scholarly journals Explaining the moderate platform of the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood: Against the inclusion-moderation hypothesis

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Hanlie Booysen

<p>Throughout its existence, the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood (SMB) has consistently maintained a moderate policy on governance. The main aim of this study is to explain this moderation. Previous literature has usually explained moderation in similar movements by an “inclusion-moderation hypothesis”, which holds that moderation results when movements have the opportunity to participate in pluralist political processes. However, the SMB has been progressively excluded from the Syrian political arena since 1963. The inclusion-moderation hypothesis implies, as its converse, that exclusion leads to radicalisation. This study shows that contrary to this expectation, the SMB’s ultimate exclusion from the Syrian political arena in 1982 was in fact the primary driver of its moderate policy. The SMB also participated in parliamentary politics in its early history, and therefore has not moderated over time, as the inclusion-moderation hypothesis would require. Thus, the inclusion-moderation hypothesis does not work for this case, and this dissertation advances an alternate explanation for the SMB’s continued commitment to a moderate policy on governance.  This study’s central thesis is that the SMB’s moderate policy on governance can be explained by the Brotherhood’s primary target audience, that is to say, the political force which, in the SMB’s view, can deliver its political objective. As this definition implies, the target audience shifts over time, in accordance with changing circumstances. In 1980, the primary target audience comprised diverse actors in opposition to the al-Asad government: the Fighting Vanguard, the Syrian ulama, and the secularist opposition. In 2001, the audience was the Bashar al-Asad government. In 2004, it was the secularist opposition; and in 2012, it was the foreign sponsors of the secularist opposition.</p>

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Hanlie Booysen

<p>Throughout its existence, the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood (SMB) has consistently maintained a moderate policy on governance. The main aim of this study is to explain this moderation. Previous literature has usually explained moderation in similar movements by an “inclusion-moderation hypothesis”, which holds that moderation results when movements have the opportunity to participate in pluralist political processes. However, the SMB has been progressively excluded from the Syrian political arena since 1963. The inclusion-moderation hypothesis implies, as its converse, that exclusion leads to radicalisation. This study shows that contrary to this expectation, the SMB’s ultimate exclusion from the Syrian political arena in 1982 was in fact the primary driver of its moderate policy. The SMB also participated in parliamentary politics in its early history, and therefore has not moderated over time, as the inclusion-moderation hypothesis would require. Thus, the inclusion-moderation hypothesis does not work for this case, and this dissertation advances an alternate explanation for the SMB’s continued commitment to a moderate policy on governance.  This study’s central thesis is that the SMB’s moderate policy on governance can be explained by the Brotherhood’s primary target audience, that is to say, the political force which, in the SMB’s view, can deliver its political objective. As this definition implies, the target audience shifts over time, in accordance with changing circumstances. In 1980, the primary target audience comprised diverse actors in opposition to the al-Asad government: the Fighting Vanguard, the Syrian ulama, and the secularist opposition. In 2001, the audience was the Bashar al-Asad government. In 2004, it was the secularist opposition; and in 2012, it was the foreign sponsors of the secularist opposition.</p>


2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 205630511983767 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ole Kelm ◽  
Marco Dohle ◽  
Uli Bernhard

The growing importance of social media in the political arena seems to be in line with the mediatization of politics thesis, which states that mediated communication is becoming more important in politics and increasingly influences political processes. However, how politicians’ social media activities and politicians’ perceptions concerning social media have developed over time has rarely been examined. Moreover, it is unclear how the politicians’ activities and perceptions are related to each other. Referring to theoretical approaches, such as the influence of presumed influence approach, four surveys were conducted among German parliamentarians (MPs) between 2012 and 2016 ( n = 194/149/170/118). The results indicate that the MPs’ self-reported social media activities and perceptions have remained remarkably constant since 2012. Regression analyses indicate that MPs’ self-reported social media activities and perceptions are hardly related to each other. This raises the question whether mediatization processes are indeed driven by politicians’ perceptions about media influences.


