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The Process of Revolutionary Protest: Development and Democracy in the Tunisian Revolution

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 September 2023

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Abstract

Revolutionary protest rarely begins as democratic or revolutionary. Instead, it grows in a process of positive feedback, incorporating new constituencies and generating new demands. If protest is not revolutionary at its onset, theory should reflect this and be able to explain the endogenous emergence of democratic demands. In this article, I combine multiple data sources on the 2010–2011 Tunisian Revolution, including survey data, an original event catalogue, and field interviews. I show that the correlates of protest occurrence and participation change significantly during the uprising. Using the Tunisian case as a theory-building exercise, I argue that the formation of protest coalitions is essential, rather than incidental, to democratic revolution.

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Type
Struggles For and Over Representation
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the American Political Science Association
Figure 0

Figure 1 Diffusion of protest during the Tunisian RevolutionNote: Hexagons in bold represent delegations in the capital city, Tunis

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Figure 2 Twitter data analysisFrequency of words related to democracy in #sidibouzid data (% of total)Relative democracy word keyness by stage (1 versus 3)

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Figure 3 News data analysisFrequency of words related to democracy in turess.com news data (% of total)Relative democracy word keyness by stage (1 versus 3)

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Figure 4 Protest diffusion and regional developmentDiffusion of protest during Tunisian Revolution, weeks1-4Local economic development (IDR) by quantileNightlights (logged) by quantile; inset: VIIRS DNB nightlights raster from April, 2012

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Table 1 Discrete-time logistic regression of IDR with and without time interaction, cluster robust standard errors

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Figure 5 Development and probability of protest over timePredictive margins of IDR over time, upper and lower quartilesMarginal effects of IDR by stage of uprising, with 95% CIs

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Table 2 Sequences of participation in the Tunisian Revolution from Arab Barometer Wave II

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Figure 6 Protest participation by stage of revolutionMultinomial logistic link plot of coefficient contrasts for separate predictorsNote: Joining lines indicate no significant difference at .05 level; SO = base outcome; S1 = Stage 1; S2 = Stage 2; S3 = Stage 3; Dem. commit. = Commitment to democracyPredictive margins of commitment to democracy on protest participation Multinomial logistic regression by stage of first participation.Note: Multinomial logistic regression by stage of first participation

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