Affiliation:
1. Assistant professor of political science and international affairs in the Department of Social and Education Sciences at the Lebanese American University
Abstract
This article explores why Lebanon’s Free Patriotic Movement (FPM) shifted from opposing the dominant political practices in the country after the 1975-90 civil war – bargaining, power-sharing, narrow parochial discourse, and patronclient relations – to adopting them
upon its transformation to a political party in 2005. While FPM leaders Michel Aoun and Gebran Bassil bear some blame for the party’s embrace of the sectarian political system, this article looks at this transformation through the lens of sociologist Anthony Giddens’s theory of
structuration. This framework reveals the role of social practices and the reproduction of systems and structures in the FPM’s sectarian transformation.
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,Geography, Planning and Development