Non-Islamist parties in post-2011 Egypt : winners in an MB-free political sphere
Purpose Years after the 2011 uprising Egypt, it seems that the country's non-Islamist parties are still included in the political game. After significant alterations in their political sphere by mid-2013 at the advent of the Muslim Brother exclusion and the subsequent discrediting of Salafi al-...
Ausführliche Beschreibung
Autor*in: |
Hussein, Ebtisam - 1981- [verfasserIn] |
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E-Artikel |
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Sprache: |
Englisch |
Erschienen: |
2021 |
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Rechteinformationen: |
Open Access Namensnennung 4.0 International ; CC BY 4.0 |
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Schlagwörter: |
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Übergeordnetes Werk: |
Enthalten in: Review of economics and political science - Bingley : Emerald, 2018, 6(2021), 2, Seite 161-178 |
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Übergeordnetes Werk: |
volume:6 ; year:2021 ; number:2 ; pages:161-178 |
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DOI / URN: |
10.1108/REPS-08-2019-0111 |
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Katalog-ID: |
1769970797 |
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520 | |a Purpose Years after the 2011 uprising Egypt, it seems that the country's non-Islamist parties are still included in the political game. After significant alterations in their political sphere by mid-2013 at the advent of the Muslim Brother exclusion and the subsequent discrediting of Salafi al-Nour party, non-Islamist parties took clear part in the mobilization for presidential elections (2014, 2018) and competed for legislative seats in 2015. Nonetheless, it is difficult to expect them to turn into long-term key political players with clear-cut ideological postures, unique platforms and strong grass root mobilization. With the exception of the electoral gains scored by numbered parties like Free Egyptians' party and Nation's Future in 2015 legislative elections, these parties seem to be lagging behind esp. in terms of their popular base; who became winners at the advent of the radical exclusion of the MB from July 2013 onwards. Design/methodology/approach This paper is based on archival research and guided by basic assumptions of rational choice institutionalism, mainly game-theoretic versions of the approach. It is divided into four sections, three of them are chronological and the last one is thematic. Findings Egypt's non-Islamists engaged in the post-2011 political sphere, with strong Islamist rivals crippling their political chances in the first two years following the 2011 uprising. They surely capitalized on the exclusion and discrediting of the latter, but they suffered lack of ideological clarity and fragmentation from 2011 onwards with no enough evidence these weaknesses were surpassed after Islamists were "out of their way". The only strand of non-Islamist parties which came out as "game winners" were those possessing the resources and enjoying overt "friendly" relations with al-Sisi regime. Nonetheless, internal conflicts inside key secularist parties shed light on their capacity to turn into long-term players in Egypt's political sphere. Originality/value Very few papers were published on Egypt's secularists parties after the 2011 uprising from the perspective of the alteration that occurred in their political environment affecting their political weight and gains. More generally, literature on non-ruling parties in authoritarian contexts mostly reduce these parties to secondary roles allocated by ruling regimes. The paper seeks to overcome both shortages. | ||
