The social contract and collective action: grievances, cleavages, and protests in the Middle East
Loewe, Markus / Holger AlbrechtExterne Publikationen (2026)
in: Kyklos - International Review for Social Sciences, first published 30.06.2026
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/kykl.70067
Open access
How do grievances turn into collective action? This article examines how citizens' expectations in social contracts lead them to embark on street protests. It draws on original, nationally representative telephone surveys in Tunisia and Lebanon and unpacks popular preferences about the states' obligations to deliver social service provision, protection, and political participation. We measure empirically whether participation in protest can be explained predominantly by people's grievances with their states' social contract obligations or the position of people in society. Findings reveal intriguing differences between the two countries but also among social groups within societies. We find that socially privileged people are more likely to take to the streets in pursuit of their demands, lending support to theories that identify society's middle classes as drivers of protest action. We believe that the article's findings will have significant implications for studies of contentious state-society relations in the MENA region and beyond.
Weitere IDOS-Expert*innen zu diesem Thema
-
Fiedler, Charlotte
Politikwissenschaftlerin
-
Gutheil, Lena
Ethnologie
-
Hackenesch, Christine
Politikwissenschaft
-
Leininger, Julia
Politikwissenschaftlerin
-
Li, Hangwei
Politikwissenschaft
-
Lorch, Jasmin
Politikwissenschaft
-
Mross, Karina
Politikwissenschaftlerin
-
Nowack, Daniel
Politikwissenschaftler
-
Sinanoglu, Semuhi
Politikwissenschaften
-
Wingens, Christopher
Politikwissenschaftler