Azmi Bishara’s Vision for an Arab Democratic Transition: A Comparative Study on the Conditions Required for Democracy

Volume 1|Issue 3| Winter 2013 |Articles

Abstract

Relying on Azmi Bishara’s writings on democracy, and using the case studies of Libya and Tunisia, the author constructs a theoretical concept on the conditions required to instill democracy or – borrowing from Bishara’s terminology – “susceptibility to democracy”. In the author’s view, Bishara’s uniqueness stems from his proposal of democracy, in its comprehensive form, as an answer to the “Arab Predicament”. To Bishara, a comprehensive democratic solution entails the concepts of identity and nation; state and civil society; democratic mechanisms and their legislation, as a contiguous structure, the formation of which should remain ever-evolving and relentless. Contrary to the popular narratives on nationalism, Bishara’s Arab nationalism is a modernist cultural identity in which the Arab nation is a future-oriented project and where the presence of a civil society, just like its counterpart in a democratic political system, is the product of an environment which presupposes the existence of a sovereign, strong and modern state. Here, the demand for a democratic transition is part of the continuous move towards modernization, and not a step back from it.
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Independent scholar with a PhD in Arabic Language and Literature. He specializes in modern and contemporary Arabic thought, and has published widely in and outside of Iraq. His publications include Discourse of Cultural Criticism in Contemporary Arab Thought: Landmarks in Another Project, On the Formation of Arab Reformist Discourse: Applications to Tunisian Reformist Thought.

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