2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 73
Author(s):  
Yayah Rukiah ◽  
Nurulfatmi Amzy ◽  
Angga Kusuma Dawami

<strong>Abstract</strong><br />The Changes of Singgalang Newspaper Logo. Logo becomes an inseparable identity in introducing a brand to society in general. The construction of the shape represents the identity in itself to show the entity and become a characteristic that is finally known to the target audience. Changes to the logo are based on the need for the entity to always make a new appearance to be better known and to imprint the meaning of the<br />entity in the minds of consumers. As one of the National newspapers, the Singgalang daily also changed its logo from the beginning of its publication in 1969. Changes in form that corresponded to Singgalang’s identity brought a different perception between one logo and another. The shapes differ from the first logo to the online media logo, indicating that Singgalang has special characteristics to show himself to the general<br />public. This article discusses the development of the Singgalang Daily logo that was published for the first time, until the logo is displayed in online media. The results of this study used the semiotic-Sumbo Tinarbuko approach, to see logos as symbols that exist and continue to make changes over time. By using semiotic analysis, the results of<br />this study show that logos are important for re-branding to get into the community in general.<br /><br /><strong>Abstrak</strong><br />Perubahan Logo Harian Singgalang. Logo merupakan salah satu identitas yang tidak terpisahkan dalam mengenalkan sebuah merek kepada masyarakat secara umum. Konstruksi bentuk merepresentasikan identitas dalam dirinya untuk menunjukkan entitasnya dan menjadi ciri khas yang akhirnya dikenal kepada target pembacanya. Perubahan logo didasari pada kebutuhan entitas untuk selalu membuat tampilan baru agar lebih dikenal dan lebih menancapkan makna bentuk entitasnya di benak konsumen. Sebagai salah satu koran nasional, Harian Singgalang juga melakukan perubahan logo dari awal terbitnya di 1969. Perubahan bentuk yang sesuai dengan identitas Singgalang membawa persepsi yang berbeda antar satu logo dengan logo yang lain. Bentukbentuknya<br />yang berbeda dari logo pertama sampai logo media daringnya, menandakan Singgalang memiliki ciri khusus untuk menunjukkan dirinya kepada masyarakat umum.Tulisan ini membahas tentang perkembangan logo Harian Singgalang yang terbit pertama kali, sampai logo yang ditampilkan di media daring. Hasil penelitian ini menggunakan pendekatan semiotika-Sumbo Tinarbuko, untuk melihat logo sebagai<br />sebuah simbol yang ada dan terus dilakukan perubahan dari waktu ke waktu. Dengan menggunakan analisis semiotika, hasil penelitian ini memperlihatkan bahwa logo menjadi penting untuk dilakukan desain ulang (re-branding) untuk dapat masuk ke masyarakat secara umum.


Author(s):  
Sónia Leite ◽  
Diana Brás

Resumo As sociedades têm, ao longo dos tempos, desenvolvido práticas e conceitos diversos face ao que consideram como “o diferente”. A forma como as pessoas “diferentes” têm sido encaradas em diversos momentos históricos traduz, de alguma forma, fatores de ordem social, cultural, religiosa e económica, próprios das diversas épocas (Pereira, 1999). Na última década, foram introduzidas mudanças significativas no apoio a prestar aos alunos com Necessidades Educativas Especiais (NEE) pelas escolas do ensino regular. O Decreto-Lei no 3/2008, de 7 de Janeiro veio revogar o Decreto-Lei no 319/91, de 23 de Agosto, o qual determina os apoios especializados a prestar aos alunos com NEE. Este diploma gerou muita controvérsia por parte dos investigadores nacionais, por limitar o público-alvo de apoios especializados e defender um modelo de avaliação das NEE por referência à Classificação Internacional de funcionalidade, incapacidade e saúde (CIF). Uma década depois, o diploma que regulamenta a Educação Especial foi novamente revisto, tendo surgido o Decreto-Lei 54/2018. Através de um questionário com questões abertas e fechadas foi nosso intuito obter informação relativamente à perspetiva dos professores de ensino regular acerca da inclusão de alunos com NEE nas salas de ensino regular e às alterações previstas no novo Decreto-Lei que regulamenta a Educação Especial e os apoios a prestar a estes alunos.Palavras-chave: Educação Especial, Necessidades Educativas Especiais, Decreto-Lei Abstract Societies have, over time, developed diverse practices and concepts in relation to what they consider as "the different". The way in which "different" people have been viewed at various historical moments translates in some way into social, cultural, religious and economic factors characteristic of the various eras (Pereira, 1999). In the last decade, significant changes have been introduced in support for pupils with Special Educational Needs (SEN) in regular schools. Decree- Law no. 3/2008, of 7 January, revoked Decree-Law no. 319/91, of 23 August, which determines the specialized support to be provided to students with SEN. This diploma generated much controversy on the part of the national researchers, for limiting the target audience of specialized supports and to defend a model of evaluation of the SEN with reference to the International Classification of functionality, incapacity and health (CIF). A decade later, the diploma that regulates Special Education was again revised, and Decree-Law 54/2018 emerged. Through a questionnaire with open and closed questions, it was our intention to obtain information regarding the perspective of teachers of regular education about the inclusion of students with SEN in the regular teaching rooms and the changes provided for in the new Decree- Law that regulates Special Education and the support to these students.Keywords: Special Education, Special Educational Needs, Decree-Law


