Struggle for Influence in the Middle East

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aid conditionality
Arab countries
Arab MENA
Arab spring
Arab Uprisings
Arab uprisings Arab spring
bureaucratisation
Category=JKSR
Category=JP
Category=KCLT
Category=KCP
Civil Society
Democracy Promotion
democracy promotion strategies
Dg Dev
Dg Relex
donor recipient relations
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EU Aid
EU Budget
EU Delegation
EU Democracy
EU Democracy Promoter
EU Foreign Policy
EU Special Representative
EU's External
EU's Mediterranean Policy
European Union
foreign aid
Gulf Aid
Gulf countries
Humanitarian Aid
MENA political economy
MENA Region
Middle East
Middle East North Africa
Muslim World
NATO Operation
Net FDI
North Africa
Palestinian Authority
post-Arab Spring Context
post-Arab uprisings foreign aid analysis
regional power dynamics
securitisation
security sector reform
SSR Contribution
Turkey
Turkey's Aid
United States of America

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138937246
  • Weight: 408g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Nov 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This collection of research papers explores the impact of the Arab uprisings on the politics and political economy of foreign aid provision in the MENA region. Contributions focus on the foreign assistance policies and strategies of key donors (United States, Europe, Gulf countries and Turkey), and on the relationship between donors and recipients of foreign aid in a select set of MENA cases (Tunisia, Egypt, Palestine and to a lesser extent Morocco).

Despite widespread rhetoric among lead donors pledging to support the transformational potential of the Arab uprisings, the contributions find a more complex pattern in foreign aid provision since 2011. Among Arab donors, who have played a significant role as providers of aid to states most affected by mass protests, trends in foreign assistance reflect the competing priorities of donors, and their willingness to politicize aid provision in pursuit of their strategic interests. Among Western donors, authors find a high degree of continuity. Chapters that focus on Western donors seek to account for continuity on the part of Western governments and the EU at a moment of profound transformational potential. Two factors, bureaucratization and securitization, capture most of the explanations provided, which take into account a variety of local dimensions as well. Contributions also discuss the changing assistance environment, namely the globalization of foreign assistance, the complex bureaucratic arrangements presiding over the delivery of European and US aid, and the role of regional and international non-democracies in the provision of foreign assistance.

This book was published as a special issue of Mediterranean Politics.

Federica Bicchi is Associate Professor at the Department of International Relations, London School of Economics, UK. Benoit Challand is Assistant Professor at New York University, USA. Steven Heydemann is Vice President on Applied Research on Conflict at the US Institute of Peace. He is also adjunct professor at the Department of Government, Georgetown University, USA.