Routledge Handbook of Middle East Politics

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Abu Dharr
Arab Barometer
Arab Nationalism
Arab Uprisings
Arabic literature
Authoritarian Upgrading
Authoritarianism
Category=JP
Civil Society
Electoral Authoritarianism
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fieldwork methodology
FIS Leadership
gendered power relations
Huda Shaarawi
interdisciplinary Middle East studies
Interdisciplinary prism
Iraqi Security Force
ISIS Caliphate
Islamic Revolution
MENA Country
MENA Region
MENA State
Middle East Politics
Muslim World
Non-state Armed
Non-state Armed Groups
Non-state Armed Organizations
Palestinian Authority
political epistemology
Political Parties
qualitative political research
Sectarian Fault Line
sectarianism analysis
secularism studies
Vice Versa
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032237176
  • Weight: 1080g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Dec 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Drawing on various perspectives and analysis, the Handbook problematizes Middle East politics through an interdisciplinary prism, seeking a melioristic account of the field. Thematically organized, the chapters address political, social, and historical questions by showcasing both theoretical and empirical insights, all of which are represented in a style that ease readers into sophisticated induction in the Middle East.

It positions the didactic at the centre of inquiry. Contributions by forty-four scholars, both veterans and newcomers, rethink knowledge frames, conceptual categories, and fieldwork praxis. Substantive themes include secularity and religion, gender, democracy, authoritarianism, and new "borderline" politics of the Middle East. Like any field of knowledge, the Middle East is constituted by texts, authors, and readers, but also by the cultural, spatial, and temporal contexts within which diverse intellectual inflections help construct (write–speak) academic meaning, knowing, and practice. By denaturalizing notions of singularity of authorship or scholarship, the Handbook plants a dialogic interplay animated by multi-vocality, multi-modality, and multi-disciplinarity.

Targeting graduate students and young scholars of political and social sciences, the Handbook is significant for understanding how the Middle East is written and re-written, read and re-read (epistemology, methodology), and for how it comes to exist (ontology).

Larbi Sadiki is Professor of Arab Democratization at Qatar University. His blogs have appeared in Aljazeera, and his publications have been translated into Arabic, Turkish, and Portuguese. He is editor of the Routledge Series on Middle Eastern Democratization and Government, and has been a Non-resident Fellow at Carnegie Middle East Center (Beirut), Senior Non-resident Fellow at the Brookings Doha Center, and an Honorary Associate at the University of Sydney’s Department of Arabic Languages and Cultures.