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10.1108/REPS-08-2019-0111 doi (DE-627)1769970797 (DE-599)KXP1769970797 DE-627 ger DE-627 rda eng Hussein, Ebtisam 1981- verfasserin (DE-588)1056979550 (DE-627)794346901 (DE-576)412958945 aut Non-Islamist parties in post-2011 Egypt winners in an MB-free political sphere Ebtisam Hussein 2021 Text txt rdacontent Computermedien c rdamedia Online-Ressource cr rdacarrier DE-206 Open Access Controlled Vocabulary for Access Rights http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2 Purpose Years after the 2011 uprising Egypt, it seems that the country's non-Islamist parties are still included in the political game. After significant alterations in their political sphere by mid-2013 at the advent of the Muslim Brother exclusion and the subsequent discrediting of Salafi al-Nour party, non-Islamist parties took clear part in the mobilization for presidential elections (2014, 2018) and competed for legislative seats in 2015. Nonetheless, it is difficult to expect them to turn into long-term key political players with clear-cut ideological postures, unique platforms and strong grass root mobilization. With the exception of the electoral gains scored by numbered parties like Free Egyptians' party and Nation's Future in 2015 legislative elections, these parties seem to be lagging behind esp. in terms of their popular base; who became winners at the advent of the radical exclusion of the MB from July 2013 onwards. Design/methodology/approach This paper is based on archival research and guided by basic assumptions of rational choice institutionalism, mainly game-theoretic versions of the approach. It is divided into four sections, three of them are chronological and the last one is thematic. Findings Egypt's non-Islamists engaged in the post-2011 political sphere, with strong Islamist rivals crippling their political chances in the first two years following the 2011 uprising. They surely capitalized on the exclusion and discrediting of the latter, but they suffered lack of ideological clarity and fragmentation from 2011 onwards with no enough evidence these weaknesses were surpassed after Islamists were "out of their way". The only strand of non-Islamist parties which came out as "game winners" were those possessing the resources and enjoying overt "friendly" relations with al-Sisi regime. Nonetheless, internal conflicts inside key secularist parties shed light on their capacity to turn into long-term players in Egypt's political sphere. Originality/value Very few papers were published on Egypt's secularists parties after the 2011 uprising from the perspective of the alteration that occurred in their political environment affecting their political weight and gains. More generally, literature on non-ruling parties in authoritarian contexts mostly reduce these parties to secondary roles allocated by ruling regimes. The paper seeks to overcome both shortages. DE-206 Namensnennung 4.0 International CC BY 4.0 cc https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Arab Spring (dpeaa)DE-206 Egypt (dpeaa)DE-206 Elections (dpeaa)DE-206 Non-Islamist parties (dpeaa)DE-206 Enthalten in Review of economics and political science Bingley : Emerald, 2018 6(2021), 2, Seite 161-178 Online-Ressource (DE-627)168853377X (DE-600)3006450-8 2631-3561 nnns volume:6 year:2021 number:2 pages:161-178 https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/REPS-08-2019-0111/full/pdf?title=non-islamist-parties-in-post-2011-egypt-winners-in-an-mb-free-political-sphere Verlag kostenfrei https://doi.org/10.1108/REPS-08-2019-0111 Resolving-System kostenfrei GBV_USEFLAG_U GBV_ILN_26 ISIL_DE-206 SYSFLAG_1 GBV_KXP GBV_ILN_11 GBV_ILN_20 GBV_ILN_22 GBV_ILN_23 GBV_ILN_24 GBV_ILN_31 GBV_ILN_39 GBV_ILN_40 GBV_ILN_60 GBV_ILN_62 GBV_ILN_63 GBV_ILN_65 GBV_ILN_69 GBV_ILN_70 GBV_ILN_73 GBV_ILN_95 GBV_ILN_105 GBV_ILN_110 GBV_ILN_151 GBV_ILN_161 GBV_ILN_206 GBV_ILN_213 GBV_ILN_230 GBV_ILN_285 GBV_ILN_293 GBV_ILN_370 GBV_ILN_602 GBV_ILN_2014 GBV_ILN_4012 GBV_ILN_4037 GBV_ILN_4112 GBV_ILN_4125 GBV_ILN_4126 GBV_ILN_4249 GBV_ILN_4305 GBV_ILN_4306 GBV_ILN_4307 GBV_ILN_4313 GBV_ILN_4322 GBV_ILN_4323 GBV_ILN_4324 GBV_ILN_4325 GBV_ILN_4326 GBV_ILN_4335 GBV_ILN_4338 GBV_ILN_4367 GBV_ILN_4700 GBV_ILN_2403 GBV_ILN_2403 ISIL_DE-LFER AR 6 2021 2 161-178 26 01 0206 3976526266 x1z 09-09-21 2403 01 DE-LFER 3984792190 00 --%%-- --%%-- n --%%-- l01 06-10-21 2403 01 DE-LFER https://doi.org/10.1108/REPS-08-2019-0111 2403 01 DE-LFER https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/REPS-08-2019-0111/full/pdf?title=non-islamist-parties-in-post-2011-egypt-winners-in-an-mb-free-political-sphere |
spelling |
