
Contents
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Subnational Research and the Field of Comparative Politics Subnational Research and the Field of Comparative Politics
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An Overview of Local Politics Research in the MENA An Overview of Local Politics Research in the MENA
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Limitations: Privileging the National Scale and Central State Power Limitations: Privileging the National Scale and Central State Power
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How to Think about Scale Politically How to Think about Scale Politically
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The Production of Scale and the State The Production of Scale and the State
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Topological Accounts of Power Topological Accounts of Power
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The Future of Local Politics in the MENA The Future of Local Politics in the MENA
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“Governance” Is Not Synonymous with “State” “Governance” Is Not Synonymous with “State”
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Excavating Power from Material Ecologies Excavating Power from Material Ecologies
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De-exceptionalizing the MENA De-exceptionalizing the MENA
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Notes Notes
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11 Toward a Relational Approach to Local Politics
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Published:June 2022
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Abstract
The Arab uprisings of 2011–12 brought into stark relief the fact that neither states nor societies in the Middle East were monolithic units. Instead, the region shows remarkable variation in terms of administration, governance, and development at the local level. Hence, the study of local politics—often termed “subnational politics” in mainstream political science—in its own right has gained greater urgency. This chapter argues that this new field of research ought to be conceptualized in relation to localities and the study of politics at multiple scales. This builds on methodological and disciplinary transformations, namely the growing recognition of the importance of localized processes as well as the adoption of interdisciplinary analytical frames, including the spatial turn in conceptualizing political processes. The chapter therefore breaks the encumbering label of “subnational politics” in favor of “local politics,” thereby embracing the productivity of localities and the dynamism of “scalar politics.”
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