Youth in Sudan and the Reformation of the Public Sphere: A Study of the Dynamics of Social Action and the Potentialities for Public Involvement

This study attempts to understand the impact of non-protest youth action, specifically by focusing on the some civic initiatives. The author is convinced that the motives of the Sudanese youth behind this initiative would allow an analysis of their internal tensions, allowing researchers to ask whether or not we are facing a shift in how action is taken in the youth field, and whether such a change will alter the public sphere. The hypothesis which this study seeks to test is whether the Sudanese state’s moves to appropriate civil society in the country, and to reduce the state apparatus to its bare bones oppressive machinery has driven a critical mass of Sudanese youth to create their own space and their own mechanisms from which collective action can be taken in future.  

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Abstract

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This study attempts to understand the impact of non-protest youth action, specifically by focusing on the some civic initiatives. The author is convinced that the motives of the Sudanese youth behind this initiative would allow an analysis of their internal tensions, allowing researchers to ask whether or not we are facing a shift in how action is taken in the youth field, and whether such a change will alter the public sphere. The hypothesis which this study seeks to test is whether the Sudanese state’s moves to appropriate civil society in the country, and to reduce the state apparatus to its bare bones oppressive machinery has driven a critical mass of Sudanese youth to create their own space and their own mechanisms from which collective action can be taken in future.  

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