Oil wealth and authoritarianism: Algeria in the Arab Spring

The “oil curse thesis” links a country’s oil largesse inter alia to the durability of its authoritarian regime. And it contends that abundant oil revenues enable autocrats to stymie democratic transition by obviating taxation from citizens, buying off their political acquiescence, bolstering the rep...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Muradova Huseynova, Lala
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2016
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Online Access:https://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/oaiart?codigo=5407003
Source:Revista española de ciencia política, ISSN 1575-6548, Nº 40, 2016, pags. 63-89
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Summary: The “oil curse thesis” links a country’s oil largesse inter alia to the durability of its authoritarian regime. And it contends that abundant oil revenues enable autocrats to stymie democratic transition by obviating taxation from citizens, buying off their political acquiescence, bolstering the repressive apparatus and thwarting the formation of civil society. This paper revisits the relevant literature by qualitatively testing its predictions on an in-depth case study of the Algerian regime in the face of the political crisis and riots of 2011. Going beyond the deterministic argument on “oil wealth-authoritarianism”, it carefully examines the strategic interaction between country-specific factors and oil wealth and studies how the confluence of these factors has shaped the survival of the authoritarian regime in Algeria since 2011.