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Soldiers of Democracy?

Military Legacies and the Arab Spring

Dr Sharan Grewal (Assistant Professor, Assistant Professor, William & Mary)

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English
Oxford University Press
20 October 2023
Why do some militaries support and others thwart transitions to democracy? After the Arab Spring revolutions, why did Egypt's military stage a coup to end the transition? Conversely, why did Tunisia's military initially support the transition, only to later facilitate the elected president's dismantling of democracy?

In Soldiers of Democracy? Military Legacies and the Arab Spring, Sharan Grewal argues that a military's behavior under democracy is shaped by how it had been treated under autocracy. Autocrats who had empowered their militaries produce soldiers who will repress protests and stage coups to preserve their privileges. Meanwhile, autocrats who had marginalized their militaries produce soldiers who support democratization, but who are also more susceptible to incumbent takeovers and civil wars. The dictator's choice to either empower or marginalize the military thus creates legacies that shape both the likelihood of democratization and the forms by which it breaks down.

Drawing on over 140 interviews with civilian and military leaders, and three surveys of military personnel, this scholarly volume illustrates this theory through detailed case studies of Egypt and Tunisia. Grewal also probes the generalizability of the theory through a cross-national analysis of all countries between 1946-2010. Overall, he brings the military front and center to the study of democratic transition and consolidation.

By:  
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 157mm,  Spine: 19mm
Weight:   1g
ISBN:   9780198873518
ISBN 10:   0198873514
Pages:   352
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
1: Introduction 2: A Theory of Military Behavior 3: Cross-National Analysis 4: Case Selection: Egypt & Tunisia 5: Egypt: Empowering the Military 6: Egypt: Repression and Revolution 7: Egypt: A Coup against Democracy 8: Tunisia: Marginalizing the Military 9: Tunisia: Shirking in the Revolution 10: Tunisia: Supporting the Transition 11: Tunisia: Facilitating the Takeover 12: Surveying the Military 13: Conclusion Bibliography

Sharan Grewal is an Assistant Professor of Government at William & Mary, a non-resident fellow at the Brookings Institution, and a non-resident senior fellow at the Project on Middle East Democracy. His research has been published in the American Political Science Review and the American Journal of Political Science, among other outlets, and has received funding from the National Science Foundation, the Henry Luce Foundation, the John Templeton Foundation, and the Smith Richardson Foundation.

Reviews for Soldiers of Democracy?: Military Legacies and the Arab Spring

A country's chances of getting and keeping democracy are indelibly shaped by men with guns. In this extraordinary, multi-method study of civil-military relations in two Arab polities, Sharan Grewal argues that in Egypt, a military that had long been politically central under dictatorship fought tooth and nail against attempts to upend the old order, while in Tunisia, a military that had been kept small and weak by a jealous dictator saw in democracy a chance to shine. The result is that Egypt's democracy never got off the ground, while Tunisia enjoyed 10 years of democracy - before its military got a better offer. This book singlehandedly puts the role of militaries in political development back at the top of the agenda of comparative politics scholars. * Tarek Masoud, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University * Elegant and insightful, Soldiers of Democracy offers a compelling theory that explains when the military is likely to support a country's transition to democracy and when not. Anchored in rich empirical analysis of the Tunisian and Egyptian cases and bolstered by multi-case comparison, Grewal offers a masterful contribution to the lively debate on the military's role in politics. A model piece of research. * Eva Bellin, Myra and Robert Kraft Professor of Arab Politics, Brandeis University * In this important book, Sharan Grewal highlights the importance of civil-military relations in the prior autocratic regime in explaining military reactions to democratization. In bringing the military back into the study of nascent democracies, Grewal has revived interest in a crucial set of actors, and in focusing on their history, he has helped explain divergent behavior that would otherwise be puzzling. * Donald L. Horowitz, James B. Duke Professor of Law and Political Science Emeritus, Duke University * Too often contemporary scholarship on authoritarianism neglects civil-military relations. In his new book, Sharan Grewal shows why the military deserves centerstage. Drawing on interviews and original surveys, he demonstrates how the methods through which leaders control the military under autocracy - whether they empower or marginalize it - profoundly affects the military's response during democratic transitions. Grewal's Soldiers of Democracy is sure to be a defining work on the Arab Spring and on the military's role in democratization. * Risa Brooks, Allis Chalmers Professor of Political Science, Marquette University * Sharan Grewal's comprehensive comparison of how the Tunisian and Egyptian militaries reacted to the Arab Spring uprisings is invaluable for understanding why they diverged so dramatically. The incisiveness of Grewal's analysis is as impressive as the scope of his research. Everyone interested in the successes and failures of the Arab Spring should read this superb book to better understand the Middle East and North Africa today. * Gordon Gray, U.S. Ambassador to Tunisia, 2009-2012 *


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