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University of Copenhagen

After the Arab Spring – Democratic Aspirations and State Failure

Learn why the hope and excitement of the Arab Spring is gone, why so many Arab states are falling apart, why the youth are so frustrated, why there are so many refugees, and what can be done about it. The so-called Arab Spring appeared to end decades of exceptionalism and bring the Arab world back into the mainstream of global developments. The rebellions promised the return of politics and the reassertion of popular sovereignty against their corrupt and geriatric leaders. Much hope and flowery language greeted the young men and women who deposed their leaders and tried to build new, better societies. Today, the Arab world is in deep crisis. Of the 22 member states of the Arab League, at least five have essentially collapsed: Iraq, Libya, Yemen, Somalia and Syria exist only in name today, as their territories have fallen to competing, murderous armed groups. In the remaining countries, the old autocracies have reasserted themselves. The repression at home is now worsened by regional conflict on an unprecedented scale, and the resulting frustration has led to the biggest refugee flows in recent memory. What went wrong? This course offers an overview of the structural shortcomings of Arab states and societies, which help us understand why the democratic awakening did not happen but instead “has given way to civil wars, ethnic, sectarian and regional divisions and the reassertion of absolutism.” This raises the obvious and renewed question whether there is something inherent in the Arab, and by analogy Muslim, condition that makes them special. Does this condition make this part of the world impervious to generally observable trends towards greater accountability, popular participation in political decision-making, greater generation and fairer division of economic wealth? Join this course to find out!

Status: Cultural Diversity
Status: Economic Development
BeginnerCourse25 hours

Featured reviews

ZS

5.0Reviewed Nov 12, 2020

As a Senior POL/MIL Analyst for Egypt this course was simply amazing, hands down one of the better courses of study I have ever taken. Thanks!

BE

5.0Reviewed Sep 4, 2017

That is the second class I am taking with Professor Afsah and would love to take more. The class is interesting, engaging and relevant. Highly recommended!

LK

5.0Reviewed Oct 13, 2018

An eye opening experience. I really hope this becomes a mandated course among anyone participating in any diplomatic initiatives in the Middle East and the Arabic world.

RW

5.0Reviewed Jun 29, 2020

Very interesting and thought provoking perspective on the region, its economies, governments / ruling institutions and societies.

JS

5.0Reviewed Mar 31, 2021

Clear and concise lectures, useful charts and photos, the course was a pleasure to listen to and tremendously beneficial to my understanding of the region.

TS

5.0Reviewed Jul 13, 2020

The professor is amazing and you'll just want to hear everything he has to say. The reading material and discussion forums are also great.

RY

5.0Reviewed Jun 6, 2022

Excellent course. Interesting , informative , thoughtful, well presented & should be required of all western policy makers dealing with the Middle East.

NJ

5.0Reviewed Jun 3, 2021

I loved this course. It was very informative and the Professor was so acknowledgeable. I would love to take another course that he is teaching. I learned a lot.

TG

4.0Reviewed Aug 28, 2017

The course is very interesting and helpful to understand the big picture. But sometimes I lost the overview at which point of the review/ discussion we actually are. Anyway, I recommend the course.

MP

5.0Reviewed May 18, 2020

very insightful course for me. Learning the facts of the failure and significance of the Arab world is so fascinating and new subject for me. Thank you very much.

OM

4.0Reviewed Dec 2, 2022

The very short videos followed by quizes made it very difficult to listen to a full lecture in a podcast like fashion, while later doing the test over the larger amount of information.

CS

4.0Reviewed May 16, 2021

It was a very informative course but the number of quizzes were excessive and sometimes questions were unrelated to the lecture topic.

All reviews

Showing: 20 of 157

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