Toward a Citizen's State
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Lebanon: Managing the Gathering Storm
LEBANON: MANAGING THE GATHERING STORM Middle East Report N°48 – 5 December 2005 TABLE OF CONTENTS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS................................................. i I. A SYSTEM BETWEEN OLD AND NEW.................................................................. 1 A. SETTING THE STAGE: THE ELECTORAL CONTEST..................................................................1 B. THE MEHLIS EFFECT.............................................................................................................5 II. SECTARIANISM AND INTERNATIONALISATION ............................................. 8 A. FROM SYRIAN TUTELAGE TO WESTERN UMBRELLA?............................................................8 B. SHIFTING ALLIANCES..........................................................................................................12 III. THE HIZBOLLAH QUESTION ................................................................................ 16 A. “A NEW PHASE OF CONFRONTATION” ................................................................................17 B. HIZBOLLAH AS THE SHIITE GUARDIAN?..............................................................................19 C. THE PARTY OF GOD TURNS PARTY OF GOVERNMENT.........................................................20 IV. CONCLUSION ............................................................................................................. 22 A. A BROAD INTERNATIONAL COALITION FOR A NARROW AGENDA .......................................22 B. A LEBANESE COURT ON FOREIGN -
Making a Difference: Victories in the Fight Against Corruption Is a Record of Many of the Achievements of Our Members and Chapters
MAKING A DIFFERENCE Victories in the fight against corruption Copyright 2014 by the Global Organization of Parliamentarians Against Corruption (GOPAC) Suite 904, 255 Albert Street Ottawa, Ontario K1P 6A9 Canada [email protected] gopacnetwork.org facebook.com/gopacnetwork twitter.com/GOPAC_Eng MAKING A DIFFERENCE Victories in the fight against corruption Message from the Chair ............................................................................... 2 Message from the Executive Director .......................................................... 3 About the Global Organization of Parliamentarians Against Corruption .... 5 Anti-Money Laundering ................................................................................ 7 Parliamentary Ethics and Conduct ............................................................... 11 Parliamentary Oversight ............................................................................... 14 Participation of Society ................................................................................. 19 United Nations Convention Against Corruption .......................................... 23 Women in Parliament .................................................................................... 27 Message from the Chair Every day articles covering issues of corruption appear in newspapers around the world. They tell stories of corrupt officials, money laundering, abuse of power—crimes that eat away at public coffers and propagate political instability. The victims of these crimes are ordinary citizens -
Motion for a Resolution
EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT 2004 2009 Session document 4.9.2006 B6-0487/2006 MOTION FOR A RESOLUTION to wind up the debate on statements by the Council and Commission pursuant to Rule 103(2) of the Rules of Procedure by Cristiana Muscardini, Konrad Szymański, Inese Vaidere, Roberta Angelilli and Ģirts Valdis Kristovskis on behalf of the UEN Group on the crisis in the Middle East RE\629054EN.doc PE 378.344v01-00 EN EN B6-0487/2006 European Parliament resolution on the crisis in the Middle East The European Parliament, having regard to its resolutions of 16 January 2003 on the conclusion of an Association Agreement with the Republic of Lebanon and 10 March 2005 on the situation in Lebanon, having regard to its previous resolutions on the Euro-Mediterranean Partnership and European Neighbourhood Policy, having regard to United Nations Security Council (UNSC) Resolutions 1559 of 2 September 2004 and 1701 of 11 August 2006, having regard to the Council's conclusions of 21 February 2005 on the Middle East peace process and of 1 August 2006 on the situation on Lebanon, having regard to the statements issued by its Conference of Presidents on 20 July and 1 August 2006, having regard to Rule 103(2) of its Rules of Procedure, A. whereas the escalation of hostilities in Lebanon and Israel broke out after Hezbollah sparked the crisis by attacking Israel and ignoring Israeli's repeated calls for the liberation of two Israeli soldiers on July 12, B. whereas, at the extraordinary GAERC (General Affairs and External Relations Council) meeting of 25 August, the Council expressed full support for the implementation of UNSC Resolution 1701, 1. -
NYU/CIC Draft Report