10.1108/REPS-08-2019-0111 doi (DE-627)1769970797 (DE-599)KXP1769970797 DE-627 ger DE-627 rda eng Hussein, Ebtisam 1981- verfasserin (DE-588)1056979550 (DE-627)794346901 (DE-576)412958945 aut Non-Islamist parties in post-2011 Egypt winners in an MB-free political sphere Ebtisam Hussein 2021 Text txt rdacontent Computermedien c rdamedia Online-Ressource cr rdacarrier DE-206 Open Access Controlled Vocabulary for Access Rights http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2 Purpose Years after the 2011 uprising Egypt, it seems that the country's non-Islamist parties are still included in the political game. After significant alterations in their political sphere by mid-2013 at the advent of the Muslim Brother exclusion and the subsequent discrediting of Salafi al-Nour party, non-Islamist parties took clear part in the mobilization for presidential elections (2014, 2018) and competed for legislative seats in 2015. Nonetheless, it is difficult to expect them to turn into long-term key political players with clear-cut ideological postures, unique platforms and strong grass root mobilization. With the exception of the electoral gains scored by numbered parties like Free Egyptians' party and Nation's Future in 2015 legislative elections, these parties seem to be lagging behind esp. in terms of their popular base; who became winners at the advent of the radical exclusion of the MB from July 2013 onwards. Design/methodology/approach This paper is based on archival research and guided by basic assumptions of rational choice institutionalism, mainly game-theoretic versions of the approach. It is divided into four sections, three of them are chronological and the last one is thematic. Findings Egypt's non-Islamists engaged in the post-2011 political sphere, with strong Islamist rivals crippling their political chances in the first two years following the 2011 uprising. They surely capitalized on the exclusion and discrediting of the latter, but they suffered lack of ideological clarity and fragmentation from 2011 onwards with no enough evidence these weaknesses were surpassed after Islamists were "out of their way". The only strand of non-Islamist parties which came out as "game winners" were those possessing the resources and enjoying overt "friendly" relations with al-Sisi regime. Nonetheless, internal conflicts inside key secularist parties shed light on their capacity to turn into long-term players in Egypt's political sphere. Originality/value Very few papers were published on Egypt's secularists parties after the 2011 uprising from the perspective of the alteration that occurred in their political environment affecting their political weight and gains. More generally, literature on non-ruling parties in authoritarian contexts mostly reduce these parties to secondary roles allocated by ruling regimes. The paper seeks to overcome both shortages. DE-206 Namensnennung 4.0 International CC BY 4.0 cc https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Arab Spring (dpeaa)DE-206 Egypt (dpeaa)DE-206 Elections (dpeaa)DE-206 Non-Islamist parties (dpeaa)DE-206 Enthalten in Review of economics and political science Bingley : Emerald, 2018 6(2021), 2, Seite 161-178 Online-Ressource (DE-627)168853377X (DE-600)3006450-8 2631-3561 nnns volume:6 year:2021 number:2 pages:161-178 https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/REPS-08-2019-0111/full/pdf?title=non-islamist-parties-in-post-2011-egypt-winners-in-an-mb-free-political-sphere Verlag kostenfrei https://doi.org/10.1108/REPS-08-2019-0111 Resolving-System kostenfrei GBV_USEFLAG_U GBV_ILN_26 ISIL_DE-206 SYSFLAG_1 GBV_KXP GBV_ILN_11 GBV_ILN_20 GBV_ILN_22 GBV_ILN_23 GBV_ILN_24 GBV_ILN_31 GBV_ILN_39 GBV_ILN_40 GBV_ILN_60 GBV_ILN_62 GBV_ILN_63 GBV_ILN_65 GBV_ILN_69 GBV_ILN_70 GBV_ILN_73 GBV_ILN_95 GBV_ILN_105 GBV_ILN_110 GBV_ILN_151 GBV_ILN_161 GBV_ILN_206 GBV_ILN_213 GBV_ILN_230 GBV_ILN_285 GBV_ILN_293 GBV_ILN_370 GBV_ILN_602 GBV_ILN_2014 GBV_ILN_4012 GBV_ILN_4037 GBV_ILN_4112 GBV_ILN_4125 GBV_ILN_4126 GBV_ILN_4249 GBV_ILN_4305 GBV_ILN_4306 GBV_ILN_4307 GBV_ILN_4313 GBV_ILN_4322 GBV_ILN_4323 GBV_ILN_4324 GBV_ILN_4325 GBV_ILN_4326 GBV_ILN_4335 GBV_ILN_4338 GBV_ILN_4367 GBV_ILN_4700 GBV_ILN_2403 GBV_ILN_2403 ISIL_DE-LFER AR 6 2021 2 161-178 26 01 0206 3976526266 x1z 09-09-21 2403 01 DE-LFER 3984792190 00 --%%-- --%%-- n --%%-- l01 06-10-21 2403 01 DE-LFER https://doi.org/10.1108/REPS-08-2019-0111 2403 01 DE-LFER https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/REPS-08-2019-0111/full/pdf?title=non-islamist-parties-in-post-2011-egypt-winners-in-an-mb-free-political-sphere |
