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Journal article

In the shadow of power: civil?military relations and the Tunisian popular uprising

English
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AUC Library
Taylor & Francis Group
Africa | Northern Africa
1362-9387

This study examines the relative unknown strategic decisions inside the ?black box? of Ben Ali's authoritarian regime under stress, and questions the broader narrative claiming that the fall of his regime was mainly the result of the mass uprising. Making use of new primary and secondary material, the author argues that the demise of the autocratic ruler was caused by the failure of the regime's controlling strategies due to the defunct communication among key security figures that represented its coercive apparatus: military, ministries of Defense and Interior, and different domestic security organisations. Indeed, the dysfunctional intra-regime dynamics were responsible for the outcome of the popular uprising, not the number of the demonstrators across the country. In this regard, Ben Ali's departure was the unintended outcome due to his misreading of the civil?military relations, as well as his own ambiguous perception of the military as a protector and potential threat that led...

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