Pathways to Change Baseline Study to Identify Theories of Change on Political Settlements and Confidence Building By Molly Elgin-Cossart, Bruce Jones, and Jane Esberg July 31, 2012 This is one part of a two-part preliminary study. It is designed to excavate, through interviews with development field staff, perspectives and story lines on how international actors (especially development actors) can influence the degree of inclusiveness of political settlements. This is an interim step to a longer-term, more comprehensive study to assess the causal relationship between donor programming and political settlements. The purpose of this initial study is to narrow the field of inquiry by providing ‘theories of change’ that can then be tested. A cognate study, more conceptually oriented, focuses on political settlements (defined below) that follow violence or episodes or imminent threatened violence, to provide an exegesis of the argument that ‘inclusive enough’ settlements matter to stability and thus development in fragile states. That study is designed to help establish a research agenda that could test and refine that proposition. Prepared with support from the UK Department for International Development, the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and the Carnegie Corporation. 1 Preface ........................................................................................................................... 3 Background: Why an emphasis on inclusive political settlements? ........................... 4 Research approach ....................................................................................................... -
Title Public Opinion and Deterrence
Title Public opinion and deterrence: an evolutionary game theoretic study of the Israeli policy toward Lebanon Sub Title Author 浜中, 新吾(Hamanaka, Shingo) Publisher Global Center of Excellence Center of Governance for Civil Society, Keio University Publication year 2011 Jtitle Journal of political science and sociology No.15 (2011. 9) ,p.21- 49 Abstract Israel's policies regarding Lebanon have been dependent on public opinion, which is volatile. The citizens of Israel did not favor the occupation of the security zone in South Lebanon because of the Four Mothers movement, which influenced the government to unilaterally withdraw military forces in May 2000. When Hizbollah attacked an Israel Defense Force (IDF) patrol and abducted two soldiers on the northern border, the Israeli citizens supported the decision to wage a war in retaliation. This study aims to shed light on the causal mechanism of the influence of public opinion on defense policy within the rational framework of deterrence strategy. I chose the evolutionary game theory approach as my research method in order to deal with dynamics of public opinion. My study yielded the following result: deterrence is not stable when the aggression level of the defenders is less than the level of the critical condition. The Israeli government made a decision to conduct a unilateral withdrawal under pressure from passive defenders among the people. However, the IDF could begin the operation in Lebanon because of a substantial number of supporters who hoped to retaliate against Hizbollah. As a result, deterrence was restored after the war. We can understand the implications of the case of the Second Lebanon War: the enforcement of conventional deterrence may occasionally require conflicts to occur with small non-governmental military groups. -
Gendering Legislative Behavior: Institutional Constraints and Collaboration Tiffany D
Cambridge University Press 978-1-107-14319-7 - Gendering Legislative Behavior: Institutional Constraints and Collaboration Tiffany D. Barnes Index More information Index Alcañiz, Isabella, 8 , 17 majority parties in, 65 – 7 Alemán, Eduardo, 4n4 , 5 , 10 , 14 , 26 , 29 , 52 , Mendoza, 51 – 2 , 56 – 8 , 66 – 7 , 123 , 134 – 5 , 54 , 59 – 60 146 , 219 Alexander, Amy C., 24n5 , 33 – 5 Misiones, 71 , 166 Alexander, Deborah, 32 party ideology in, 139 – 40 , 160 Alles, Santiago, 11 – 12 , 14 , 227 Río Negro, 57 , 83 , 96 – 7 , 143 , 166 Ames, Barry, 37 Salta, 14 , 22 – 3 , 53 – 4 , 57 , 67 , 69 , 73 , 82 , Andersen, Kristi, 32 86n14 , 87 , 101 , 104 , 106 , 123 , 143 – 4 , Anzia, Sarah F., 29 146 , 168 , 222 – 3 , 230 Archenti, Nélida, 12 , 200 San Juan, 14 Argentina San Luis, 80 , 82 Argentine National Congress, 38 , 54n4 , Santa Cruz, 14 , 55n5 166 , 228 Santa Fe, 82 , 96 cultural diversity in, 30 Tierra del Fuego, 83 , 147n6 provincial legislatures, 8 , 11 – 12 , 76 , 89 , 91 , variation among, 11 , 14 – 15 , 60 , 97 , 172 123 , 146 , 153 , 226 Argimón, Beatriz, 197 , 201 – 3 Buenos Aires, 53 , 96 – 7 , 141 , 166 – 7 Arnold, Laura W., 31 , 192 Catamarca, 57 , 82 – 3 , 103 , 136 , 169 – 70 at-large district, 76 – 7 , 123 – 4 , 124n7 , 136 , Chaco, 57 , 83 141 , 158 , 166 , 169 – 70 Chubut, 12 , 14 , 55 , 83 , 97 Atkeson, Lonna Rae, 31 , 40 , 108 Córdoba, 10 , 56 , 65 – 6 , 71 , 80n2 , 81n3 , autonomous women’s movements, 183 , 209 , 85 – 8 , 118 , 123 , 134 , 166 , 169 221 , 224 Corrientes, 81 , 87 , 96 determinants of leadership Bækgaard, -
How Lebanese Elites Coopt Protest Discourse: a Social Media Analysis
