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dc.contributor.authorKrieg, Andreas
dc.date.accessioned2020-04-15T09:16:06Z-
dc.date.available2020-04-15T09:16:06Z-
dc.date.issued2017
dc.identifier.isbn9783319522432
dc.identifier.urihttp://repository.vnu.edu.vn/handle/VNU_123/81172-
dc.description.abstractContents: Acknowledgements; Contents; List of Figures; Chapter 1: Introduction; Redefining the Concept of Security; Why This Book?; The Book's Outline; Notes; Chapter 2: A New Approach to Conceptualizing Security in the Arab World; The Social Contract: Providing Security as a Public Good; Defining the Public Sphere; Conceptualizing Patron-Protégé Relations in Islamic Political Thought; Conclusion; Notes; Chapter 3: Patron-Protégé Relations Under the Old Regime; Patron-Protégé Relations in the Arab World; Egypt; Syria; Libya; Tunisia; Bahrain; Yemen; Conclusion; Notes. Contents: Chapter 4: Traditional Civil-Security Sector Relations in the Arab WorldConceptualizing the Relationship Between Public, Patron and Security Sector; Means of Privatizing the Statutory Security Sector; Structural Means of Privatization of the Security Sector; Diversification of the Security Sector; Centralization of Command Structures; Constant Rotation of Stakeholders; Coercive Means of Privatizing the Security Sector; Commissarism; Accommodative Means of Privatizing the Security Sector; Favouritism; Types of Security Sectors; Personalized Security Sectors; Sectarian Security Sectors. Contents: Momentum and EscalationMeans of Last Resort; Regime Change, Resilience and Counterrevolution; Conclusion; Notes; Chapter 7: Alternative Patronage Systems: From Old Regime Failure to New Security Providers; Renegotiating the Social Contract After the Failure of State Patronage; Islamism as the Foundation for a New Social Contract; The Muslim Brotherhood; The Brotherhood and the Arab Spring; Hezbollah; Conclusion; Notes; Chapter 8: Battling for a New Post-Revolutionary Order: New Security Providers in Syria, Libya and Yemen; Syria: From Public Dissidence to Socio-Political Disintegration. Contents: Profiteering Security SectorsPraetorian Security Sectors; Fractured Security Sectors; Conclusion; Notes; Chapter 5: The Arab Public Sphere: Challenging the Old Regime; Civil Society and the Regime; New Media and the Rise of the Arab Public Sphere; The Arab Public Sphere and the Arab Spring; The Mobilization of the Masses; Conclusion; Notes; Chapter 6: Public Dissidence, the Security Sector and Regime Resilience; Dissidence, Repression and Its Impact on Regime Resilience; The Escalatory Spiral of Dissidence, Response and Regime Resilience Since 2011; The Initial Spark; Protest and Repression. Contents: Socio-Political Reintegration Amid Widespread AnarchyLibya: From Regime Change to Socio-Political Disintegration; Yemen: The Intensification of Socio-Political Fragmentation; AQAP Ansar-al-Sharia; The Houthis; Conclusion; Notes; Chapter 9: Iraq: The Privatization of Security and the Rise of ISIS; The Socio-Political Context of Iraq; Building a New Regime: Private Patronage in Reverse; Maliki's Private Security Sector; From Public Dissidence to Socio-Political Disintegration; The Rise of ISIS; ISIS as a Public Security Provider; Conclusion; Notes; Chapter 10: Conclusion; Notes.
dc.format.extent283 p.
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherPalgrave Macmillan
dc.rights©The Author(s)
dc.subjectNational security -- Arab countries; POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Essays; POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Government -- General; POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Government -- National; POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Reference; National security; Politics and government; Social conditions; Arab
dc.subject.ddc320
dc.titleSocio-political order and security in the Arab world : from regime security to public security
dc.typeBook
Appears in Collections:Khoa học xã hội và hành vi


