Authoritarianism in the Middle East
Following the push for reform during the popular uprising in 2011, authoritarianism is once again dominating domestic politics and power relations in the MENA region. Drawing on data collected during field trips to Cairo, Tehran, Beirut and Kuwait city, the five authors behind of this EU-funded MENARA working paper, analyse three distinct ways in which political leaders in Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Iran have stood their grounds since 2011. The working paper shows that the region’s autocratic leaders have adopted highly distinct strategies to cope with the challenges they have been confronted with internally – including strategies of ‘restoration’, of ‘transformation’ and of ‘adaptation’. The working paper ends by suggesting that European leaders, in spite of their limited leverage and resources, have a long-term strategic interest in fostering alternative forms of political regimes in the MENA region.