Journal Article
Understanding Revolution in the Middle East: The Central Role of the Middle Class
Abstract
The paper presents the outlines of a coherent, structural, long term account of the socioeconomic and political evolution of the Arab republics that can explain both the persistence of autocracy until 2011, and the its eventual collapse, in a way that is empirically verifable. I argue that the changing interests of the middle class would have to be a central aspect of a coherent story, on accounts of both distributional and modernization considerations, and that the ongoing transformation can be best understood in terms of their defection from the autocratic order to a new democratic order, which is still in formation. I then review what the evidence says in two central parts of the emerging narrative, for the case of Egypt: first,by looking directly at changes in opinion and asking whether these are consistent with the predictions of the theory. And second, by examining the corporate sector before and during the uprisings of 2011 in order to understand better the performance of "crony capitalism", and to evaluate whether it may have affected the incentives of the middle class to defect.
The remainder of the Middle East Development Journal is available online for free until October, 2013. You can access it here: www.worldscientific.com/worldscinet/medj Please note you will have to either log-in or create an account (for free) to read the articles if you do not have access through the Harvard University library system.
For more information on this publication:
Please contact
Middle East Initiative
For Academic Citation:
Diwan, Ishac.. “Understanding Revolution in the Middle East: The Central Role of the Middle Class.” , vol. 5. (May 2013) .
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Abstract
The paper presents the outlines of a coherent, structural, long term account of the socioeconomic and political evolution of the Arab republics that can explain both the persistence of autocracy until 2011, and the its eventual collapse, in a way that is empirically verifable. I argue that the changing interests of the middle class would have to be a central aspect of a coherent story, on accounts of both distributional and modernization considerations, and that the ongoing transformation can be best understood in terms of their defection from the autocratic order to a new democratic order, which is still in formation. I then review what the evidence says in two central parts of the emerging narrative, for the case of Egypt: first,by looking directly at changes in opinion and asking whether these are consistent with the predictions of the theory. And second, by examining the corporate sector before and during the uprisings of 2011 in order to understand better the performance of "crony capitalism", and to evaluate whether it may have affected the incentives of the middle class to defect.
The remainder of the Middle East Development Journal is available online for free until October, 2013. You can access it here: www.worldscientific.com/worldscinet/medj Please note you will have to either log-in or create an account (for free) to read the articles if you do not have access through the Harvard University library system.
- Recommended
- In the Spotlight
- Most Viewed
Recommended
Audio - Radio Open Source
JFK in the American Century
Analysis & Opinions - Foreign Policy
The Realist Case for the Non-Realist Biden
Newspaper Article - Harvard Crimson
HKS Prof. Aldy Talks Clean Energy, Economic Policy at Belfer Center Webinar
In the Spotlight
Most Viewed
Policy Brief - Quarterly Journal: International Security
The Future of U.S. Nuclear Policy: The Case for No First Use
Discussion Paper - Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, Harvard Kennedy School
Why the United States Should Spread Democracy