allfields_unstemmed |
10.1108/REPS-08-2019-0111 doi (DE-627)1769970797 (DE-599)KXP1769970797 DE-627 ger DE-627 rda eng Hussein, Ebtisam 1981- verfasserin (DE-588)1056979550 (DE-627)794346901 (DE-576)412958945 aut Non-Islamist parties in post-2011 Egypt winners in an MB-free political sphere Ebtisam Hussein 2021 Text txt rdacontent Computermedien c rdamedia Online-Ressource cr rdacarrier DE-206 Open Access Controlled Vocabulary for Access Rights http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2 Purpose Years after the 2011 uprising Egypt, it seems that the country's non-Islamist parties are still included in the political game. After significant alterations in their political sphere by mid-2013 at the advent of the Muslim Brother exclusion and the subsequent discrediting of Salafi al-Nour party, non-Islamist parties took clear part in the mobilization for presidential elections (2014, 2018) and competed for legislative seats in 2015. Nonetheless, it is difficult to expect them to turn into long-term key political players with clear-cut ideological postures, unique platforms and strong grass root mobilization. With the exception of the electoral gains scored by numbered parties like Free Egyptians' party and Nation's Future in 2015 legislative elections, these parties seem to be lagging behind esp. in terms of their popular base; who became winners at the advent of the radical exclusion of the MB from July 2013 onwards. Design/methodology/approach This paper is based on archival research and guided by basic assumptions of rational choice institutionalism, mainly game-theoretic versions of the approach. It is divided into four sections, three of them are chronological and the last one is thematic. Findings Egypt's non-Islamists engaged in the post-2011 political sphere, with strong Islamist rivals crippling their political chances in the first two years following the 2011 uprising. They surely capitalized on the exclusion and discrediting of the latter, but they suffered lack of ideological clarity and fragmentation from 2011 onwards with no enough evidence these weaknesses were surpassed after Islamists were "out of their way". The only strand of non-Islamist parties which came out as "game winners" were those possessing the resources and enjoying overt "friendly" relations with al-Sisi regime. Nonetheless, internal conflicts inside key secularist parties shed light on their capacity to turn into long-term players in Egypt's political sphere. Originality/value Very few papers were published on Egypt's secularists parties after the 2011 uprising from the perspective of the alteration that occurred in their political environment affecting their political weight and gains. More generally, literature on non-ruling parties in authoritarian contexts mostly reduce these parties to secondary roles allocated by ruling regimes. The paper seeks to overcome both shortages. DE-206 Namensnennung 4.0 International CC BY 4.0 cc https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Arab Spring (dpeaa)DE-206 Egypt (dpeaa)DE-206 Elections (dpeaa)DE-206 Non-Islamist parties (dpeaa)DE-206 Enthalten in Review of economics and political science Bingley : Emerald, 2018 6(2021), 2, Seite 161-178 Online-Ressource (DE-627)168853377X (DE-600)3006450-8 2631-3561 nnns volume:6 year:2021 number:2 pages:161-178 https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/REPS-08-2019-0111/full/pdf?title=non-islamist-parties-in-post-2011-egypt-winners-in-an-mb-free-political-sphere Verlag kostenfrei https://doi.org/10.1108/REPS-08-2019-0111 Resolving-System kostenfrei GBV_USEFLAG_U GBV_ILN_26 ISIL_DE-206 SYSFLAG_1 GBV_KXP GBV_ILN_11 GBV_ILN_20 GBV_ILN_22 GBV_ILN_23 GBV_ILN_24 GBV_ILN_31 GBV_ILN_39 GBV_ILN_40 GBV_ILN_60 GBV_ILN_62 GBV_ILN_63 GBV_ILN_65 GBV_ILN_69 GBV_ILN_70 GBV_ILN_73 GBV_ILN_95 GBV_ILN_105 GBV_ILN_110 GBV_ILN_151 GBV_ILN_161 GBV_ILN_206 GBV_ILN_213 GBV_ILN_230 GBV_ILN_285 GBV_ILN_293 GBV_ILN_370 GBV_ILN_602 GBV_ILN_2014 GBV_ILN_4012 GBV_ILN_4037 GBV_ILN_4112 GBV_ILN_4125 GBV_ILN_4126 GBV_ILN_4249 GBV_ILN_4305 GBV_ILN_4306 GBV_ILN_4307 GBV_ILN_4313 GBV_ILN_4322 GBV_ILN_4323 GBV_ILN_4324 GBV_ILN_4325 GBV_ILN_4326 GBV_ILN_4335 GBV_ILN_4338 GBV_ILN_4367 GBV_ILN_4700 GBV_ILN_2403 GBV_ILN_2403 ISIL_DE-LFER AR 6 2021 2 161-178 26 01 0206 3976526266 x1z 09-09-21 2403 01 DE-LFER 3984792190 00 --%%-- --%%-- n --%%-- l01 06-10-21 2403 01 DE-LFER https://doi.org/10.1108/REPS-08-2019-0111 2403 01 DE-LFER https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/REPS-08-2019-0111/full/pdf?title=non-islamist-parties-in-post-2011-egypt-winners-in-an-mb-free-political-sphere |
