic change during the Arab spring revolutions, suggesting that they could be utiliz...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: Applied Economics Letters
سال: 2019
ISSN: 1350-4851,1466-4291
DOI: 10.1080/13504851.2019.1588938