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Dr. Jamil Mouawad, lecturer in the Political Studies and Public Administration Dept at AUB, has studied Lebanese politics for decades; he is publishing a new book on the nature of the state in Lebanon and how its citizens interact with the state. He explains his theory of Lebanon as a deliberately weakened and cannibalized state whose political elite governs through "shadow" institutions. Yet, he feels Lebanese citizens still yearn and work for a state that delivers its promise, and sees this as a moment to reconstruct the state in a way that allows it to serve all its citizens.
By AUB CommunicationsDr. Jamil Mouawad, lecturer in the Political Studies and Public Administration Dept at AUB, has studied Lebanese politics for decades; he is publishing a new book on the nature of the state in Lebanon and how its citizens interact with the state. He explains his theory of Lebanon as a deliberately weakened and cannibalized state whose political elite governs through "shadow" institutions. Yet, he feels Lebanese citizens still yearn and work for a state that delivers its promise, and sees this as a moment to reconstruct the state in a way that allows it to serve all its citizens.