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MEIS Podcast / Year III of the Hirak Between Oppression and Optimism: Revisiting the Algerian Uprising

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MEIS Podcast
Year III of the Hirak Between Oppression and Optimism: Revisiting the Algerian Uprising
{{langos=='en'?('07/05/2021' | todate):('07/05/2021' | artodate)}} - Issue 8.3
Hosted by Bassam Haddad

After suspending protests due to the pandemic, Algerian activists have once again taken to the streets demanding meaningful political change. The political mobilization known as the Hirak began in February 2019 and is now entering its third year. While the movement has remained committed and shown its creativity and resilience, the Algerian state has cracked down on protestors with new resolve, raising questions about the parliamentary elections that will be held on 12 June 2021. 

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What are the current obstacles faced by the Hirak, both given the political configuration in the country and regionally as well as internationally? How can we better understand the movement in light of the War of Independence as well as the Civil War, both of which continue to structure imaginaries of revolution and violence? Jadaliyya Maghreb Page Co-Editors Muriam Haleh Davis and Thomas Serres join the MEIS podcast to address all of these questions and more.

Video:

Guests

Muriam Haleh Davis
Muriam Haleh Davis

Assistant Professor of History at UCSC

Muriam Haleh Davis is an assistant professor of History at the University of California, Santa Cruz. Her current book project studies how the postwar reinvention of a market economy influenced prevailing ideas of race and national identity in Algeria. She is the co-editor of a volume entitled North Africa and the Making of Europe: Institutions, Governance and Culture, and has published articles in the Journal of Contemporary History, the Journal of European Integration History, and Middle East Critique. She is also a co-editor of Jadaliyya's Maghreb Page.

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Thomas Serres
Thomas Serres

Adjunct Professor at UCSC and Researcher with Développement & Société

Thomas Serres has a PhD in political science from the EHESS. He is currently an associated researcher with Développement & Société in Paris and an Adjunct Professor at the University of California-Santa Cruz.  His research focuses on the politics of crisis and trans-nationalization in Algeria

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