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6 - Impacts of the Tunisian Provisional Administration and National Transition Council in Later Years

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 December 2020

Sabina Henneberg
Affiliation:
The Johns Hopkins University, Maryland
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Summary

This chapter shows how the decisions and actions taken between January and October 2011 by the Tunisian Provisional Administration (TPA) in Tunisia and by the National Transition Council (NTC) in Libya between February 2011 and July 2012, which were the first interim governments in each country, influenced events between 2014 and 2019. In Tunisia, where the TPA had insisted on abiding by a “spirit of consensus” that helped its successor government, the National Constituent Assembly (NCA)/Troika, overcome its crisis of 2013, a second republic had been inaugurated under a constitution that was written in this spirit. However, governing in this spirit – implementing and operating through consensual institutions – proved much more difficult and caused many challenges in later years. In Libya, the NTC had been unable to assert a moderate, unifying narrative and governing presence; it was instead drowned out by extremist forces as the NTC gave way to its successor, the General National Congress (GNC). The GNC became so plagued by the features and decisions of the NTC – among others, its inability to control armed groups or assert a shared Libyan vision – that the next several years were defined by spiraling conflict among groups of varying goals and identities.

Type
Chapter
Information
Managing Transition
The First Post-Uprising Phase in Tunisia and Libya
, pp. 170 - 205
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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