Type | Journal Article - Population and Development Review |
Title | On the role of human development in the Arab Spring |
Author(s) | |
Volume | 38 |
Issue | 4 |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2012 |
Page numbers | 649-683 |
URL | https://www.brown.edu/academics/population-studies/sites/brown.edu.academics.population-studies/files/uploads/Kuhn-Human-Development.pdf |
Abstract | This essay traces the impact of human development on political change, focusing on the events of the Arab Spring. Over the past generation, most Arab States experienced rapid progress in human development outcomes, including declining child mortality, increasing schooling and increasing height of women. I posit that improvements in human development laid the foundation for mobilization against political regimes. This thesis rests on three interlinked propositions. First, human development led to increased political participation and knowledge. Second, basic human development led to a dramatic increase in population needs and expectations, creating new policy challenges and reducing public dependency on regimes. Finally, the preceding changes resulted in values and attitudes conducive to regime change. Each proposition builds on new theories of human capital accumulation over the life course that isolate the human dimension of national development. I provide provisional support for these pathways through cross-regional comparison and evidence from the unique case of Egypt. I highlight the need for study design and datasets that can test causal pathways from health and education to political participation and attitudes. |
» | Egypt, Arab Rep. - Survey of Young People 2009 |