عوﺿوﻣﻟا مﺳا Failure of Initiatives to Resolve the ﻋﻧوان اﻟﻣوﺿوع
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In Tunisia Policies and Legislations Related to the Democratic Transition
Policies and legislations The constitutional and legal framework repre- sents one of the most important signs of the related to the democratic transition in Tunisia. Especially by establishing rules, procedures and institutions in order to achieve the transition and its goals. Thus, the report focused on further operatio- nalization of the aforementioned framework democratic while seeking to monitor the events related to, its development and its impact on the transi- tion’s path. Besides, monitoring the difficulties of the second transition, which is related to the transition and political conflict over the formation of the go- vernment and what’s behind the scenes of the human rights official institutions. in Tunisia The observatorypolicies and rightshuman and legislation to democratic transition related . 27 Activating the constitutional and legal to submit their proposals until the end of January. Then, outside the major parties to be in the forefront of the poli- the committee will start its action from the beginning of tical scene. framework for the democratic transition February until the end of April 2020, when it submits its outcome to the assembly’s bureau. The constitution of 2015 is considered as the de facto framework for the democratic transition. And all its developments in the It is reportedly that the balances within the council have midst of the political life, whether in texts or institutions, are an not changed numerically, as it doesn’t witness many cases The structural and financial difficulties important indicator of the process of transition itself. of changing the party and coalition loyalties “Tourism” ex- The three authorities and the balance cept the resignation of the deputy Sahbi Samara from the of the Assembly Future bloc and the joining of deputy Ahmed Bin Ayyad to among them the Dignity Coalition bloc in the Parliament. -
2019 Presidential and Parliamentary Elections in Tunisia Final Report
ELECTION REPORT ✩ 2019 Presidential and Parliamentary Elections in Tunisia Final Report ELECTION REPORT ✩ 2019 Presidential and Parliamentary Elections in Tunisia Final Report One Copenhill 453 Freedom Parkway Atlanta, GA 30307 (404) 420-5100 www.cartercenter.org Contents Map of Tunisia................................. 4 The Independent High Authority Executive Summary ............................ 5 for Audiovisual Communications .............. 40 Background ................................. 6 Conclusion ................................ 41 Legal Framework ............................ 7 Candidates, Parties, and Campaigns ........... 42 Election Management ........................ 7 Campaigning in the First Round Voter Registration ........................... 8 of the Presidential Election .................. 42 Voter Education ............................. 8 Conclusion ................................ 44 Citizen Observation .......................... 8 Campaigning in the Parliamentary Election .... 44 Candidate Registration ....................... 8 Campaigning in the Second Round of the Campaign .................................. 9 Presidential Election ........................ 46 Voting and Counting ........................ 11 Campaign Finance ............................ 47 Tabulation ................................. 12 Social Media Monitoring ...................... 49 Electoral Dispute Resolution ................. 12 Legal Framework ........................... 49 Results .................................... 13 Methodology ............................. -
Defining Political Choices: Tunisia's Second Democratic Elections From
ANALYSIS PAPER Number 38, May 2015 DEFINING POLITICAL CHOICES: Tunisia’s Second Democratic Elections from the Ground Up Chantal E. Berman Elizabeth R. Nugent The Brookings Institution is a private non-profit organization. Its mission is to conduct high-quality, independent research and, based on that research, to provide innovative, practical recommendations for policymakers and the public. The conclusions and recommendations of any Brookings publication are solely those of its author(s), and do not reflect the views of the Institution, its management, or its other scholars. Brookings recognizes that the value it provides to any supporter is in its absolute commitment to quality, independence and impact. Activities supported by its donors reflect this commitment and the analysis and recommendations are not determined by any donation. Copyright © 2015 1775 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036 www.brookings.edu Table of Contents Acknowledgments ............................................................iii About the Author ............................................................iv Introduction ................................................................1 Table 1: Vote Share by Party, 2014...........................................2 Table 2: Vote Share by District, 2014 ........................................2 The Parties: Evolution of the Tunisian Party System, 2011 to 2014 .......................4 Table 3: Vote Share by Party, 2011............................................5 The Voters: Priorities, Turnout, & Demographic -
Results for Tunisia, 2020