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10.1108/REPS-08-2019-0111 doi (DE-627)1769970797 (DE-599)KXP1769970797 DE-627 ger DE-627 rda eng Hussein, Ebtisam 1981- verfasserin (DE-588)1056979550 (DE-627)794346901 (DE-576)412958945 aut Non-Islamist parties in post-2011 Egypt winners in an MB-free political sphere Ebtisam Hussein 2021 Text txt rdacontent Computermedien c rdamedia Online-Ressource cr rdacarrier DE-206 Open Access Controlled Vocabulary for Access Rights http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2 Purpose Years after the 2011 uprising Egypt, it seems that the country's non-Islamist parties are still included in the political game. After significant alterations in their political sphere by mid-2013 at the advent of the Muslim Brother exclusion and the subsequent discrediting of Salafi al-Nour party, non-Islamist parties took clear part in the mobilization for presidential elections (2014, 2018) and competed for legislative seats in 2015. Nonetheless, it is difficult to expect them to turn into long-term key political players with clear-cut ideological postures, unique platforms and strong grass root mobilization. With the exception of the electoral gains scored by numbered parties like Free Egyptians' party and Nation's Future in 2015 legislative elections, these parties seem to be lagging behind esp. in terms of their popular base; who became winners at the advent of the radical exclusion of the MB from July 2013 onwards. Design/methodology/approach This paper is based on archival research and guided by basic assumptions of rational choice institutionalism, mainly game-theoretic versions of the approach. It is divided into four sections, three of them are chronological and the last one is thematic. Findings Egypt's non-Islamists engaged in the post-2011 political sphere, with strong Islamist rivals crippling their political chances in the first two years following the 2011 uprising. They surely capitalized on the exclusion and discrediting of the latter, but they suffered lack of ideological clarity and fragmentation from 2011 onwards with no enough evidence these weaknesses were surpassed after Islamists were "out of their way". The only strand of non-Islamist parties which came out as "game winners" were those possessing the resources and enjoying overt "friendly" relations with al-Sisi regime. Nonetheless, internal conflicts inside key secularist parties shed light on their capacity to turn into long-term players in Egypt's political sphere. Originality/value Very few papers were published on Egypt's secularists parties after the 2011 uprising from the perspective of the alteration that occurred in their political environment affecting their political weight and gains. More generally, literature on non-ruling parties in authoritarian contexts mostly reduce these parties to secondary roles allocated by ruling regimes. The paper seeks to overcome both shortages. DE-206 Namensnennung 4.0 International CC BY 4.0 cc https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Arab Spring (dpeaa)DE-206 Egypt (dpeaa)DE-206 Elections (dpeaa)DE-206 Non-Islamist parties (dpeaa)DE-206 Enthalten in Review of economics and political science Bingley : Emerald, 2018 6(2021), 2, Seite 161-178 Online-Ressource (DE-627)168853377X (DE-600)3006450-8 2631-3561 nnns volume:6 year:2021 number:2 pages:161-178 https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/REPS-08-2019-0111/full/pdf?title=non-islamist-parties-in-post-2011-egypt-winners-in-an-mb-free-political-sphere Verlag kostenfrei https://doi.org/10.1108/REPS-08-2019-0111 Resolving-System kostenfrei GBV_USEFLAG_U GBV_ILN_26 ISIL_DE-206 SYSFLAG_1 GBV_KXP GBV_ILN_11 GBV_ILN_20 GBV_ILN_22 GBV_ILN_23 GBV_ILN_24 GBV_ILN_31 GBV_ILN_39 GBV_ILN_40 GBV_ILN_60 GBV_ILN_62 GBV_ILN_63 GBV_ILN_65 GBV_ILN_69 GBV_ILN_70 GBV_ILN_73 GBV_ILN_95 GBV_ILN_105 GBV_ILN_110 GBV_ILN_151 GBV_ILN_161 GBV_ILN_206 GBV_ILN_213 GBV_ILN_230 GBV_ILN_285 GBV_ILN_293 GBV_ILN_370 GBV_ILN_602 GBV_ILN_2014 GBV_ILN_4012 GBV_ILN_4037 GBV_ILN_4112 GBV_ILN_4125 GBV_ILN_4126 GBV_ILN_4249 GBV_ILN_4305 GBV_ILN_4306 GBV_ILN_4307 GBV_ILN_4313 GBV_ILN_4322 GBV_ILN_4323 GBV_ILN_4324 GBV_ILN_4325 GBV_ILN_4326 GBV_ILN_4335 GBV_ILN_4338 GBV_ILN_4367 GBV_ILN_4700 GBV_ILN_2403 GBV_ILN_2403 ISIL_DE-LFER AR 6 2021 2 161-178 26 01 0206 3976526266 x1z 09-09-21 2403 01 DE-LFER 3984792190 00 --%%-- --%%-- n --%%-- l01 06-10-21 2403 01 DE-LFER https://doi.org/10.1108/REPS-08-2019-0111 2403 01 DE-LFER https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/REPS-08-2019-0111/full/pdf?title=non-islamist-parties-in-post-2011-egypt-winners-in-an-mb-free-political-sphere |