How Lebanese Elites Coopt Protest Discourse: A Social Media Analysis ."3 Report Policy Alexandra Siegel Founded in 1989, the Lebanese Center for Policy Studies is a Beirut-based independent, non-partisan think tank whose mission is to produce and advocate policies that improve good governance in fields such as oil and gas, economic development, public finance, and decentralization. This report is published in partnership with HIVOS through the Women Empowered for Leadership (WE4L) programme, funded by the Netherlands Foreign Ministry FLOW fund. Copyright© 2021 The Lebanese Center for Policy Studies Designed by Polypod Executed by Dolly Harouny Sadat Tower, Tenth Floor P.O.B 55-215, Leon Street, Ras Beirut, Lebanon T: + 961 1 79 93 01 F: + 961 1 79 93 02 [email protected] www.lcps-lebanon.org How Lebanese Elites Coopt Protest Discourse: A Social Media Analysis Alexandra Siegel Alexandra Siegel is an Assistant Professor at the University of Colorado Boulder, a faculty affiliate of NYU’s Center for Social Media and Politics and Stanford's Immigration Policy Lab, and a nonresident fellow at the Brookings Institution. She received her PhD in Political Science from NYU in 2018. Her research uses social media data, network analysis, and experiments—in addition to more traditional data sources—to study mass and elite political behavior in the Arab World and other comparative contexts. She is a former Junior Fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and a former CASA Fellow at the American University in Cairo. She holds a Bachelors in International Relations and Arabic from Tufts University. -
As of 9/12/2017 9:14 AM LIST of PARTICIPANTS WORLD
As of 9/12/2017 9:14 AM LIST OF PARTICIPANTS WORLD PARLIAMENTARY FORUM ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT 6th – 7th SEPTEMBER 2017, NUSA DUA BALI, INDONESIA I. COUNTRIES AFGHANISTAN Hon. Mr. Ghulam Mahudin Mansif MP, Chairman of the Legislative Commission of the Upper House Hon. Mrs. Shafiqah Nowrozkhel MP, Chairman of the Women Affairs Committee, National Assembly of Afghanistan Hon. Mrs. Roshan Ara Alkozay Senator, National Assembly of Afghanistan Hon. Mrs. Suhaila Sharefi Senator, National Assembly of Afghanistan Hon. Mr. Rahmatullah Achakzai Senator, National Assembly of Afghanistan Mr. Sayid Elham Zahir Protocol ALGERIA Hon. Mr. Boudqoud Abdelyamine MP, National People’s Assembly of Algeria Hon. Mr. Dekhili Salah Eddine MP, National People’s Assembly of Algeria ARGENTINA Hon. Ms. Norma Durango Senator, National Senator of Argentina Hon. Ms. Marina Riofrio Senator, National Senator of Argentina BANGLADESH Hon. Mr. Mohd. Zillul Hakim MP, Parliament of Bangladesh Hon. Mr. B.M. Muzammel Haque MP, Parliament of Bangladesh Hon. Mr. Anupam Shahjahan Joy MP, Parliament of Bangladesh Hon. Mr. Mohammad Abdul Munim Chowdhury MP, Parliament of Bangladesh Mr. S.M. Manzoor Observer Mr. Khan Md Elias Observer Mr. MD Wares Hossain Secretary BENIN, REPUBLIC OF Hon. Noel H. Akissoe MP, National Assembly (Benin) Hon. Yaya Garba MP, National Assembly (Benin) Hon. Leon Comlan Ahossi MP, National Assembly (Benin) BHUTAN H.E. Dr. Sonam Kinga Speaker/Chair National Council of Bhutan Hon. Mr. Kamal Bahadur Gurung MP, National Council of Bhutan Hon. Jigme Wangchuk MP, National Council of Bhutan Hon. Mr. Nima Gyeltshen MP, National Council of Bhutan Mrs. Sonam Yangzom Secretary 1 BRUNEI DARUSSALAM Hon. -
Political Party Mapping in Lebanon Ahead of the 2018 Elections
Political Party Mapping in Lebanon Ahead of the 2018 Elections Foreword This study on the political party mapping in Lebanon ahead of the 2018 elections includes a survey of most Lebanese political parties; especially those that currently have or previously had parliamentary or government representation, with the exception of Lebanese Communist Party, Islamic Unification Movement, Union of Working People’s Forces, since they either have candidates for elections or had previously had candidates for elections before the final list was out from the Ministry of Interior and Municipalities. The first part includes a systematic presentation of 27 political parties, organizations or movements, showing their official name, logo, establishment, leader, leading committee, regional and local alliances and relations, their stance on the electoral law and their most prominent candidates for the upcoming parliamentary elections. The second part provides the distribution of partisan and political powers over the 15 electoral districts set in the law governing the elections of May 6, 2018. It also offers basic information related to each district: the number of voters, the expected participation rate, the electoral quotient, the candidate’s ceiling on election expenditure, in addition to an analytical overview of the 2005 and 2009 elections, their results and alliances. The distribution of parties for 2018 is based on the research team’s analysis and estimates from different sources. 2 Table of Contents Page Introduction ....................................................................................................... -
