One Response to “The Dynamics of Nonviolent Power:
Egypt, Tunisia and beyond”

  1. Jeanmarie Amend /

    Three things I want to offer are pertinent and current: (1) Regionalism inherently serves governance. Something about Afghanistan I learned this week was contributed by Brig. Genl. Martin that the form of social organization was local, and shar'ia comparatively minimal although the hierarchical implicit of law effected the national sense of unity about local and province subsidiarity. Lakh Brahimi best created the socio-legal introduction to consensus oriented political discourse by hosting national strategy experience for all leaders. (2) "No smoking." given the global advertising campaign and focus, this oxymoron introduces irony to the workplace and legal program. That is another new universal despite internal or hierarchical constraint in the reality. (3) Consent to be governed. Not all democracies are established upon consent, it is to be clarified among values in the nascent situations. Reply

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