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10.1108/REPS-08-2019-0111 doi (DE-627)1769970797 (DE-599)KXP1769970797 DE-627 ger DE-627 rda eng Hussein, Ebtisam 1981- verfasserin (DE-588)1056979550 (DE-627)794346901 (DE-576)412958945 aut Non-Islamist parties in post-2011 Egypt winners in an MB-free political sphere Ebtisam Hussein 2021 Text txt rdacontent Computermedien c rdamedia Online-Ressource cr rdacarrier DE-206 Open Access Controlled Vocabulary for Access Rights http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2 Purpose Years after the 2011 uprising Egypt, it seems that the country's non-Islamist parties are still included in the political game. After significant alterations in their political sphere by mid-2013 at the advent of the Muslim Brother exclusion and the subsequent discrediting of Salafi al-Nour party, non-Islamist parties took clear part in the mobilization for presidential elections (2014, 2018) and competed for legislative seats in 2015. Nonetheless, it is difficult to expect them to turn into long-term key political players with clear-cut ideological postures, unique platforms and strong grass root mobilization. With the exception of the electoral gains scored by numbered parties like Free Egyptians' party and Nation's Future in 2015 legislative elections, these parties seem to be lagging behind esp. in terms of their popular base; who became winners at the advent of the radical exclusion of the MB from July 2013 onwards. Design/methodology/approach This paper is based on archival research and guided by basic assumptions of rational choice institutionalism, mainly game-theoretic versions of the approach. It is divided into four sections, three of them are chronological and the last one is thematic. Findings Egypt's non-Islamists engaged in the post-2011 political sphere, with strong Islamist rivals crippling their political chances in the first two years following the 2011 uprising. They surely capitalized on the exclusion and discrediting of the latter, but they suffered lack of ideological clarity and fragmentation from 2011 onwards with no enough evidence these weaknesses were surpassed after Islamists were "out of their way". The only strand of non-Islamist parties which came out as "game winners" were those possessing the resources and enjoying overt "friendly" relations with al-Sisi regime. Nonetheless, internal conflicts inside key secularist parties shed light on their capacity to turn into long-term players in Egypt's political sphere. Originality/value Very few papers were published on Egypt's secularists parties after the 2011 uprising from the perspective of the alteration that occurred in their political environment affecting their political weight and gains. More generally, literature on non-ruling parties in authoritarian contexts mostly reduce these parties to secondary roles allocated by ruling regimes. The paper seeks to overcome both shortages. DE-206 Namensnennung 4.0 International CC BY 4.0 cc https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Arab Spring (dpeaa)DE-206 Egypt (dpeaa)DE-206 Elections (dpeaa)DE-206 Non-Islamist parties (dpeaa)DE-206 Enthalten in Review of economics and political science Bingley : Emerald, 2018 6(2021), 2, Seite 161-178 Online-Ressource (DE-627)168853377X (DE-600)3006450-8 2631-3561 nnns volume:6 year:2021 number:2 pages:161-178 https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/REPS-08-2019-0111/full/pdf?title=non-islamist-parties-in-post-2011-egypt-winners-in-an-mb-free-political-sphere Verlag kostenfrei https://doi.org/10.1108/REPS-08-2019-0111 Resolving-System kostenfrei GBV_USEFLAG_U GBV_ILN_26 ISIL_DE-206 SYSFLAG_1 GBV_KXP GBV_ILN_11 GBV_ILN_20 GBV_ILN_22 GBV_ILN_23 