Arab Spring: Difference between revisions
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imported>Nick Gardner |
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primary export economies (PEE: Comoros, Djibouti, Mauritania, Somalia, Sudan and | primary export economies (PEE: Comoros, Djibouti, Mauritania, Somalia, Sudan and | ||
Yemen)18. | Yemen)18. | ||
According to one estimate at least 19% of the Arab population lived below the [[poverty line]] at the end of the 1990s<ref>[http://www.arab-api.org/cv/aali-cv/aali/wps0402.pdf Ali Abdel Gadir Ali: ''Poverty in the Arab Region: A Selective Review'', (Background paper prepared for the IFPRI / API Collaborative Research Project on: ''Public | |||
Policy and Poverty Reduction in the Arab Region''.) page 26]</ref> | |||
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Revision as of 00:02, 30 July 2011
Although there have been other uses, the term Arab Spring is now taken to refer to the sequence of protest movements that started with the successful uprising in Tunisia that began in December 2010. The subsequent protest movements in other Arab countries were mainly motivated by a wish to put an end to what was perceived as government oppression, corruption and incompetence. Many sought to go so by introducing a measure of democratic accountability, but the various national movements had little else in common, apart from confidence inspired by the Tunisian success.