The Process of Political Transition in Post-Arab Spring Libya

Foreign Imposed Regime Change, Tribes, Militias and Civil War

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.20889/M47e21018

Keywords:

Libya. Arab Spring. NATO/US military intervention Foreign-Imposed Regime Change (FIRC). Civil War. Militias. Tribes. Islamists.

Abstract

Is it possible to export democracy by the use of force? This article deals with this question as applied to the NATO/U.S. military intervention in Libya, in 2011, during the Arab- Spring uprisings and its aftermath. We will test and refine the Foreign Imposed Regime Change (FIRC) model by using the qualitative methods of case study and process- tracing.  By doing this, we will be able to identify independent variables not anticipated by the FIRC model, unveiling the actual, very complex social-political cleavages of the country that hinder democratization and conduce to civil war.

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Author Biographies

Maria Helena de Castro Santos, Universidade de Brasília

University of Brasília, Institute of International Relations

Rebeca Mansur Vieira, Universidade de Brasília

University of Brasília, Institute of International Relations

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Published

2020-09-25

How to Cite

de Castro Santos, Maria Helena, and Rebeca Mansur Vieira. 2020. “The Process of Political Transition in Post-Arab Spring Libya: Foreign Imposed Regime Change, Tribes, Militias and Civil War”. Meridiano 47 - Journal of Global Studies 21 (September). https://doi.org/10.20889/M47e21018.

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