Small farmer uprisings and rural neglect in Egypt and Tunisia
It is a truism that modern Arab states, following in the footsteps of colonial powers, have concentrated on the socio-economic development of cities, particularly the capital, and badly neglected the provinces. The rulers and the nationalist intelligentsia tend to see peasants as backward and mired in “tradition” that can only impede the progress toward modernity that the elites desire. In both Egypt and nearby Tunisia, where Mubarak’s fellow dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali was also overthrown in 2011, there is a complete mismatch between state agricultural policy and rural political consciousness, characterized by strong peasant populism and a strong analytical sense of what is behind rural development failures.
Title of publication: Middle East report
Volume: 272
Author: Habib Ayeb
Other authors: Ray Bush
Year: 2014
Country/ies: Egypt, Tunisia
Geographical coverage: Near East and North Africa
Type: Journal article
Full text available at: http://www.merip.org/mer/mer272/small-farmer-uprisings-rural-neglect-egypt-tunisia
Content language: English