2019 ◽  
pp. 269-284
Author(s):  
Andrew W. Neal

The conclusion reasserts that professional politicians are more active on security than ever before, and that although parliamentary politics is deeply unfashionable among critical scholars, it is precisely this unfashionableness that makes it so important in this context. If ‘security’ can increasingly be found in this most ‘normal’ of political arenas, then we cannot seriously maintain that security is inherently exceptional and anti-political. The chapter revisits the debate on security as a state of exception, arguing that if security is increasingly part of normal politics, and not a damaging exception to it, then we need to rethink our very understanding of security. The exclusions, prerogatives, taboos, boundaries, hierarchies and symbolic inequalities that elevated security above normal politics have been diluted by new security practices and problematisations. As these have proliferated, they have spilled into the normal political arena and the activities of politicians. The chapter demonstrates this argument by summarising the book’s story of UK security politics over four decades from the 1980s onwards, discussing issues of parliamentary marginalisation, influence, voice, and oversight. Finally, the chapter concludes that more security does not mean less politics, it means more.


First Monday ◽  
2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Volodymyr Lysenko ◽  
Catherine Brooks

This research examines the contemporary landscape relative to information-driven strategies used for global gain by analyzing Russian activities in particular. With Russia functioning as a cause of global democratic disruption, this exploratory project focuses on information-based, computational, and media-related political strategies. The findings provide a way to see patterns over time offering further evidence of ‘hybrid’ warfare identified in recent literature. This work allows readers to connect events in recent years in order to view them together as a strong case of ‘hybrid’ war. These findings also provide scholars, practitioners, and citizens interested in democratic processes around the globe the opportunity to consider the many threats to contemporary political processes, and contributes to ongoing academic conversations about digital political disruptions and warfare. Particularly for readers concerned about political influence via social media and digital security, this study of Russia’s information-related activity as a case of international interference will be of particular interest. 


2016 ◽  
Vol 34 (7_suppl) ◽  
pp. 220-220 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sandra Toutounji ◽  
Ron Fung ◽  
Katherine Enright

220 Background: Chemotherapy induced nausea and vomiting (CINV) remains one of the most feared treatment-related toxicities in cancer patients. CINV has been shown to decrease quality of life and to increase dose modifications and unplanned hospital visits. Cancer Care Ontario (CCO) and the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) updated their CINV guidelines in 2013. These changes included a reclassification of many regimens from moderate (MEC) to highly emetogenic (HEC) and a decrease in the duration of serotonin inhibitors (5HT3i). Uptake of the new guidelines at Trillium Health Partners has been slow. We aimed to improve CINV by increasing the percentage of patients who received guideline concordant anti-emetics with their first cycle of HEC/MEC chemotherapy. Methods: The first 25 patients started on MEC/HEC chemotherapy during 3 time periods (pre-guidelines, 6 months post guidelines, 1.5 years post guidelines) were identified. The primary measure of interest was the percentage of patients receiving MEC/HEC who were treated in concordance with the updated CINV guidelines. Secondary measures included the percentage of MEC/HEC patients who experienced grade 2+ CINV. The collected data was used with quality improvement techniques to guide the development of interventions to improve guideline concordance. Results: The concordance of anti-emetics on the day of chemotherapy improved over time, but post-chemotherapy concordance remained at 0% (table). The primary driver for concordance was the use of NK1inhibitors on chemotherapy day, and the duration of 5HT3i post-chemotherapy. Using quality improvement methodology, the highest impact intervention was identified as changing the default settings in the computerized order entry system (CPOE) to reflect the updated guidelines. These changes are currently in progress and a test of this change will be presented. Conclusions: Concordance with CINV guidelines improved over time resulting in lower CINV and less need for reactive CINV interventions. Further work to target duration of 5HT3i is ongoing. [Table: see text]


