Students examine oil and geopolitics, issues between the Palestinians and Israel, the Egyptian revolution, Syrian refugees, and other issues that have shaped U.S. relations in the region.
December 2011
Objectives
Students will:
- Explore the concept of revolution and come up with a class definition for the term.
- Learn about various Arab Spring protest movements in the Middle East and North Africa.
- Assess the accomplishments of the movements and discuss whether they meet definitions of revolution.
Resources
Handouts—The Arab Spring: Country Presentations and Looking at the Region
In the Classroom
1. Introduction
Write the focus question “What is a revolution?” on the board. Ask students what they know about revolution. What are some different ways that people use the term revolution? Can students give examples of revolutions from history? What characteristics do these revolutions share? How are they different? What different stages do revolutions go through? How can we assess whether a revolution is successful? Develop a definition of revolution together as a class and write it on the board beneath the focus question.
2. Group Work
Inform students that they will be researching the recent Middle East and North Africa protest movements and analyzing whether they should be considered revolutions. Divide the class into groups and distribute “The Arab Spring: Country Presentations.” Assign each group a country: Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, Syria, Yemen, and any other countries you want to include in the lesson (i.e. Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Algeria, etc.). Each group will be responsible for giving a 2-3 minute presentation to the class about the effects of recent protests in their assigned country. Have groups explore the sources listed below and consider the questions on the handout to help them prepare.
Note: You may want to have students do this lesson over two class periods, or have groups research their assigned countries the night before.
3. Presentations
Distribute “The Arab Spring: Looking at the Region.” Have students fill in the row for their assigned country. While groups are presenting, students should take notes on their charts.
4. Considering the Arab Spring Today
What is the status of the political movements today? How successful have the protests been? How do we measure their success? (Elections? New governments?) What have been the major obstacles to change? Why have some countries experienced violence? How has the response of the international community and the United States impacted various political movements? Why has the United States responded differently to protests in different countries?
5. Arab Revolution?
Ask students to compare the movements in the Middle East with the historical revolutions mentioned in the beginning of class and with the class definition of revolution. Can we call some of these movements “revolutions?” If so, which ones? Can we think of the Arab Spring as a regional revolution? Is it too early to tell? After looking at these different case studies, what do students think about their class definition of revolution—should it be changed in any way?
General Resources:
BBC: Middle East Protests—Country by Country
New York Times: Arab Spring and Fall
Guardian: Arab Spring—An Interactive Timeline of Middle East Protests
BBC: How the Arab Spring began
Country-Specific Resources:
Egypt:
Al Jazeera: Egypt in Transition
New York Times: Egypt News—Revolution and Aftermath
Yemen:
New York Times: Yemen—Protests (2011)
Libya:
New York Times: Libya—Revolution and Aftermath (2011)
Al Jazeera: Empire—A Revolution for All Seasons (watch 21:23-23:20)
Syria:
New York Times: Syria—Protests (2011)
Al Jazeera: Empire—A Revolution for All Seasons (watch 2:23-6:25)
Tunisia:
Al Jazeera: 2011 Tunisia Election
Al Jazeera: Empire—A Revolution for All Seasons (watch 23:25-28:22)