Is There an Islamist Alternative in Egypt?
It is a common place in the literature that the Muslim Brotherhood (jama’a al-ikhwan al-muslimin) is - after its re-emergence on the political scene back in the seventies - the main (if not the only) real, organised and mass-based opposition force in Egypt. Events in Egypt in January 2011 have recast attention on this question. This paper aims to evaluate, inasmuch as it is possible, the state of health of the Muslim Brotherhood (MB) today, after forty years of coexistence with the Egyptian (neo)-authoritarian regime. Has the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood represented a real alternative to the incumbent regime? Or it is more correct to speak today in terms of an almost ‘functional’ opposition, tamed by recurring political repression and limited freedom of action? To what extent has the Muslim Brotherhood been able to shape or at least to influence the Egyptian political and social agenda, both with respect to the regime and to other opposition forces?
Paper written within the framework of the IAI-GMF Strategic Partnership.
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Details
Roma, Istituto Affari Internazionali, February 2011, 13 p. -
Issue
11|03 -
ISBN/ISSN/DOI:
978-88-98042-02-9
Introduction
1. The Muslim Brotherhood and the Egyptian regime
2. The Muslim Brotherhood and social action
Conclusions
References
Topic
Tag
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