Revolution, reform, and reaction comprise the respective fortunes of modern Iran, Turkey and Egypt. The Power Triangle attributes the different outcomes to the power struggle between the military, security, and political institutions. Royal ascendency in Iran made it vulnerable to revolution; military dominance in Turkey ushered democracy; and Egypt's police state produced entrenched authoritarianism.
Revolution, reform, and reaction comprise the respective fortunes of modern Iran, Turkey and Egypt. The Power Triangle attributes the different outcomes to the power struggle between the military, security, and political institutions. Royal ascendency in Iran made it vulnerable to revolution; military dominance in Turkey ushered democracy; and Egypt's police state produced entrenched authoritarianism.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hazem Kandil is the Cambridge University Lecturer in Political Sociology and Fellow of St Catharine's College. He studies power relations in revolution and war in the Middle East, Western Europe, and North America.
Inhaltsangabe
* Introduction: From Revolution to Regime Change * PART I - IRAN: ROYALISM AND REVOLUTION * Chapter 1. A One Man Coup: February 1921 * Chapter 2. A Coup de Théâtre: August 1953 * Chapter 3. The Road to Persepolis and Back: August 1953-January 1978 * Chapter 4. The Coup that Never Was: January 1979 * Chapter 5. Check and Balances: The Realist Version: February 1979 and After * PART II - TURKEY: THE LIMITS OF MILITARY GUARDIANSHIP * Chapter 6. The Founding Coup: March 1924 * Chapter 7. The Corrective Coup: May 1960 * Chapter 8. The Communiqué Coup: March 1971 * Chapter 9. The Passive Revolution: September 1980 * Chapter 10. The White Coup: June 1997 * Chapter 11. Aborted Coups? November 2002 and After * PART III - EGYPT: THE POLITICS OF REPRESSION * Chapter 12. Militarism and its Discontents: March 1954 * Chapter 13. Blood, Folly, and Sandcastles: June 1967 * Chapter 14. Becoming a Police States: October 1973 * Chapter 15. The Long Road to a Short Revolution: October 1981-January 2011 * Chapter 16. The Resilience of Repression: January 2011 and After * Conclusion: Revolution, Reform, and Resilience
* Introduction: From Revolution to Regime Change * PART I - IRAN: ROYALISM AND REVOLUTION * Chapter 1. A One Man Coup: February 1921 * Chapter 2. A Coup de Théâtre: August 1953 * Chapter 3. The Road to Persepolis and Back: August 1953-January 1978 * Chapter 4. The Coup that Never Was: January 1979 * Chapter 5. Check and Balances: The Realist Version: February 1979 and After * PART II - TURKEY: THE LIMITS OF MILITARY GUARDIANSHIP * Chapter 6. The Founding Coup: March 1924 * Chapter 7. The Corrective Coup: May 1960 * Chapter 8. The Communiqué Coup: March 1971 * Chapter 9. The Passive Revolution: September 1980 * Chapter 10. The White Coup: June 1997 * Chapter 11. Aborted Coups? November 2002 and After * PART III - EGYPT: THE POLITICS OF REPRESSION * Chapter 12. Militarism and its Discontents: March 1954 * Chapter 13. Blood, Folly, and Sandcastles: June 1967 * Chapter 14. Becoming a Police States: October 1973 * Chapter 15. The Long Road to a Short Revolution: October 1981-January 2011 * Chapter 16. The Resilience of Repression: January 2011 and After * Conclusion: Revolution, Reform, and Resilience
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