Discusses why and how the Egyptian judiciary was critically important in bringing down two vastly different regimes in three years.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Mahmoud Hamad is an assistant professor of political science at Cairo University and the founding secretary general of the Arab Association of Constitutional Law (2016-18). He previously taught at the University of Utah, Drake University, Iowa, and Brigham Young University, Utah. During his graduate studies, he won two Fulbright awards at the University of Washington and the University of Utah.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Introduction 2. The historical legacies and the institutional culture of the Egyptian judiciary 3. Nasser's Egypt: charisma, populism, and the attacks on judicial independence 4. The years of Sadat: crisis, regime survival, and the awakening of judicial activism 5. Judicial politics under Mubarak: judges and the fall of the Pharaoh 6. The scaf, the courts, and Islamists: judges and the political transition 7. Mursi and the judiciary: the self-fulfilling prophecy 8. Patricians and plebeians: the chief justice paves the road to the general 9. Old wine in a new bottle: Ssisi, judges, and the restoration of the ancien régime References Index.
1. Introduction 2. The historical legacies and the institutional culture of the Egyptian judiciary 3. Nasser's Egypt: charisma, populism, and the attacks on judicial independence 4. The years of Sadat: crisis, regime survival, and the awakening of judicial activism 5. Judicial politics under Mubarak: judges and the fall of the Pharaoh 6. The scaf, the courts, and Islamists: judges and the political transition 7. Mursi and the judiciary: the self-fulfilling prophecy 8. Patricians and plebeians: the chief justice paves the road to the general 9. Old wine in a new bottle: Ssisi, judges, and the restoration of the ancien régime References Index.
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