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Civil Society in the Arab World… towards democracy?. 351 – Contemporary Politics of the Middle East Summer 2010. What is Society?. A system of social interaction that includes culture and social organization Status (rank in society)
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Civil Society in the Arab World… towards democracy? 351 – Contemporary Politics of the Middle East Summer 2010
What is Society? • A system of social interaction that includes culture and social organization • Status (rank in society) • Role (expected behavior associated with a particular status • Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft • Primary and Secondary Associations
What is Civil Society? • Civil society as a set of organized groups/associations, whose members deliberate about social or political issues or act collectively to accomplish common goals. • “the place where a mélange of groups, associations, clubs, guilds, syndicates, federations, unions, parties, and groups come together to provide a buffer between state and citizen.” • Counterweight to the state
Source: Jan Kubik, Rutgers University, Comparative Proseminar
Two Examples of Civil Society (1) • Qat Chews in Yemen (Wedeen) • Public Sphere – where people congregate to discuss societal issues and transform discussion into political action • Educated populace, performances of knowledge, enlightened (and critical) debate • help people to develop attachments to the nation outside of the formal institutions of government • Pluralism & inclusivity, but hierarchy
Two Examples of Civil Society (2) • Dewaniya in Kuwait - place of receiving associates • Gathering place to facilitate discussion & deliberation about important issues, and build consensus • Similar to a ‘town hall’ meeting, but less formal and continuously taking place, and more social • Politics of deliberation, alliance formation, activism, and contention • Locus of pro-democracy movement in 1980s-90s • Locus of nationalist activism during Iraqi occupation • Political Campaigns
Characteristics of Civil Society Organizations (CSOs) • Secondary group relations, not primary • Openness and inclusivity (public); civil in their behavior • Legally recognized • Produce dense networks of social relationship based on trust and reciprocity (social capital) • **Tolerant and moderate in their claims; Supportive of democratic reform
Networks • What is a network? • A complex set of relationships between individuals and organized groups of individuals • Generates feelings of solidarity • Collective “we” that is often sub-national • Reified by regular associations among individuals • Based on trust and continued associations • Strongest predictor of recruitment into activist organization? knowing someone already involved
Web of Social Affiliations or Social Network Some Types of Ties Professional Family Business Romance
Some Types of CSOs (Yom reading) • Membership-based Professional Groups • Ex: Lawyer’s organizations (like Bar Association) • NGOs • Ex: Widows for Peace (micro-credit); Iraq Health Aid Organization (basic nursing skills); require registration • Public Interest Advocates – human rights, watchdogs, thinktanks, etc. • Unions • Ex: Labor Unions exist in most, if not all, Arab states • Regulated by gov’t (public funding; constrains activism) • Informal Social Groups and Networks • Iraqi Youth League in Jordan; Internat’l. Pal. Youth League
What is Democracy? • Minimalist (process) definitions • Substantive definitions (& preconditions) • "democracy is not attained simply by making institutional changes or through elite level maneuvering. Its survival depends also on the values and beliefs of ordinary citizens." • Civic Culture (Tessler on attitudes) • Pride and emotional investment in the nation & pol. system • Expectation of fair treatment from government authorities • Relative freedoms of speech and expression about political issues • Tolerance toward groups/parties/orgs you disagree with • Valuing of active participation (in local government, parties, & civic associations) • Self-confidence in one's competence to participate in politics • Civic cooperation and trust • Membership in a voluntary association • Social Capital