Description
About the Author
Luis Martinez is Senior Research Fellow, CERI/Sciences Po and author of several books on the Maghreb published by Hurst. Rasmus Alenius Boserup is Senior Researcher, Foreign Policy, at the Danish Institute for International Studies.
Reviews
'This book is timely and significant. It both reveals how Algeria has changed since its civil war in the 1990s and how scholars now interpret North Africa's most important country. The contributors, moreover, are acknowledged specialists of the country, or have recently completed research there, and so are ideal guides to its evolving complexities.' -- George Joffe, Lecturer in the Department of Politics and International Studies, University of Cambridge, and editor of 'Islamist Radicalisation in North Africa'; 'This volume provides a judicious assessment of how the Bouteflika regime has demilitarized the Algerian polity without, however, altering the architecture of control. It provides a provocative reinterpretation of how politics and power in Algeria have evolved and yet remain the same despite the wholesale house cleaning of the intelligence service. A must-read for those interested in authoritarian resiliency.' -- John P. Entelis, Professor of Political Science, Fordham University, and author of, among others, 'Algeria: The Revolution Institutionalized'; 'An extremely timely book that addresses comprehensively one of the least known and understood countries in the Arab world, just as it enters a new period of political and economic change. The contributors provide important insights into how Algeria emerged from its traumatic experiences of the 1980s and 1990s and the lessons this provides for the tumult the Arab world is currently experiencing.' -- Michael Willis, King Mohamed VI Fellow in Moroccan and Mediterranean Studies, University of Oxford, and author of 'Politics and Power in the Maghreb'
This volume provides a judicious assessment of how the Bouteflika regime has demilitarized the Algerian polity without, however, altering the architecture of control. It provides a provocative reinterpretation of how politics and power in Algeria have evolved and yet remain the same despite the wholesale house cleaning of the intelligence service. A must-read for those interested in authoritarian resiliency. -- John P. Entelis, Professor of Political Science, Fordham University, and author of, among others, Algeria: The Revolution Institutionalized
An extremely timely book that addresses comprehensively one of the least known and understood countries in the Arab world, just as it enters a new period of political and economic change. The contributors provide important insights into how Algeria emerged from its traumatic experiences of the 1980s and 1990s and the lessons this provides for the tumult the Arab world is currently experiencing. -- Michael Willis, King Mohamed VI Fellow in Moroccan and Mediterranean Studies, University of Oxford, and author of Politics and Power in the Maghreb
Algeria Modern contributes greatly to the literature on Algerian politics by offering a refreshing perspective and understanding of complex inter-relations and transformations in recent years. ... It is therefore particularly timely for those interested in Algeria's political trajectory to read Algeria Modern. -- Africa at LSE Blog
Book Information
ISBN 9781849045872
Author Luis Martinez
Format Hardback
Page Count 256
Imprint C Hurst & Co Publishers Ltd
Publisher C Hurst & Co Publishers Ltd