Summary of results Afrobarometer Round 8 survey in Tunisia, 2020 Compiled by: One To One for Research and Polling 1 Afrobarometer Round 8 Summary of results for Tunisia, 2020 Afrobarometer, a nonprofit corporation with headquarters in Ghana, is a pan-African, nonpartisan survey research network that provides reliable data on African experiences and evaluations of democracy, governance, and quality of life. Seven rounds of surveys were completed in up to 38 countries between 1999 and 2018. Round 8 surveys in 2019/2021 are planned in at least 35 countries. Afrobarometer conducts face-to-face interviews in the language of the respondent’s choice with nationally representative samples. Regional coordination of national partners in about 35 countries is provided by the Ghana Center for Democratic Development (CDD-Ghana), the Institute for Justice and Reconciliation (IJR) in South Africa, and the Institute for Development Studies (IDS) at the University of Nairobi in Kenya. Michigan State University (MSU) and the University of Cape Town (UCT) provide technical support to the network. The Afrobarometer National Partner in Tunisia, One to One for Research and Polling, interviewed a nationally representative, random, stratified probability sample of 1,200 adult Tunisians between 24 February 2020 and 18 March 2020. A sample of this size yields country- level results with a margin of error of +/-3 percentage points at a 95% confidence level. Previous surveys have been conducted in Tunisia in 2013, 2015, and 2018. CDD-Ghana provided technical backstopping for the survey. Technical details of the survey, including descriptions of stratification and household selection, translation languages, and related information, can be found in the survey Technical Information Form that follows. -
Commentary a New Political Map for Tunisia Paves the Way for Another
(Doha Institute) www.dohainstitute.org Commentary A new political map for Tunisia paves the way for another within the coming year Rashid Khashana Arab Center for Research & Policy Studies Commentary Doha, December- 2011 Commentary Series Copyrights reserved for Arab Center for Research & Policy Studies © 2011 Contents A NEW POLITICAL MAP FOR TUNISIA PAVES THE WAY FOR ANOTHER WITHIN THE COMING YEAR .............................. OLD PARTIES IN A PROCESS OF RENEWAL .................................................................................. 1 THE DEVIOUS GUISES OF THE CONSTITUTIONAL DEMOCRATIC RALLY ................................... 2 THE FAILURE OF IDEOLOGICAL MOVEMENTS AND THE RISE OF CENTRIST PARTIES ................ 3 THE NEW POLITICAL MAP IN TERMS OF NUMBERS OF PARLIAMENTARY SEATS PER PARTY ..... 4 Arab Center for Research & Policy Studies A new political map for Tunisia The elections for the Constituent Assembly held in Tunis on October 23, 2011 revealed a political scene that surprised most observers because of the large number of parliamentary seats won by fundamentalist movements, the retreat of left-wing parties, and the return of the remnants of the former ruling party, albeit under new names. The new political map is characterized by its complexity, especially since the electoral law leans toward a system of proportional representation, which means that small parties have managed to win one or two seats. As such, more than 20 political parties have representation in the new Constituent Assembly of the approximately 80 whose electoral lists engaged in the campaign. This complex political map is set to expire, however, at least theoretically, in a period not exceeding one year, as per the terms of a document signed by the parties represented in the Constituent Assembly just weeks before the election. -
New Latin American Left : Utopia Reborn
Barrett 00 Prelims.qxd 31/07/2008 14:41 Page i THE NEW LATIN AMERICAN LEFT Barrett 00 Prelims.qxd 31/07/2008 14:41 Page ii Transnational Institute Founded in 1974, the Transnational Institute (TNI) is an international network of activist-scholars committed to critical analyses of the global problems of today and tomorrow, with a view to providing intellectual support to those movements concerned to steer the world in a democratic, equitable and environmentally sustainable direction. In the spirit of public scholarship, and aligned to no political party, TNI seeks to create and promote international co-operation in analysing and finding possible solu- tions to such global problems as militarism and conflict, poverty and marginalisation, social injustice and environmental degradation. Email: [email protected] Website: www.tni.org Telephone + 31 20 662 66 08 Fax + 31 20 675 71 76 De Wittenstraat 25 1052 AK Amsterdam The Netherlands Barrett 00 Prelims.qxd 31/07/2008 14:41 Page iii The New Latin American Left Utopia Reborn Edited by Patrick Barrett, Daniel Chavez and César Rodríguez-Garavito Barrett 00 Prelims.qxd 31/07/2008 14:41 Page iv First published 2008 by Pluto Press 345 Archway Road, London N6 5AA www.plutobooks.com Copyright © Patrick Barrett, Daniel Chavez and César Rodríguez-Garavito 2008 The right of the individual contributors to be identified as the authors of this work has been asserted by them in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library ISBN 978 0 7453 2639 9 Hardback ISBN 978 0 7453 2677 1 Paperback Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data applied for This book is printed on paper suitable for recycling and made from fully managed and sustained forest sources. -
