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Democracy or Authoritarianism
Islamist Governments in Turkey, Egypt, and Tunisia

Traces the evolution of three Islamist governments to explain why some commit to democracy while others devolve into authoritarianism.

Sebnem Gumuscu (Author)

9781009178235, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 16 March 2023

296 pages
23.5 x 15.5 x 2.1 cm, 0.62 kg

'This is comparative politics at its very best. Grappling with the timely question of why some Islamist parties remain committed to democracy once in power while others experience democratic backsliding, Gumuscu leverages a rich body of primary research to argue for intra-party competition as the causal factor. Readers have gained a powerful tool via Gumuscu's tour de force.' Nora Fisher Onar, University of San Francisco

The first Islamist parties to come to power through democratic means in the Muslim world were those in Turkey, Tunisia, and Egypt. The Justice and Development Party (AKP) won the 2002 election in Turkey, and Ennahda (Renaissance Party) in Tunisia and the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt were both elected in the wake of the Arab uprisings of 2010/11. Yet only Ennahda could be said to have fulfilled its democratic promise, with both the Turkish and Egyptian governments reverting to authoritarianism. Drawing upon extensive fieldwork in three countries, Sebnem Gumuscu explains why some Islamist governments adhered to democratic principles and others took an authoritarian turn following electoral success. Using accessible language, Gumuscu clearly introduces key theories and considers how intra-party affairs impacted each party's commitment to democracy. Through a comparative lens, Gumuscu identifies broader trends in Islamist governments and explains the complex web of internal dynamics that led political parties either to advance or subvert democracy.

Introduction
1. Modernization, inclusion, and power: explaining Islamist parties' democratic commitments
2. A theory of intra-party politics: resources and coalitions
3. The AKP's pivot from liberal democracy to electoral Islamism
4. Electoral Islamism and killing the dream of a democratic Muslim brotherhood
5. Ennahda's path towards liberal Islamism
Conclusion.

Subject Areas: Religious & theocratic ideologies [JPFR], Comparative politics [JPB], Middle Eastern history [HBJF1]

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