Civil Society in Algeria: Activism, Identity and the Democratic Process
Autor Jessica Ayesha Northeyen Limba Engleză Hardback – 3 oct 2018
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781788311595
ISBN-10: 1788311590
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: 16 b&w
Dimensiuni: 138 x 216 x 27 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția I.B.Tauris
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1788311590
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: 16 b&w
Dimensiuni: 138 x 216 x 27 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția I.B.Tauris
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Algeria
plays
an
increasingly
important
role
in
the
stability
and
future
peaceful
relations
across
the
Middle
East
and
North
Africa
Notă biografică
Jessica
Ayesha
Northeyis
the
Director
of
Postgraduate
Research
at
the
Centre
for
Trust,
Peace
and
Social
Relations
of
the
University
of
Coventry,
UK.
She
is
a
country
expert
for
the
Bertelsmann
Foundation,
Washington
D.C.
and
has
carried
out
numerous
research
assignments
and
electoral
observation
missions
for
international
organisations,
including
the
EU,
the
Westminster
Foundation
and
the
World
Bank.
She
completed
her
PhD
in
Social
&
Political
Sciences
at
the
European
University
Institute,
Florence.
Cuprins
AcknowledgementsIntroductionData
GatheringScope
and
Structure
of
the
BookPART
I
Civil
Society
and
Democracy
Promotion
in
the
Arab
WorldChapter
1
Civil
Society
in
the
Arab
World
and
AlgeriaAssociations
in
the
Arab
WorldCivil
Society
and
DemocracyPerceptions
of
Civil
Society
in
AlgeriaAssociative
Activism
in
a
Post-Conflict
EnvironmentConclusionChapter
2
International
Donors
and
Democracy
PromotionDevelopment
Paradigms
and
the
Language
of
DonorsRegional
Variations
in
EU
Support
to
Civil
SocietyCivil
Society
Support
in
the
MENA
Region:
Algeria,
Palestine
and
LebanonConclusionPART
II
Algerian
Civil
Society
and
Relations
with
the
StateChapter
3
Historical
Perspectives
on
Civil
Society
in
AlgeriaTraditional
Civil
Society
and
the
Impact
of
ColonialismCivil
Society
in
an
Independent
AlgeriaDemocratic
Opening
and
the
Black
DecadeConclusionChapter
4
Civil
Society
and
the
StateState-Society
Relations
and
the
Failure
of
DialogueThe
Arab
Spring,
Associative
Action
and
State
ResponsesCivil
Society
and
the
2012
Law
on
AssociationsConclusionChapter
5
Associations
in
AlgeriaA
New
Typology
of
AssociationsThe
Regional
Focus
of
Algerian
AssociationsThe
Sector
Focus
of
Algerian
AssociationsConclusionChapter
6
Algerian
Associations
Protecting
the
PastHeritage
Associations
in
AlgeriaAssociations
and
Urban
HistoryPreserving
Roman
History
in
AlgeriaAlgeria's
Archaeological
Past
Religious
Heritage
and
TraditionsConclusionChapter
7
Algerian
Associations
and
Social
WelfareSocial
Sector
Associations
in
AlgeriaSocial
Work,
Disability
and
New
Voices
in
OranContesting
State
Provision
in
KabyliaAssociations,
Faith
and
Health
Care
in
El
OuedDealing
with
TraumaConclusionPART
III
Donors,
Democracy
and
the
Language
of
OthersChapter
8
Europe,
Civil
Society
and
Democracy
in
AlgeriaEuropean
Diplomacy
in
AlgeriaEuropean
Union
Programmes
in
AlgeriaEuropean
Support
to
Algerian
civil
societyConclusionChapter
9.
Language
and
the
Construction
of
Civil
SocietyThe
Performative
Effect
of
LanguageHistorical
NarrativesLanguage
Policies
and
the
Public
SphereConclusionConclusionNotesBibliography
Recenzii
'A
breath
of
fresh
air
has
entered
the
polarised
debates
about
associational
life.
After
interviewing
civil
society
actors
in
Algeria
for
more
than
ten
years,
Jessica
Northey
confidently
takes
us
beyond
facile
generalisations
about
the
value
of
associations.
She
shows
-
in
detail
and
with
subtlety
-
how
citizens
in
this
turbulent
and
authoritarian
country
have
been
staking
claims
to
be
legitimate
political
actors.
She
uses
her
trove
of
local
insights
to
suggest
sometimes
surprising
answers
to
weighty
social
scientific
questions:
can
associations
inculcate
democratic
behavior?
Do
external
donors
like
the
EU
help
or
hinder
the
development
of
this
democratic
process,
as
fragile
as
it
is
precious?'
