Creating Consent in Ba thist Syria

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Creating Consent in Ba thist Syria

Women and Welfare in a Totalitarian State

Middle Eastern history Social and cultural history Gender studies: women and girls Social welfare and social services Political structures: totalitarianism and dictatorship Political control and freedoms Political activism / Political engagement

Author: Esther Meininghaus

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Language: English

Published by: I.B. Tauris

Published on: 31st March 2016

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 400 pages

ISBN: 9780857729774


The Challenge of Maintaining Dictatorial Regimes

The challenge of maintaining dictatorial regimes through control, co-option and coercion while upholding a facade of legitimacy is something that has concerned leaders throughout the Middle East and beyond. Nowhere is this more evident than in the Syria ruled by the Asads, both Hafiz and his son Bashar.

Drawing on the example of the General Union of Syrian Women (founded in 1967), Esther Meininghaus offers new insights into how the Syrian Ba''thist regimes attempted to move beyond mere satisfaction with the compliance of the citizenry and to consolidate their rule amongst the local population.

Meininghaus argues that this was partially achieved through providing welfare services delivered by the Union as one of the state-led mass organisations. In this way, she suggests, these regimes did not only aim to undermine opposition and to create the illusion of consent, but they factually catered to local needs and depended on consent.

Based on archival material, interviews and statistics, Creating Consent in Ba''thist Syria will shed new light on mass organisations as a crucial institution of Ba''thist state building and, more broadly, the construction of the Asad regimes.

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