Arab Spring: Difference between revisions
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imported>Howard C. Berkowitz No edit summary |
imported>Nick Gardner (deletion of paragraphs transferred to addendum) |
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| publisher = [[Sourcewatch]]}}</ref> The term, however, best refers to popular, apparently spontaneous, actions in 2011 that have led to new governments in [[Tunisia]] and [[Egypt]], and probably in [[Yemen]]. It also includes increasingly intense protests in a number of countries, such as [[Bahrain]], [[Jordan]] and [[Syria]], and active civil war in [[Libya]]. | | publisher = [[Sourcewatch]]}}</ref> The term, however, best refers to popular, apparently spontaneous, actions in 2011 that have led to new governments in [[Tunisia]] and [[Egypt]], and probably in [[Yemen]]. It also includes increasingly intense protests in a number of countries, such as [[Bahrain]], [[Jordan]] and [[Syria]], and active civil war in [[Libya]]. | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{reflist|2}} | {{reflist|2}} |
Revision as of 04:18, 28 July 2011
Arab Spring refers to movements toward democracy in Arab countries. It first appeared in media, probably prematurely, in 2005, to refer to assumptions that a democratic Iraqi government, formed as a result of the Iraq War, would spread.[1] The term, however, best refers to popular, apparently spontaneous, actions in 2011 that have led to new governments in Tunisia and Egypt, and probably in Yemen. It also includes increasingly intense protests in a number of countries, such as Bahrain, Jordan and Syria, and active civil war in Libya.