中东和北非地区的议会:在胆怯的改革和倒退之间。比较调查

Rainer Grote
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引用次数: 0

摘要

作为专门讨论议会在当代阿拉伯政治中的作用的特刊的一部分,本文对“阿拉伯之春”之后和新冠肺炎大流行早期阶段阿拉伯议会地位和权力的宪法规则的演变进行了监督。议会传统上在阿拉伯宪法理论和实践中发挥着边缘作用。尽管在“阿拉伯之春”抗议运动产生的改革议程中,加强议会的作用和权力以及重新平衡行政立法关系以支持后者是突出的,但事实证明,这些运动无法产生持久的变革。改革要么被压迫性政府推翻,要么被重新确立总统主导地位的政治协议所取代,这与改革者最初的愿望大相径庭。大多数阿拉伯国家存在着极其不利的条件——内部分裂的民主改革运动、根深蒂固的军事、,以及决心用一切可用手段抵制真正民主变革的政治精英和支持国内现状的强大外部行为者,很可能会确保议会在可预见的未来在阿拉伯政治中仍被限制在很大程度上发挥装饰作用。
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Parliaments in the MENA Region: Between Timid Reform and Regression. A Comparative Survey
Part of a special issue devoted to the role of parliaments in contemporary Arab politics, this article gives an oversight of the evolution of the constitutional rules governing the status and powers of Arab parliamentary assemblies following the “Arab spring” and during the early stages of the Covid-19 pandemic. Parliaments have traditionally played a marginal role in Arab constitutional theory and practice. Although the strengthening of the role and powers of parliaments and a rebalancing of the executive-legislative relations in favour of the latter featured prominently in the reform agendas emerging from the protest movements of the “Arab spring,” these movements proved unable to produce lasting change. The reforms have either been rolled back by oppressive governments or given way to a political pactice of renewed presidential dominance which diverges considerably from the initial aspirations of the reformers. The highly unfavourable conditions existing in most Arab countries – with internally divided democratic reform movements, entrenched military, and political elites determined to resist genuine democratic change with all means available and powerful external actors supporting the domestic status quo – are likely to ensure that parliaments will remain confined to a largely ornamental role in Arab politics in the foreseeable future.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
0.00%
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19
期刊介绍: The aim of MELG is to provide a peer-reviewed venue for academic analysis in which the legal lens allows scholars and practitioners to address issues of compelling concern to the Middle East. The journal is multi-disciplinary – offering contributors from a wide range of backgrounds an opportunity to discuss issues of governance, jurisprudence, and socio-political organization, thereby promoting a common conceptual framework and vocabulary for exchanging ideas across boundaries – geographic and otherwise. It is also broad in scope, discussing issues of critical importance to the Middle East without treating the region as a self-contained unit.
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