Columbia International Affairs Online: Journals

CIAO DATE: 02/2012

Monarchical Pluralism or De-democratization: Actors and Choices in Jordan

Insight Turkey †

A publication of:
SETA Foundation for Political, Economic and Social Research

Volume: 14, Issue: 1 (January-March 2012)


Nur Köprülü

Abstract

Full Text

This paper argues that the purpose of democratization in Jordanian politics is not only a political co-optation policy to cope with the negative effects of the country’s economic recession, but also to ensure the survival of the Hashemite monarchy. The process of democratization in the region has been closely tied with the notions of inclusiveness and exclusiveness. This is due to ‘incomplete’ national identity building formation in most parts of the Middle East. For that particular purpose, the main objective of this paper is not to re-assert the uniqueness of politics in the Arab world, but rather to engage in how politics of regime survival in the case of Jordan shape the process of democratization in the post – 1989 era. Thus this paper will examine the period following the normalization of relations with Israel in 1994, the Palestinian question, the repercussions of current social upheavals in the Arab world, and how these specific circumstances affect Jordan’s democratic opening.