Electoral Practice of Tunisian Women in the Context of a Democratic Transition
Electoral Practice of Tunisian Women in the Context of a Democratic Transition Lilia Labidi, Fellow, Woodrow Wilson Center, and former Minister for Women’s Affairs, Tunisia Women gained the right to vote in the Arab and Muslim worlds at different times that varied from country to country. In some countries this took place in the 1930s, and the most recent one was in 2011 (see Appendix 1). The 1980s marked a turning point in most of these countries because of the emergence of new women elites—women who had benefitted from the improved health services that had lowered the rate of maternal mortality and access to their countries’ universities and to the labor force (see Appendix 2, 3). By the 2000s, these elites were demanding greater participation in formal politics and the application of quotas, which stipulated that women are guaranteed a certain proportion of representatives in elected bodies (see Appendix 4). Images showing women in several countries waiting in long lines to vote appeared in newspapers, on television, and, most recently, on social media. These images had a great impact on the political education of the region’s youth. The “Arab Spring” was one of the expressions of this.1 The younger generations are increasingly hostile to forms of discrimination, including when women candidates are not allowed to put their photographs on political posters whereas men are allowed to do this2 or when possible women presidential candidates are rejected in some countries and accepted in others.3 Our question here is whether all these factors are enough to produce a new political culture that includes women and whether we see changes in the behavior of the political elites, particularly in the Tunisian context. -
One Third of New Municipal Councilors in Tunisia Are from Independent Lists
One third of new municipal councilors in Tunisia are from independent lists. How independent are they? By Aytuğ Şaşmaz, Alexandra Blackman, and Julia Clark July 2018 One third of new municipal councilors in Tunisia are from independent lists. How independent are they? Aytuğ Şaşmaz, Alexandra Blackman, Julia Clark1 Background On May 6, Tunisia held its first local democratic elections. With Ennahda—the moderate Islamist party— seeing its lists win 29 percent of the votes nationwide, the party claimed victory.2 Yet there was another type of list that garnered even more votes than Ennahda: independent, non-partisan lists received more than 32 percent of the votes. As a result, one third of municipal council seats will be held by candidates from independent lists. Many observers have welcomed this development given perceived frustration with political parties in Tunisia.3 Even though the country is considered a success case after the 2010-11 Arab uprisings, there are persistent concerns about the sustainability and depth of Tunisian democracy. In the eyes of a majority of Tunisian voters, the grand coalition between Nidaa and Ennahda has failed to solve the country’s most urgent problems, such as creating economic growth.4 This has led to a widespread disenchantment among Tunisians 1 Support for this project was generously provided by Democracy International (DI), the Middle East Partnership Initiative (MEPI), Stanford University (the Abbasi Program in Islamic Studies and the Freeman Spogli Institute), the Project on Middle East Political Science (POMEPS), and Harvard University (the Center for Middle Eastern Studies and the Institute for Quantitative Social Sciences). -
University of California UNIVERSITY of CALIFORNIA
UCLA UCLA Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title The Distorted Transformation of Mexico: Arbitralism and Developmentalism, and Political Capitalism and Subcapitalism. A Pathway towards Balancing Capitalism and Balanced Development, or Demdevelopment Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/0012399n Author Nunez, Ramon Publication Date 2013 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Los Angeles The Distorted Transformation of Mexico: Arbitralism and Developmentalism, and Political Capitalism and Subcapitalism. A Pathway towards Balancing Capitalism and Balanced Development, or Demdevelopment A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy in Urban Planning by Ramón Angel Núñez De La Mora 2013 © Copyright by Ramon Angel Nunez De La Mora 2013 ii ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION The Distorted Transformation of Mexico: Arbitralism and Developmentalism, and Political Capitalism and Subcapitalism. A Pathway towards Balancing Capitalism and Balanced Development, or Demdevelopment by Ramon Angel Nunez De La Mora Doctor of Philosophy in Urban Planning University of California, Los Angeles 2013 Professor Leobardo Estrada, Chair Starting from the Mexican state´s and capitalism´s overall performance in democracy and development, this study addresses two types of social relationships that have shaped the country´s evolution over the twentieth century: those unleashed from the Constitution of 1917 to now, which are called the historical or postrevolutionary relationships, and those just rising at the turn to the twentieth- first century, named as the emerging or post-postrevolutionary relationships. Both relationships take place through a series of state and capitalist processes overlapping in the spheres of politics, production and policymaking. -