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Lebanon 2008 - 2009 The National Human Development Report toward a citizen’s state Lebanon National Human Development Report toward a citizen's state report summary ACKNOWLEDGMENTS AND STUDY TEAMS This project is the result of a collaborative effort between the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) and the Council for Development and Reconstruction (CDR) which composed the steering committee for the report and supported the NHDR project team that directed the project. In addition, an advisory board that brought together public intellectuals, policy makers and academics from the public and private sector was established to guide this very complex process. We extend our deepest gratitude to them all for their cooperation, input and effort during this process. Toward a Citizen's State is the outcome of three years of an elaborate participatory process that included multiple roundtables, focus groups, and brainstorming sessions with over 150 academics, experts and policy makers in different fields as well as a wide range of citizens. To all those who participated in these discussions, debates and especially focus groups we would like to extend our sincerest thanks and appreciation for their contributions toward making this project a success. We hope that our collective effort will indeed bear fruit. The final version of this report is the intellectual product of four core authors who utilized the project outline, the work of participating authors that included background papers commissioned for this report, discussions from focus group meetings, the written inputs of discussants, the debates that took place during the workshops and roundtables and their own knowledge. They were assisted in this process by the NHDR team. -
Lebanon's Parliamentary Election of 2018
ا rلeمtركnزe اCل لبeنsانneي aلbلeدرLا eساThت LCPS for Policy Studies r e p Lebanon’s Parliamentary r a e P p 9 Election of 2018: 1 a y 0 2 c P y i r a Seats, Coalitions, and l u y n o a c J i P l Candidate Profiles o P Sami Atallah and Sami Zoughaib Founded in 1989, the Lebanese Center for Policy Studies is a Beirut-based independent, non-partisan think tank whose mission is to produce and advocate policies that improve good governance in fields such as oil and gas, economic development, public finance, and decentralization. Copyright© 2019 The Lebanese Center for Policy Studies Designed by Polypod Executed by Dolly Harouny Sadat Tower, Tenth Floor P.O.B 55-215, Leon Street, Ras Beirut, Lebanon T: + 961 1 79 93 01 F: + 961 1 79 93 02 [email protected] www.lcps-lebanon.org Lebanon’s Parliamentary Election of 2018: Seats, Coalitions, and Candidate Profiles 1 1 Sami Atallah and Sami Zoughaib The authors would like to thank Mohammed Diab, John McCabe, Ned Whalley, Josee Bilezikjian, and Ayman Tibi for their contribution to this paper. Sami Atallah Sami Atallah is the director of the Lebanese Center for Policy Studies (LCPS). He is currently leading several policy studies on youth social identity and political engagement, electoral behavior, political and social sectarianism, and the role of municipalities in dealing with the refugee crisis. He is the co-editor of Democracy, Decentralization, and Service Delivery in the Arab World (with Mona Harb, Beirut, LCPS 2015), co-editor of The Future of Oil in Lebanon: Energy, Politics, and Economic Growth (with Bassam Fattouh, I.B. -
Le Monde Diplomatique April 1998
Le Monde Diplomatique April 1998 BEHIND THE FACADE OF RECONSTRUCTION The "Lebanese miracle" in danger By Georges Corm "Who is gaining from the reconstruction of Beirut? For nearly six years now, most Lebanese have been urged to rally round a "unifying" theme - the renaissance of their capital - and forget their own vital needs. But the promised miracle has become a mirage. From one end of the country to the other, life is growing increasingly difficult and inequalities ever more glaring. In their quest for an elusive peace in the region, Europe and the United States have chosen to ignore the seriousness of the discontent, continuing instead to dream of "their" Lebanon. The reconstruction of Lebanon has acquired the status of an international myth. The images of desolation, the result of 15 years of war, gave way in 1992 to the good-natured face of Rafiq Hariri, whose main project as prime minister was the reconstruction of Beirut. Seeing models of sky-scrapers, broad avenues and marinas on the television screen, world opinion thought that Lebanon had ended its ordeal and was regaining its place as the Middle East’s financial capital. Since the ideological fashion is to sing the praises of the global economy, the pundits vaunted a Middle East made peaceful by new trade links between Arabs and Israelis. Lebanese reconstruction was immediately seen in the West as a first success along the road to 1 regional realignment after the upheavals of the cold war and the Gulf war. What is the formula for Lebanese-style capitalism without borders or other inhibitions? It is planning large-scale road infrastructures to help growth in regional trade, introducing a 10% income tax ceiling, hoping to privatise what remains of the public services, turning to private capital to rebuild the historic centre of Beirut, using the Build-Operate- Transfer (1) formula in the area of telephony, for example.