Abstract
Why were some Arab countries deeply affected by the Arab Spring, while others were not? I make three arguments in this paper. First, it was very quickly apparent how serious the protests would be in each Arab country (except Syria), and the speed of diffusion suggests that regime reactions were much less important than citizen attitudes toward the regimes on the eve of Ben Ali's fall from power. Second, in the initial burst of diffusion, all Arab regimes looked vulnerable. Having lost their aura of invincibility, citizens demanded the fall of the regime in countries in which that demand had a strong appeal to a wide section of the citizenry. This was not the case in most Arab countries. Third, the decision by citizens to demand the fall of the regime (or not) can best be explained by a set of political factors, one of which is a preference in Arab public opinion for the reform, rather than the overthrow, of monarchies. In making these arguments I draw on the lessons of the literature on the diffusion of similar revolutionary shocks, especially the revolutions of 1848 and the Color Revolutions in post-Communist states in the 2000s.
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