Diasporic Social Mobilization and Political Participation during the Arab Uprisings
The Arab protest movements of 20102011 gave momentum and inspiration to unprecedented political mobilizations of migrants of Arab origin, whether first generation, second generation, or more, in Europe, North and South-America. This book analyzes the essential yet understudied role of Arab diasporas during the Arab revolutions, dissecting the new forms of diasporic mobilizations that emerged during the Arab Spring and that were borrowed as much from the home countries repertoire of innovations as from global movements tactics from Wall Street to Sao Paulo.
This collection is a very timely and much-welcome contribution to our understanding of the nexus between immigration and integration. At a time when the engagement of European youth in faraway violent conflicts is hitting the headlines all over Europe, this book offers balanced and renewed academic perspectives on migrants belonging, analyzing how migrants use political engagement to assert their belonging in newly-imagined home countries and, conversely, how they get involved in the politics of their origin countries to bolster their identity in host nations.
This book was originally published as a special issue of the Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies.
Claire Beaugrand is a Researcher at the Institut Franais du Proche Orient, Jerusalem. She is one of the core team members of the European research Council-funded When Authoritarianism Fails in the Arab World (WAFAW) project in charge of its programme on Diasporas and Arab revolutions and transitions. Her research focuses on issues of nationality, transnational networks, political exiles and social margins in Kuwait and Bahrain as entry points to understand the evolution of internal and external boundaries of Gulf societies.
Vincent Geisser is a Research Fellow at the CNRS, based at the Institut Franais du Proche Orient, Beirut, Lebanon. He is a core team member of the European research Council-funded When Authoritarianism Fails in the Arab World (WAFAW) project, in charge of its programme on Diasporas and Arab revolutions and transitions. In addition to social mobilizations in Lebanon, his work concentrates on authoritarianism and social movements in Tunisia as well as the public management of the Islamic faith in France.
Diasporic Social Mobilization and Political Participation during the Arab Uprisings
Edited by
Claire Beaugrand and Vincent Geisser
First published 2018
by Routledge
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Contents
Citation Information
The chapters in this book were originally published in the Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies, volume 14, issue 3 (2016). When citing this material, please use the original page numbering for each article, as follows:
Introduction to the special issue
Social Mobilization and Political Participation in the Diaspora During the Arab Spring
Claire Beaugrand and Vincent Geisser
Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies, volume 14, issue 3 (2016), pp. 239243
Chapter 1
Moroccan Diaspora in France and the February 20 Movement in Morocco
Antoine Dumont
Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies, volume 14, issue 3 (2016), pp. 244260
Chapter 2
The U.S. Coptic Diaspora and the Limit of Polarization
Nadia Marzouki
Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies, volume 14, issue 3 (2016), pp. 261276
Chapter 3
Diaspora Mobilization for Western Military Intervention During the Arab Spring
Dana M. Moss
Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies, volume 14, issue 3 (2016), pp. 277297
Chapter 4
To What Extent Can the January 25 Revolution Be Seen as a Bifurcation in the Life Stories of Egyptian Migrants in France?
Celia Lamblin
Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies, volume 14, issue 3 (2016), pp. 298313
Chapter 5
AlgiersParis Round Trips: Diasporic Pathways of a Public Civil Dissidence
Warda Hadjab
Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies, volume 14, issue 3 (2016), pp. 314333
Chapter 6
Building Support for the Asad Regime: The Syrian Diaspora in Argentina and Brazil and the Syrian Uprising
Cecilia Baeza and Paulo Pinto
Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies, volume 14, issue 3 (2016), pp. 334352
Chapter 7
Diaspora Mobilizations in the Egyptian (Post)Revolutionary Process: Comparing Transnational Political Participation in Paris and Vienna
Lea Mller-Funk
Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies, volume 14, issue 3 (2016), pp. 353370
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Notes on Contributors
Cecilia Baeza is Professor of International Relations at the Pontificia Universidade Catlica of So Paulo, Brazil.
Claire Beaugrand is a Researcher at the Institut Franais du Proche Orient, Jerusalem. She is one of the core team members of the European research Council-funded When Authoritarianism Fails in the Arab World (WAFAW) project in charge of its programme on Diasporas and Arab revolutions and transitions. Her research focuses on issues of nationality, transnational networks, political exiles and social margins in Kuwait and Bahrain as entry points to understand the evolution of internal and external boundaries of Gulf societies.
Antoine Dumont is an associate member of Migrinter, a research unit affiliated with the CNRS (Centre national de la recherche scientifique) and the University of Poitiers, France.
Vincent Geisser is a Research Fellow at the CNRS, based at the Institut Franais du Proche Orient, Beirut, Lebanon. He is a core team member of the European research Council-funded When Authoritarianism Fails in the Arab World (WAFAW) project, in charge of its programme on Diasporas and Arab revolutions and transitions. In addition to social mobilizations in Lebanon, his work concentrates on authoritarianism and social movements in Tunisia as well as the public management of the Islamic faith in France.