Significance The Qatar crisis in June 2017 was similarly sparked by a piece of ‘fake news’ planted on Doha’s national news agency showing the Qatari emir as expressing support for Iran and the Muslim Brotherhood movement. The incidents are part of a rising trend of offensive cyber actions and government-backed social media contestation in the region. They may also be the first examples of a combined cyber and physical strategy achieving core foreign policy goals just short of actual conflict. Impacts The GCC’s high online presence and draconian regulatory framework will make social media a key arena for covert state action. Interpretation of past events will fragment, meaning divisions such as the GCC split harden over time and become difficult to reverse. As GCC states’ attitudes to Iran diverge further, their Western allies will find regional diplomacy more labour-intensive.


2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 583-596
Author(s):  
Yurii Vitalevich Lashkhia

Due to the comprehensiveness of Islam, the role of the “Islamic factor” in political processes in the Middle East and North Africa is great, while the nature of the manifestations of the “Islamic factor” largely depends among other things on the current state of modern religious educational institutions, including those serving as a forge of Islamic personnel today. One of the most prestigious universities in Islamic oikumene, giving religious education for Muslims from all over the world, is AlAzhar al-Sharif (the shorter Al-Azhar is more common). It was here that some famous thinkers studied, who further significantly contributed to the development of the so-called “political Islam”. This study is an attempt to clarify the role of Al-Azhar University and related Islamic scholars in the socio-political processes of the Middle East and North Africa. Conducting the research, the author largely turned to the sources of the Islamic religion (the Qur’an, Hadith), theological texts of a number of thinkers (for example, the interpretation of the Qur’an Rashid Rida), religious polemical works (the work of Sheikh Osama al-Azhari against the “Muslim Brotherhood” and other “Islamist” trends), documents compiled by the leadership of Al-Azhar; academic literature on related issues. The author came to the conclusion that the “Islamic factor” did not play a crucial role at the beginning of events, but vividly manifested itself subsequently. The actual suppression of Islam by secular dictators created a fertile ground for the acute discontent of believing citizens and activists of various movements who uphold a particular version of the Islamic political alternative. The most influential university in the Islamic world, Al-Azhar, in an official document, “Arab Spring”, indicated the possibility of a shift in despotic power, while emphasizing at the same time the inadmissibility of violent suppression of peaceful protest. Certain Azharite theologians were directly involved in the events of the “Arab Spring”, in particular, the passionate scholar Yusuf al-Qaradawi, associated with the Muslim Brotherhood movement and graduated from Al-Azhar, as well as Sheikh Emad Effat, who died during the suppression of an unarmed speech 15 December 2011. Such activity of various Islamic forces in the political sphere is primarily due to the very nature of the Islamic tradition, which does not separate the “sacred” and “profane”.


Author(s):  
Sarah Bellows-Blakely

There is no singular or universal experience of girlhood in Africa. Conceptions of childhood, youth, generation, gender, and sexuality have differed across the continent and around the world over time. Since the 19th century, varying understandings of African girlhood have been deeply connected to the growth of racist hierarchies of human societies, the European colonization of Africa, African nationalisms, transnational feminist movements, and crises in capitalism. Case studies of two areas concerning African girlhood—female circumcision and the emergence of the girls’ rights movement—show how politicized girlhood in Africa has been. These two topics provide a distinct vantage point from which to understand far-reaching political processes and how these processes have uniquely played out in and through debates over girls’ bodies.


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