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Syria from Reform to Revolt, Vol. 2 is the second collection of essays drawn from " Syria under Bashar al-Asad, " the first international, interdisciplinary gathering of scholarly experts on contemporary Syria, held Lund University's Center for Middle Eastern Studies in October 2010. The first volume focuses on political economy and international relations; this book explores the quotidian politics emerging in cultural production and religious expression. Our volume fills a longstanding need—intensified since the beginning of the conflict in 2011—for ethnographically grounded, historically inflected analyses of Syrian society. We provide novel perspectives on how Bashar al-Asad's pivotal first decade of rule engendered transformations in power relations that fed the protest movement turned civil and proxy war. The volume has just entered its second printing.
http://www.booksandideas.net/IMG/pdf/20150126_syria_vignal_en.pdf Reviewed: La Syrie de Bashar al-Asad, Anatomie d’un régime autoritaire, [Bashar al-Asad’s Syria: Anatomy of an Authoritarian Regime] by Souhaïl Belhadj, Belin, 2013, 464 pages, 25€.
Books and ideas, 2012
The attention given today to the armed uprising in Syria must not conceal the fact that there also exists a peaceful revolutionary dynamic, which is deeply rooted in society.
I.B. Tauris, 2023
‘Syria 2011-2013: Revolution and Tyranny before the Mayhem’ is Azmi Bishara’s third book of his Revolutions Trilogy including: ‘Understanding Revolutions: Opening Acts in Tunisia’ and ‘Egypt: Revolution, Failed Transition and Counter-Revolution’. In this series, Bishara provides a theoretical analysis in addition to a rich, comprehensive and lucid assessment of the revolutions in three Arab countries: Tunisia, Egypt and Syria. This Revolutions Trilogy discusses the social, economic and political backdrop to the Arab revolutions that began in 2011. Bishara’s book on the Syrian Revolution is one of the most comprehensive and profound works on the subject published to date. Originally released in Arabic in 2013, this expanded and revised English edition examines the complex roots of Syria's political and sectarian conflicts. Its publication brings well-known Arabic-language scholarship to the English-speaking world. The book provides an analysis of the country's socio-economic background, examining the Syrian regime's strategy, its political and media discourse, the ruralization and militarization of Syrian politics, and the subsequent economic 'liberalization', which eventually led to the revolt against the Baath party. Bishara delivers an analytical record of the revolution from day one to its subsequent descent into civil war, chronicled in two stages: the peaceful civil stage and the armed stage. He excavates the very first signs of protests throughout the country with a comprehensive analysis of what drove those early events, explaining the failure of the transition and how it slipped into a civil meltdown that has impacted on the Arab region ever since. Bishara's analysis first centres on the regime's strategy, unveiling despotism, massacres, kidnapping, sectarian tendencies, jihadist violence, the emergence of warlords, and the chaotic spread of arms. He critically discusses the role of the opposition, narrating in detail the events that broke out and how a peaceful protest turned into an armed struggle. Bishara has supplemented this seminal work with a rigorous account of the developments that Syria and the Syrian people have experienced over the last decade. Written as the revolution unfolded, this book conveys a sense of immediacy and urgency as Bishara makes wide-ranging assessments with many of his forecasts corroborated in the years to come. The book is renowned for its use of primary source material, and high-level interviews, thus preserving the memory of the revolution and remaining one of the most comprehensive reference books on the subject to date.
2017
McMeekin, 2011; Clarke, 2012), and it later echoes the hotly debated effort of Timothy Snyder to re-frame the Nazi and Soviet genocides and the Second World War in Bloodlands (2010). This new way of narrating the history of the Middle East gives the reader appetite for a more up-to-date version of Hopkirk's 1990 study of The Great Game, perhaps with renewed focus devoted to the way in which the struggle between Transeurasian (Russian) and Transatlantic (Anglo-American) powers keep affecting the region.
Is the current violence in Syria a revolt of “society” against an oppressive state, or should it be read more meaningfully as a full fledged civil war? If we assume the perspective of civil war, then the “state” and its various apparatuses would stand as just one “civil party” among others, protective of its own social and political interests, while revealing the multi-layered relations of power in Syrian society which cannot be solely attributed to a dysfunctional state–society relation. That is to say, even though the violence was originally meant to displace the apparatuses of the state, it has since then sprawled in different directions, not to be restricted to the problems of legitimacy that an authoritarian state has engulfed itself into since the Baathist revolution in the 1960s. It is such hypothesis that we want to explore, first, by contextualizing the antinomies of the Syrian nation-state in historical perspective, since its inception from the remnants of the Ottoman Empire and the French colonial state. Second, through a combination of sociological and anthropological approaches, we want to analyze the contradictions that the Baathist state has set itself into once it has opted for a hegemonic takeover of civil society, in particular in the 1970s, with Asad’s “corrective movement” and its aftermath, which led to a massive expansion of the state apparatuses.
