The political participation of the diaspora of the Middle East and North Africa before and after the Arab uprisings
The political participation of the diaspora of the Middle East and North Africa before and after the Arab uprisings
Date
2019
Authors
al-Khulidi, Ali
D'Hondt, Cedric
Di Lenna, Maria Teresia
Sarsar, Chafic
Taha, Suhail
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Global Campus
Abstract
The role of the Arab diasporas in the political processes of their home
countries has changed significantly since the 2011 uprisings. The article aims to
analyse these changes and assess the impact that diasporas have had on the
democratisation processes of the post-2011 transitions. It does so by looking at
examples of both direct and indirect diasporas’ participation in the politics of
their home countries during and after the uprisings through mechanisms such as
lobbying, campaigning, national dialogue initiatives, and voting in the
parliamentary elections. The background to the social, economic and political
contributions of the Arab diasporas before 2011 highlights the multiple
identities of the diaspora communities abroad as well as the changes to their
inclusion from disputed members of the regimes’ opposition to a more active civil
society. With the shifting social and political environment of the last decade, the
examples demonstrate the important political role that diasporas could play in
cooperation and bridge building, both locally and internationally. However, they
also demonstrate the obstacles and severe limitations they face in their inclusion
in the governments’ transition to democratic governance. Transnational
repression and a negative reception context are limiting factors affecting the
ability of diasporas to fully participate as active citizens in both their host and
home countries. As an important index for democratisation in the region, the
conclusions drawn in the article could offer new perspectives on shaping and
constructing regional politics and local regimes. These constitute pressing issues
for the future and the evolution of democracy in the region, especially within the
post-war reconstruction of countries such as Syria, Libya and Yemen, and the
democratic transitions in Tunisia and Egypt.
Description
Keywords
democratisation,
Arabs,
social movement,
social change,
elections,
political participation,
civil and political rights,
human rights,
North Africa,
Middle East,
migrations
Citation
C Sarsar, C D’Hondt, MT Di Lenna, A al-Khulidi & S Taha ‘The political participation of the diaspora of the Middle East and North Africa before and after the Arab uprisings’ (2019) 3 Global Campus Human Rights Journal 52-75
Collections
Version History
You are currently viewing version 3 of the item.