Tunisia's Endless Transition? Daniel Brumberg, Maryam Ben Salem
Tunisia's Endless Transition? Daniel Brumberg, Maryam Ben Salem Journal of Democracy, Volume 31, Number 2, April 2020, pp. 110-124 (Article) Published by Johns Hopkins University Press DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/jod.2020.0025 For additional information about this article https://muse.jhu.edu/article/753198 [ Access provided at 31 Oct 2020 10:43 GMT from Tel Aviv University ] TUNISIA’S ENDLESS TRANSITION? Daniel Brumberg and Maryam Ben Salem Daniel Brumberg is associate professor of government and director of Democracy and Governance Studies at Georgetown University, and a senior nonresident fellow at the Project on Middle East Democracy (POMED). Maryam Ben Salem is assistant professor of political stud- ies at the University of Sousse. The year 2020 is proving to be another trying one for Tunisia’s barely decade-old democracy. Following September and October 2019 parlia- mentary and presidential elections—the fourth and fifth national votes held since dictator Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali fell in 2011—new president Ka¦s Sa¦ed and the unicameral 217-member national assembly face the task of consolidating democratic institutions despite economic crisis, rampant corruption, growing social and identity tensions, and wide- spread political estrangement. The Jasmine Revolution that began with Ben Ali’s flight into exile was able to succeed initially thanks to a deal or “pact” among his disparate opponents and lingering elements of his power structure. But it is proving very hard to move beyond that first, hard-won agreement and the consensus-based power-sharing system that it produced. Sa¦ed is a well-respected, 61-year-old constitutional-law professor who ran an independent campaign. -
The Accommodation of Nationalism Regional Nationalist Parties and Territorial Restructuring in Great Britain, Spain and Belgium
Department of Political and Social Sciences The Accommodation of Nationalism Regional Nationalist Parties and Territorial Restructuring in Great Britain, Spain and Belgium Simon Toubeau Thesis submitted for assessment with a view to obtaining the degree of Doctor of Political and Social Sciences of the European University Institute Florence June 2010 EUROPEAN UNIVERSITY INSTITUTE Department of Political and Social Sciences The Accommodation of Nationalism Regional Nationalist Parties and Territorial Restructuring in Great Britain, Spain and Belgium Simon Toubeau Thesis submitted for assessment with a view to obtaining the degree of Doctor of Political and Social Sciences of the European University Institute Examining Board: Prof. Michael Keating, University of Aberdeen and EUI ( Supervisor) Prof. Peter Mair, EUI Prof. Kris Deschouwer, Vrije Universiteit Brussel Prof. Charlie Jeffery, University of Edinburgh © 2010, Simon Toubeau No part of this thesis may be copied, reproduced or transmitted without prior permission of the author Toubeau, Simon (2010), The Accommodation of Nationalism: Regional Nationalist Parties and Territorial Restructuring in Great Britain, Spain and Belgium European University Institute DOI: 10.2870/17572 Table of Contents Figures 3 List of Abbreviations 4 Acknowledgements 6 Abtract 7 1. Introduction 8 Part I: The Framework for Analysis 2. Regional Nationalism and Territorial Restructuring 17 The Structures of Multinational Societies 18 The Institutionalisation of the Territorial Cleavage 21 Territory and Nation -
Social, Economic and Political Dynamics in Tunisia and The
Social, Economic and Political Dynamics in Tunisia and the Related © 2015 IAI Short- to Medium-Term Scenarios by Maryam Ben Salem ISSN 2280-4331 | ISBN 978-88-98650-65-1 ABSTRACT Tunisia is the only Arab Spring country which has succeeded so far in its democratic transition. Now that all the democratic institutions have been put in place, and after the legislative and presidential elections of 2014, the chances of democratic consolidation remain to be seen. Yet the regime faces serious challenges that cast doubt on its survival capacity. The political dynamics at play after the 2014 elections, which allowed Nidaa Tounes to come to power, cannot be understood without taking into account the conditions surrounding the political transition itself. The National Dialogue, hosted by the Quartet who were recently awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, is key to understanding the ongoing process of democracy consolidation. Taking into account both contingent and structural factors, this paper analyses how the current context is likely to shape the choices of the presidency of the Republic and of the Essid government, as well as the implications in terms of their legitimacy. Tunisia | Domestic policy | Political parties | Trade unions | Democracy | keywords Economy | Security IAI WORKING PAPERS 15 | 41 - OCTOBER 2015 15 | 41 - OCTOBER IAI WORKING PAPERS Social, Economic and Political Dynamics in Tunisia and the Related Short- to Medium-Term Scenarios Social, Economic and Political Dynamics in Tunisia and the Related Short- to Medium-Term Scenarios © 2015 IAI by Maryam Ben Salem* Introduction Tunisia is the only Arab Spring country which has more or less succeeded in its transition.