School of Law, Gender and Media

HURIME Project: Human Rights in the Post-Uprisings Middle East

HURIME Project: Human Rights in the Post-Uprisings Middle East: Emerging Discourses and Practices in Egypt, Tunisia and Morocco

Overview

The popular Arab Spring uprisings in the MENA (Middle East and North Africa) region and their recent developments have proved the significant emancipatory potential of human rights and moved the human rights issue to the forefront of academic and political debates. This project deals with the human rights discourses and practices in the MENA region undergoing transition through the course of so-called Arab Spring by conducting a comparative analysis of three key countries; namely Egypt, Tunisia and Morocco.

The project has three main objectives. First, it aims to provide an in-depth knowledge of the characteristics and developments of human rights in the region. Second, it strives to explore the main political and social conditions that constitute the shift and persistence in the discourses of human rights. Third, it aims to explore the impact of the shift and persistence in human rights discourses on the actual practice of human rights in the region, with the ultimate aim of identifying the best ways for improving human rights practice in the region.

To achieve the objectives of the project: First, in-depth analysis of primary and secondary sources will be conducted to discover the main patterns and characteristics of the emerging human rights discourses in post-uprising Egypt, Tunisia and Morocco.

Second, political, legal and social conditions influencing the human rights discourses will be explored by looking comparatively at situational variables. Third, the impact of the shift and persistence in the discourses on the human rights practice will be explored by comparatively examining the human rights situation in the post-uprising countries.

The project will enhance the knowledge of academicians and politicians on the new tendencies of human rights discourses and practices in the region and will offer a valuable insight into the main patterns and political conditions of emerging human rights discourses and practices.

Further information

Project title: HURIME

CoordinatorDr Melek Saral

Primary CoordinatorProfessor Mashood Baderin

Coordinator organisation: SOAS University of London

Period: 24 months in total started in May 2017

Funder

Project funded by the European Commission within the H2020 Framework Programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie Individual Fellowship grant agreement no 703223.