  • 2017_Book_Socio_PoliticalOrderAndSecurit.pdf
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  • Full metadata record
    DC FieldValueLanguage
    dc.contributor.authorKrieg, Andreas
    dc.date.accessioned2020-04-15T09:16:06Z-
    dc.date.available2020-04-15T09:16:06Z-
    dc.date.issued2017
    dc.identifier.isbn9783319522432
    dc.identifier.urihttp://repository.vnu.edu.vn/handle/VNU_123/81172-
    dc.description.abstractContents: Acknowledgements; Contents; List of Figures; Chapter 1: Introduction; Redefining the Concept of Security; Why This Book?; The Book's Outline; Notes; Chapter 2: A New Approach to Conceptualizing Security in the Arab World; The Social Contract: Providing Security as a Public Good; Defining the Public Sphere; Conceptualizing Patron-Protégé Relations in Islamic Political Thought; Conclusion; Notes; Chapter 3: Patron-Protégé Relations Under the Old Regime; Patron-Protégé Relations in the Arab World; Egypt; Syria; Libya; Tunisia; Bahrain; Yemen; Conclusion; Notes. Contents: Chapter 4: Traditional Civil-Security Sector Relations in the Arab WorldConceptualizing the Relationship Between Public, Patron and Security Sector; Means of Privatizing the Statutory Security Sector; Structural Means of Privatization of the Security Sector; Diversification of the Security Sector; Centralization of Command Structures; Constant Rotation of Stakeholders; Coercive Means of Privatizing the Security Sector; Commissarism; Accommodative Means of Privatizing the Security Sector; Favouritism; Types of Security Sectors; Personalized Security Sectors; Sectarian Security Sectors. Contents: Momentum and EscalationMeans of Last Resort; Regime Change, Resilience and Counterrevolution; Conclusion; Notes; Chapter 7: Alternative Patronage Systems: From Old Regime Failure to New Security Providers; Renegotiating the Social Contract After the Failure of State Patronage; Islamism as the Foundation for a New Social Contract; The Muslim Brotherhood; The Brotherhood and the Arab Spring; Hezbollah; Conclusion; Notes; Chapter 8: Battling for a New Post-Revolutionary Order: New Security Providers in Syria, Libya and Yemen; Syria: From Public Dissidence to Socio-Political Disintegration. Contents: Profiteering Security SectorsPraetorian Security Sectors; Fractured Security Sectors; Conclusion; Notes; Chapter 5: The Arab Public Sphere: Challenging the Old Regime; Civil Society and the Regime; New Media and the Rise of the Arab Public Sphere; The Arab Public Sphere and the Arab Spring; The Mobilization of the Masses; Conclusion; Notes; Chapter 6: Public Dissidence, the Security Sector and Regime Resilience; Dissidence, Repression and Its Impact on Regime Resilience; The Escalatory Spiral of Dissidence, Response and Regime Resilience Since 2011; The Initial Spark; Protest and Repression. Contents: Socio-Political Reintegration Amid Widespread AnarchyLibya: From Regime Change to Socio-Political Disintegration; Yemen: The Intensification of Socio-Political Fragmentation; AQAP Ansar-al-Sharia; The Houthis; Conclusion; Notes; Chapter 9: Iraq: The Privatization of Security and the Rise of ISIS; The Socio-Political Context of Iraq; Building a New Regime: Private Patronage in Reverse; Maliki's Private Security Sector; From Public Dissidence to Socio-Political Disintegration; The Rise of ISIS; ISIS as a Public Security Provider; Conclusion; Notes; Chapter 10: Conclusion; Notes.
    dc.format.extent283 p.
    dc.language.isoen
    dc.publisherPalgrave Macmillan
    dc.rights©The Author(s)
    dc.subjectNational security -- Arab countries; POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Essays; POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Government -- General; POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Government -- National; POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Reference; National security; Politics and government; Social conditions; Arab
    dc.subject.ddc320
    dc.titleSocio-political order and security in the Arab world : from regime security to public security
    dc.typeBook
    Appears in Collections:Khoa học xã hội và hành vi


  • 2017_Book_Socio_PoliticalOrderAndSecurit.pdf
    • Size : 2,32 MB

    • Format : Adobe PDF

    • View : 
    • Download : 


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