000 01581pab a2200193 454500
008 180718b1999 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aMufti, Malik
245 _aElite bargains and the onset of political liberalization in Jordan
260 _c1999
300 _ap.100-29
362 _aFeb
520 _aFrom the perspective of approaches focusing on political culture or social movements, Jordan seems an unlikely candidate for political liberalization. Yet, it has experienced the most far-reaching liberalization of any Arab country. By viewing the transition process as an unfolding series of bargains between government and opposition elites, this study accommodates both the reality that the decisions taken at each step reflected the self-interested calculations of a small group of people and the equally undeniable fact that those calculation were forged in a historical and normative context that constrained certain options while fostering others. This study traces the predispositions and calculations that propelled government and opposition elites from one decision locus to the next to illustrate how the interaction of a monarchy and an Islamist-dominated opposition actually promoted the initiation of political liberalization in Jordan and how the subsequent practice of political contestation generated a momentum of its own. - Reproduced
650 _aRuling class - Jordan
650 _aElite - Jordan
650 _aJordan - Politics and government
650 _aPolitics and government
773 _aComparative Political Studies
909 _a40671
999 _c40671
_d40671