MA syllabus, University of Bonn, Winter 2018/2019
Syria: From National Independence to Proxy War, 2018
The alliance between Syria and Iran and the formation of the so called ‘axis of resistance’ is one of the most fascinating and enduring example of a regional alliance, a pillar of Syria foreign policy and a determining factor in the trajectory of the Syrian conflict. To understand why secular Syria, the ‘beating heart of Arabism’, choose to align its foreign policy with the revolutionary Islamic Republic we have to look back at the transformation in Syrian politics under Hafez al-Asad, when Syria was in the process of establishing its prowess in the turbulent region (as part of its strategy to confront the Israeli ‘permanent aggression’) while it confronted a domestic rebellion. Formed as a response to the direct challenges posed to Syria and Iran by Iraq, Israel and the U.S. since 1980, the alliance with the Islamic Republic and its protégée Hezbollah boosted Syria’s regional position and contributed to its successful ‘balancing’ with international and regional powers. Concurrently, Syria continued to act as a swing state between Arab regional powers (Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Iraq) in order to consolidate an Arab front against the Zionist enemy. The alliance with Iran also served to legitimise the Asad regime, both domestically and regionally, and to contain Islamist opposition. Under Bashar al-Asad, Syria embraced the resistance front as a continuation of Hafez’ nationalist policy of sumud (steadfastness), with a renewed antiimperialist stance against regional (Israel) and international (U.S.) interference. This posture has been a key element of Syria’s regional strategy and authoritarian upgrading. Since Syria is situated at the heart of a region traditionally penetrated by international powers and ravaged by armed conflicts, it comes as no surprise that Syrian foreign policy often took priority over domestic concerns, as many analysts maintain. Besides, the Bonapartist nature of the Syrian regime allegedly made domestic opinion largely irrelevant to policy making. This paper does not rule out the explanatory power of systemic explanations: Syrian and Iranian behaviour is in great part derived from the exceptionally unstable systemic arena within which these states operate, magnified by the context of the bipolar world and its demise. Syrian leaders crafted foreign policy on a balancing strategy between rivals and enemies centred on the regional role of Syria as champion of the Arab cause . Regional power balancing and regime survival required powerful regional friends like Iran and Hezbollah acting as deterrents, superpowers as international supporters, and Gulf monarchies as rich donors. Yet any comprehensive analysis of Syrian foreign policy and alliance making requires a more nuanced view of the links between policy making and foreign and domestic threats. The Syria-Iran alliance was part of an ‘omnibalancing’ strategy designed to confront external threats and domestic challenges to state leadership while aiming at attaining ‘strategic parity’ with Israel. Both the nationalist struggle and regime consolidation required mass mobilisation to channel national energies and ensure unconditional support to leaders, whose main claim to legitimacy was a commitment to Arab nationalism. At a time when nationalist struggle, state building and regime consolidation coincided, Hafez al-Asad’s balancing policies successfully addressed the contradiction between the revisionism rooted in the Pan-Arab identity of Syria - the liberation of Palestine and the unification of the Arab umma - and geopolitical realities - the division of the Arab front and the shift from a bipolar to a unipolar world - while consolidating the regime. In the new regional and local context in which Bashar al-Asad operated in his first ten years - one in which state-led Pan-Arabism was already dead, non-state actors have emerged as powerful political agents and a growing radicalisation of the disillusioned, embittered masses was directly challenging Arab autocrats - the Syrian regime confronted an ever-increasing need for sustained mobilisation to support the ‘resistance front’ regime while facing its inability to either live up to its own legitimation claims or reform. The onset of the Arab Spring has revealed a variety of complexities in the front, yet its ‘resistance’ discourse – though in a twisted form - has shaped the trajectory of the Syrian uprising in a decisive way. The Syrian regime and its allies have linked the repression of the uprising to their counter-hegemonic discourse while Syria used a range of repressive measures against rebels and opposition groups; Hezbollah gained greater strategic depth; and Iran reinstated its ‘regional alignment’ strategy and influence. With the adoption of the western ‘war on terror’, we are seeing a re-articulation of the Syrian nationalist discourse and foreign policy as well as the transformation of the front into a transnational counterinsurgency coalition. These developments demand that we reconsider the ideological assumptions, capabilities, and persistence of the resistance front while reassessing the connection between Syrian domestic and foreign policy.
History Compass, 2008
This article examines major issues and debates in the study of modern Syrian politics including the identity crisis rooted in state formation; reasons for the failure of the early liberal experiment; the nature of the Ba'th regime and whether it can be considered to have carried out a revolution; explanations for the stabilization of the regime under Asad; the nature of Ba'thist political economy; the extent, causes, and consequences of economic liberalization; explanations for succession and the character of Bashar's rule; and the relation between the state and international forces.
Histoire sociale/Social history
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