One
of the largest strike waves in Middle East history swept across Egypt in the
years before the mighty demonstrations that erupted in Tahrir Square in January
2011, part of the ‘Arab spring’. As a new mood of protest begins to develop, DAVID
JOHNSON reviews two timely books outlining how the confidence to resist vicious
security forces had grown from those earlier workers’ movements – and had
weakened the regime.
Contesting Authoritarianism: labor challenges to the state of Egypt
By Dina Bishara
Published by Cambridge University Press, 2018, £21.99
Trade Unions and Arab Revolutions: challenging the regime in Egypt
By Heba F El-Shazli
Published by Routledge, 2019, £115
How did Egypt’s
workers break the shackles of state, management and corrupt trade union
leaders? How did independent unions emerge in some areas while other workers
stayed in state-run organisations? These are vital questions for workers in
many parts of the world with similar restrictions on the right to organise –
not least in Egypt itself. Gains briefly won after the 2011 uprising were
snatched back, particularly by the Muslim Brotherhood’s President Mohammed
Morsi and current President Abdel Fatah al-Sisi’s dictatorial regime.
Both books,
written by Egypt-born academics now based in American universities, examine
these questions. They contain much valuable information, drawing on published
material and interviewing participants in key strikes and in the formation of
independent trade unions. The interviews were mostly conducted between 2011 and
2013, prior to al-Sisi stamping down on the movement.
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