Non-party ministers and technocrats in post-revolutionary Tunisia
Non-party ministers and technocrats in post-revolutionary Tunisia
Non-party ministers and technocrats have emerged as leading political actors in post-revolutionary Tunisia. Five heads of government out of eight appointed between 2011 and 2020 were not affiliated to any political party. Technocrat-led governments were appointed amidst acute political crises due to their ostensible technical expertise and non-partisan profile. Despite their prominent role in government, existing studies on post-revolutionary Tunisia have largely neglected the role of non-party ministers and technocrats, treating them as relatively marginal actors. The article situates their emergence along a decades-long technocratic turn started under Ben Ali, which opted to replace the professional politicians of the Bourguiba era with technocrats hailing from the public administration. After 2011, a combination of demand- and supply-side factors have contributed to their increased participation in government. In particular, the article argues that the institutional autonomy of the technocratic apparatus, weakness of political parties, a preference for technical expertise and consensual politics, and pressures from international financial institutions were key to the rise of non-party ministers and technocrats in post-revolutionary Tunisia.
CITATION: Carboni, Andrea. Non-party ministers and technocrats in post-revolutionary Tunisia . Oxon : Taylor & Francis Group , 2023. Journal of North African Studies, Vol. 28, No. 1, 2023, p. 151-178 - Available at: https://library.au.int/frnon-party-ministers-and-technocrats-post-revolutionary-tunisia