GBV_ILN_24 GBV_ILN_31 GBV_ILN_39 GBV_ILN_40 GBV_ILN_60 GBV_ILN_62 GBV_ILN_63 GBV_ILN_65 GBV_ILN_69 GBV_ILN_70 GBV_ILN_73 GBV_ILN_95 GBV_ILN_105 GBV_ILN_110 GBV_ILN_151 GBV_ILN_161 GBV_ILN_206 GBV_ILN_213 GBV_ILN_230 GBV_ILN_285 GBV_ILN_293 GBV_ILN_370 GBV_ILN_602 GBV_ILN_2014 GBV_ILN_4012 GBV_ILN_4037 GBV_ILN_4112 GBV_ILN_4125 GBV_ILN_4126 GBV_ILN_4249 GBV_ILN_4305 GBV_ILN_4306 GBV_ILN_4307 GBV_ILN_4313 GBV_ILN_4322 GBV_ILN_4323 GBV_ILN_4324 GBV_ILN_4325 GBV_ILN_4326 GBV_ILN_4335 GBV_ILN_4338 GBV_ILN_4367 GBV_ILN_4700 GBV_ILN_2403 GBV_ILN_2403 ISIL_DE-LFER AR 6 2021 2 161-178 26 01 0206 3976526266 x1z 09-09-21 2403 01 DE-LFER 3984792190 00 --%%-- --%%-- n --%%-- l01 06-10-21 2403 01 DE-LFER https://doi.org/10.1108/REPS-08-2019-0111 2403 01 DE-LFER https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/REPS-08-2019-0111/full/pdf?title=non-islamist-parties-in-post-2011-egypt-winners-in-an-mb-free-political-sphere |
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Non-Islamist parties in post-2011 Egypt winners in an MB-free political sphere Ebtisam Hussein Arab Spring (dpeaa)DE-206 Egypt (dpeaa)DE-206 Elections (dpeaa)DE-206 Non-Islamist parties (dpeaa)DE-206 |
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Non-Islamist parties in post-2011 Egypt winners in an MB-free political sphere |
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Purpose Years after the 2011 uprising Egypt, it seems that the country's non-Islamist parties are still included in the political game. After significant alterations in their political sphere by mid-2013 at the advent of the Muslim Brother exclusion and the subsequent discrediting of Salafi al-Nour party, non-Islamist parties took clear part in the mobilization for presidential elections (2014, 2018) and competed for legislative seats in 2015. Nonetheless, it is difficult to expect them to turn into long-term key political players with clear-cut ideological postures, unique platforms and strong grass root mobilization. With the exception of the electoral gains scored by numbered parties like Free Egyptians' party and Nation's Future in 2015 legislative elections, these parties seem to be lagging behind esp. in terms of their popular base; who became winners at the advent of the radical exclusion of the MB from July 2013 onwards. Design/methodology/approach This paper is based on archival research and guided by basic assumptions of rational choice institutionalism, mainly game-theoretic versions of the approach. It is divided into four sections, three of them are chronological and the last one is thematic. Findings Egypt's non-Islamists engaged in the post-2011 political sphere, with strong Islamist rivals crippling their political chances in the first two years following the 2011 uprising. They surely capitalized on the exclusion and discrediting of the latter, but they suffered lack of ideological clarity and fragmentation from 2011 onwards with no enough evidence these weaknesses were surpassed after Islamists were "out of their way". The only strand of non-Islamist parties which came out as "game winners" were those possessing the resources and enjoying overt "friendly" relations with al-Sisi regime. Nonetheless, internal conflicts inside key secularist parties shed light on their capacity to turn into long-term players in Egypt's political sphere. Originality/value Very few papers were published on Egypt's secularists parties after the 2011 uprising from the perspective of the alteration that occurred in their political environment affecting their political weight and gains. More generally, literature on non-ruling parties in authoritarian contexts mostly reduce these parties to secondary roles allocated by ruling regimes. The paper seeks to overcome both shortages. |
abstractGer |