'Based on months of in-depth fieldwork, this highly original book explores the internal dynamics of Algerian society, its attempts to take advantage of any vacuum inadvertently provided by the bureaucracy and its pragmatic use of European support, without adopting the conceptual framework of European institutions. It will be of great interest to those working on the evolution of civil society and national identity and on the future of political participation in Algeria and the region.'
'This is an important and welcome publication for scholars seeking to understand therelationship between civil society and state not only in Algeria but across MENA. Jessica Northey offers engaging insights into a range of grass roots organisations in Algeria based on her extensive fieldwork and knowledge of the political, historical and social issues at play. Her focus is on the construction of civil society in Algeria over the past three decades, examining the effects of the post-1988 reforms, the role of European Union funding and the link between such forms of funding for associations and the EU's strategic aims and objectives in the Southern Mediterranean. But it is her astute use of empirical data gathered from an impressive range of interviews carried out during extensive field-work trips to Algeria that gives the reader such a real insight into the resilience and agency of ordinary Algerians - those who have worked for social and cultural change through associations that allow communities to shape change. This book is marked by methodological rigour, enriched by Northey's linguistic and listening skills and informed by human empathy.Civil Society in Algeriabrings us into the heart of everyday Algeria in a way that few books do and is essential reading for those of us who seek to understand civil society in North Africa.'
'This fascinating book identifies some of the key dynamics of socio-political change in contemporary Algeria. Drawing on personal experience and wide-ranging research in the country, including impressive fieldwork, Northey's analysis of the emergence and behaviour of numerous voluntary associations, active particularly in the fields of heritage preservation and social welfare, charts an extremely interesting and positive evolution in the relationship between state and society and argues persuasively that earlier pessimistic assessments of the role of associations in Algeria are now seriously out-of-date. A crucial feature of these dynamics is the way the associations she describes have eschewed contestation of the state and instead have developed strategies of constructive engagement and persuasion that tend to prompt new, equally constructive, responses on the part of Algerian officialdom. The associations demonstrated how their independent initiatives and activities, while advancing particular concerns and projects, have also been contributing to the commonweal, thus inducing the state to adopt a new and positive attitude towards them. Now, association activists and government agencies and office holders have begun to move along vital learning curves into new and hopeful territory. Northey's lucid and judicious analysis authorises us at last to speak of the emergence of civil society in Algeria without debasing that venerable concept. This is an original and important book and a most welcome contribution to the study of contemporary Algeria.'
'Based on months of in-depth fieldwork, this highly original book explores the internal dynamics of Algerian society, its attempts to take advantage of any vacuum inadvertently provided by the bureaucracy and its pragmatic use of European support, without adopting the conceptual framework of European institutions. It will be of great interest to those working on the evolution of civil society and national identity and on the future of political participation in Algeria and the region.'
'This is an important and welcome publication for scholars seeking to understand therelationship between civil society and state not only in Algeria but across MENA. Jessica Northey offers engaging insights into a range of grass roots organisations in Algeria based on her extensive fieldwork and knowledge of the political, historical and social issues at play. Her focus is on the construction of civil society in Algeria over the past three decades, examining the effects of the post-1988 reforms, the role of European Union funding and the link between such forms of funding for associations and the EU's strategic aims and objectives in the Southern Mediterranean. But it is her astute use of empirical data gathered from an impressive range of interviews carried out during extensive field-work trips to Algeria that gives the reader such a real insight into the resilience and agency of ordinary Algerians - those who have worked for social and cultural change through associations that allow communities to shape change. This book is marked by methodological rigour, enriched by Northey's linguistic and listening skills and informed by human empathy.Civil Society in Algeriabrings us into the heart of everyday Algeria in a way that few books do and is essential reading for those of us who seek to understand civil society in North Africa.'
'This fascinating book identifies some of the key dynamics of socio-political change in contemporary Algeria. Drawing on personal experience and wide-ranging research in the country, including impressive fieldwork, Northey's analysis of the emergence and behaviour of numerous voluntary associations, active particularly in the fields of heritage preservation and social welfare, charts an extremely interesting and positive evolution in the relationship between state and society and argues persuasively that earlier pessimistic assessments of the role of associations in Algeria are now seriously out-of-date. A crucial feature of these dynamics is the way the associations she describes have eschewed contestation of the state and instead have developed strategies of constructive engagement and persuasion that tend to prompt new, equally constructive, responses on the part of Algerian officialdom. The associations demonstrated how their independent initiatives and activities, while advancing particular concerns and projects, have also been contributing to the commonweal, thus inducing the state to adopt a new and positive attitude towards them. Now, association activists and government agencies and office holders have begun to move along vital learning curves into new and hopeful territory. Northey's lucid and judicious analysis authorises us at last to speak of the emergence of civil society in Algeria without debasing that venerable concept. This is an original and important book and a most welcome contribution to the study of contemporary Algeria.'