Author(s)
Evirgen, YusufContributor(s)
Işık Üniversitesi, İktisadi ve İdari Bilimler Fakültesi, Uluslararası İlişkiler BölümüIşık University, Faculty of Economics and Administrative Sciences Department of International Relations
286143
Keywords
BooksBook reviews
Democratization
Islamism
Government archives
Arab Spring
History
Political leadership
Legislatures
Elections
Islam
Political activism
Religion politics relationship
Secularism
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http://hdl.handle.net/11729/1571Abstract
Political Islam in Tunisia offers some helpful explanatory tools as appendixes, such as the al-Nahda Electoral Programme of 2011; the Statute of the al-Nahda Movement, July 2012; the Final Declaration of the Eight Congress of al-Nahda, May 2007; the Final Declaration of the Seventh Congress of al-Nahda, April 3, 2001; an Account of an al-Nahda Campaign Event in the Electoral District of Tunis 1; and Selected Interviews. The author searches for historical ties between alNahda and the Muslim Brotherhood, but this focus causes her to overlook some of the alNahda movement's traditional ties. [...]we know that the Arab Spring affected the alNahda movement's structure in different ways. [...]Political Islam in Tunisia offers a helpful introduction to readers interested in political Islam, Islamism, Tunisia, and the al-Nahda movement.Publisher's Version
Date
2019-04-22Type
Book ReviewIdentifier
oai:localhost:11729/15711302-177X
WOS:000461165700019
http://hdl.handle.net/11729/1571
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