Purpose Years after the 2011 uprising Egypt, it seems that the country's non-Islamist parties are still included in the political game. After significant alterations in their political sphere by mid-2013 at the advent of the Muslim Brother exclusion and the subsequent discrediting of Salafi al-Nour party, non-Islamist parties took clear part in the mobilization for presidential elections (2014, 2018) and competed for legislative seats in 2015. Nonetheless, it is difficult to expect them to turn into long-term key political players with clear-cut ideological postures, unique platforms and strong grass root mobilization. With the exception of the electoral gains scored by numbered parties like Free Egyptians' party and Nation's Future in 2015 legislative elections, these parties seem to be lagging behind esp. in terms of their popular base; who became winners at the advent of the radical exclusion of the MB from July 2013 onwards. Design/methodology/approach This paper is based on archival research and guided by basic assumptions of rational choice institutionalism, mainly game-theoretic versions of the approach. It is divided into four sections, three of them are chronological and the last one is thematic. Findings Egypt's non-Islamists engaged in the post-2011 political sphere, with strong Islamist rivals crippling their political chances in the first two years following the 2011 uprising. They surely capitalized on the exclusion and discrediting of the latter, but they suffered lack of ideological clarity and fragmentation from 2011 onwards with no enough evidence these weaknesses were surpassed after Islamists were "out of their way". The only strand of non-Islamist parties which came out as "game winners" were those possessing the resources and enjoying overt "friendly" relations with al-Sisi regime. Nonetheless, internal conflicts inside key secularist parties shed light on their capacity to turn into long-term players in Egypt's political sphere. Originality/value Very few papers were published on Egypt's secularists parties after the 2011 uprising from the perspective of the alteration that occurred in their political environment affecting their political weight and gains. More generally, literature on non-ruling parties in authoritarian contexts mostly reduce these parties to secondary roles allocated by ruling regimes. The paper seeks to overcome both shortages. |
abstract_unstemmed |
Purpose Years after the 2011 uprising Egypt, it seems that the country's non-Islamist parties are still included in the political game. After significant alterations in their political sphere by mid-2013 at the advent of the Muslim Brother exclusion and the subsequent discrediting of Salafi al-Nour party, non-Islamist parties took clear part in the mobilization for presidential elections (2014, 2018) and competed for legislative seats in 2015. Nonetheless, it is difficult to expect them to turn into long-term key political players with clear-cut ideological postures, unique platforms and strong grass root mobilization. With the exception of the electoral gains scored by numbered parties like Free Egyptians' party and Nation's Future in 2015 legislative elections, these parties seem to be lagging behind esp. in terms of their popular base; who became winners at the advent of the radical exclusion of the MB from July 2013 onwards. Design/methodology/approach This paper is based on archival research and guided by basic assumptions of rational choice institutionalism, mainly game-theoretic versions of the approach. It is divided into four sections, three of them are chronological and the last one is thematic. Findings Egypt's non-Islamists engaged in the post-2011 political sphere, with strong Islamist rivals crippling their political chances in the first two years following the 2011 uprising. They surely capitalized on the exclusion and discrediting of the latter, but they suffered lack of ideological clarity and fragmentation from 2011 onwards with no enough evidence these weaknesses were surpassed after Islamists were "out of their way". The only strand of non-Islamist parties which came out as "game winners" were those possessing the resources and enjoying overt "friendly" relations with al-Sisi regime. Nonetheless, internal conflicts inside key secularist parties shed light on their capacity to turn into long-term players in Egypt's political sphere. Originality/value Very few papers were published on Egypt's secularists parties after the 2011 uprising from the perspective of the alteration that occurred in their political environment affecting their political weight and gains. More generally, literature on non-ruling parties in authoritarian contexts mostly reduce these parties to secondary roles allocated by ruling regimes. The paper seeks to overcome both shortages. |
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7.398963 |