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Youth Mobilization in Lebanon [1]

Power2Youth Papers [2]

Youth Mobilization in Lebanon: Navigating Exclusion and Seeds for Collective Action

[3]
Authors:
Mona Harb [4]
30/09/2016

This paper investigates youth mobilization in Lebanon. It is organized in two main sections. The first section analyses patterns of youth inclusion and exclusion in the context of Lebanese sectarian politics, showing how partisan groups, religious and family authorities lock-in the youth. It then moves to an overview of “independent” NGOs, examining youth mobilization in NGOs since 2005. It focuses on the role of youth-led organizations (YLOs) and youth-relevant organizations (YROs) in three policy domains: entrepreneurship, personal rights and spatial planning. The second section reflects on NGOs’ professionalization and on youth’s related demobilization, discussing how youth’s associational life reproduces sectarian politics, and depoliticizes engagement. I also examine the rise of coalitions, arguing that they may be the components for future collective action, and reflect on whether this can form the seeds of an independent social movement among the youth. The paper concludes with a synthesis of opportunities and challenges facing youth mobilization in Lebanon.

p2y_16.pdf [3]

Details

  • Details

    Roma, IAI, September 2016, 24 p.
  • In:
    Power2Youth Papers [2]
  • Issue

    16

Table of contents

Introduction
Overview: The Structural Context of Youth Mobilization
Mobilization and Emigration, amidst Wars and Refugees
Framework of Analysis
1. Youth Inclusion and Exclusion in the Context of Sectarian Politics
1.1 The State, Sectarian Political Parties and Families: Locking Youth In
1.2 NGOs and Youth: An Overview
1.3 Two Phases of Youth Mobilization in NGOs (2005-09 and 2009-15)
1.4 Three Policy Domains: Entrepreneurship, Personal Rights and Spatial Planning
2. Youth Mobilization: Reproducing Sectarian Politics vs. Planting Seeds for Collective Action
2.1 NGOs: Professionalization, Depoliticization, Demobilization
2.2 Coalitions: Scattered Components of Latent Collective Action?
Conclusion: Challenges and Opportunities of an Independent Youth Social Movement
References


Source URL:https://www.iai.it/en/pubblicazioni/c34/youth-mobilization-lebanon

Links
[1] https://www.iai.it/en/pubblicazioni/c34/youth-mobilization-lebanon [2] https://www.iai.it/en/pubblicazioni/lista/all/power2youth-papers [3] https://www.iai.it/sites/default/files/p2y_16.pdf [4] https://www.iai.it/en/persone/mona-harb