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Mobilization and Advocacy since 2011: The Case of Lebanon

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dc.contributor.author Haidar, Diala
dc.contributor.author Harb, Mona
dc.contributor.author Daou, Bernadette
dc.contributor.author Clark, Janine A.
dc.contributor.editor Harb, Mona
dc.date.accessioned 2023-09-15T08:58:41Z
dc.date.available 2023-09-15T08:58:41Z
dc.date.issued 2019-10
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10938/24219
dc.description.abstract At the time of writing the introduction of this report (December 2019), the streets of many cities and towns across Lebanon are filled with protestors denouncing the corrupt leaders who parasited the sectarian political system, extracted public resources, and misappropriated foreign aid for their own gains. It is not the first time that the frail Lebanese political system is challenged, but it is the first time that the uprisings reach such unprecedented momentum, scope, and scale. Protestors are focused on socio-economic demands; requesting the return of stolen public money, an independent judiciary system that can hold corrupt rulers accountable and trace theft, an interim government that is able to restructure public debt in equitable ways while protecting the most vulnerable, and the organization of early and fair parliamentary elections. They are mobilized in the main Lebanese cities, from the North (Tripoli) to the South (Tyre, Nabatiyeh) to the Bekaa (Baalbeck) and, of course, in Beirut. Protestors’ profiles cut across class, sect, education, age, and gender. Women groups are very visible and vocal in the streets, and the presence of LGBTQ+ groups is also quite salient in the capital city. The scene is well occupied, in addition, by an array of groups that have been engaged in alternative oppositional politics for several years now, some of whom have participated in the municipal elections of 2016 and in the parliamentary elections of 2018 (and failed, except for one individual who became a member of parliament in 2018).
dc.language.iso en
dc.relation Arabic version: http://hdl.handle.net/10938/24218
dc.relation.ispartofseries Working Papers
dc.subject October Revolution, 2019
dc.subject Feminism
dc.subject Social change
dc.subject Civil society
dc.subject Non-governmental organizations
dc.subject Lebanon
dc.title Mobilization and Advocacy since 2011: The Case of Lebanon
dc.type Report
dc.contributor.authorCorporate Asfari Institute for Civil Society and Citizenship


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