There is an epochal quality to the current wave of street protests, no matter their enormous differences, from the extraordinary courage and determination of protesters in Syria, to the flash crowds convoked via social media to invade commercial blocks in Chile, the United Kingdom, and the United States, to the unarmed Occupiers being tear-gassed, beaten, and arrested by militarized police forces across America.
All posts tagged Middle East
| July 14, 2012
Democracy and Change: What are the Prospects for an “African Spring?”
by Jolyon Ford
| July 12, 2012
Did the June 23 Movement Change Senegal?
| June 15, 2012
The Coming Elections in Zimbabwe: Hysterical Headlines and Happy Losers
by Andrew Iliff
A Vision and a Program for the American Left: A Conversation with Roberto Mangabeira Unger on the Situation, the Task, and the Remaking of the Democratic Party
Rediscovering Politics
Occupy’s Expressive Impulse
by Todd Gitlin
| September 7, 2012
The Return of the Opposition in Gabon
| September 5, 2012
An African Lysistrata in Togo
by Ciara Aucoin
| June 4, 2012
Democracy in Mali: A True Festival of Robbers
by Sara Abbas




