01281nam 2200373 450 00001076420050718115400.00-444-86016-920020312d1980----km-y0itay0103----baengNL<<The>> finite element methods for elliptic problemsPhilippe G. CiarletAmsterdamNorth-Holland1980XVII, 530 p.23 cm.Studies in mathematics and its applications4Analisi matematica515(20. ed.)AnalisiCiarlet,Philippe G.13206ITUniversità della Basilicata - B.I.A.RICAunimarc000010764Finite element methods for elliptic problems77177UNIBASMONSCIMONOGRSCIENZESTD0100120020312BAS011819TORRE2020020319BAS01171620050601BAS011754batch0120050718BAS01105020050718BAS01111020050718BAS01114020050718BAS011154BAS01BAS01BOOKBASA2Polo Tecnico-ScientificoDIDDidatticaPTS.s3.p27.2775357S753572002031204Prestabile Didattica06107nam 22007215 450 991106599050332120260218120401.0981-9537-04-510.1007/978-981-95-3704-4(MiAaPQ)EBC32553906(Au-PeEL)EBL32553906(CKB)45354456500041(DE-He213)978-981-95-3704-4(OCoLC)1574115321(EXLCZ)994535445650004120260218d2026 u| 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierComparative Electoral Politics and the Quest for Representation in West Asia and North Africa /edited by Sujata Ashwarya, Mujib Alam1st ed. 2026.Singapore :Springer Nature Singapore :Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan,2026.1 online resource (553 pages)Political Science and International Studies981-9537-03-7 Chapter 1: Introduction: Between Contestation and Control: Electoral Politics and the Quest for Representation in West Asia and North Africa -- Part I: Electoral Engineering and Regime Legitimation -- Chapter 2: The Illusion of Reform: Electoral Politics and Monarchical Power in Jordan -- Chapter 3: Egypt’s Electoral Politics Post-2011: Legitimacy and Authoritarian Control -- Chapter 4: Parliamentary Elections and the Road to Reform in Post-Arab Spring Morocco -- Chapter 5: Saudi Arabia: Electoral Formalism and the Limits of Citizen Participation under Absolute Monarchy -- Part II: Opposition Dynamics and Constrained Pluralism -- Chapter 6: Elections and Executive Power in Kuwait’s Monarchy: Reversal of Opposition Gains, 2012–2024 -- Chapter 7: Türkiye’s 2023 Elections: Opposition Setbacks and Future Prospects -- Chapter 8: Authoritarian Governance and Elections in the UAE and Bahrain: A Comparative Analysis -- Chapter 9: The Illusion of Consensus: Electoral Politics and the Challenge of Governance in Tunisia -- Part III: Institutional Fragility and Contested Sovereignty -- Chapter 10: The Question of People’s Representation in Iran: Negotiating Democracy with ‘Divinity’ -- Chapter 11: Between Ballots and Bullets: The Political Meaning of Libya’s Missing Elections -- Chapter 12: Contesting Representation: Hamas and Electoral Politics in a Divided Palestine -- Chapter 13: Lebanese Electoral Politics: Consociationalism and its Limitations -- Chapter 14: Elections and Representation in Post-Saddam Iraq: Institutional Fragility and Sectarian Politics -- Part IV: Electoral Engagement and Limits of Participation -- Chapter 15: Political Participation in Qatar: From Municipal Elections to the Shura Council -- Chapter 16: Divided We Stand: The Electoral System and Voter Turnout in Israel, 2019–2022 -- Chapter 17: Elections Without Alternation in Algeria: Protest Cycles and FLN Continuity under Military Guardianship -- Chapter 18: Conclusion.This volume examines how elections and reform across West Asia and North Africa function less as routes to alternation than as instruments of control. Anchored by an integrative introduction and a concluding synthesis, it gathers original studies showing how rules, parties, patronage, and civic mobilisation organise political life. Contributors trace how incumbents bend law and voting cycles through pliant oversight to simulate responsiveness while weakening opponents, as turnout declines and protest recurs. In some polities electoral forms recede altogether: ballots are suspended, assemblies fall silent, and authority is channelled through appointments and managed consultation. Israel appears as a democratic outlier under a highly proportional electoral system, a foil to the region’s managed pluralism and electoral authoritarianism. Libya is conceptualised as non-electoral fragmented authoritarianism, where institutional absence hardens into elite bargains and armed networks. Organised thematically, rather than by country, the volume shows how electoral ritual and performance reshape representation and legitimacy across the region. Sujata Ashwarya is Professor at the Centre for West Asian (Middle Eastern) Studies, Jamia Millia Islamia, New Delhi. She has published widely on West Asian politics, India–West Asia relations, and the political economy of energy, including Israel’s Mediterranean Gas and The Arab Spring: Ten Years On. Mujib Alam is Professor at the MMAJ Academy of International Studies, Jamia Millia Islamia, New Delhi. His research focuses on the politics and international relations of West Asia; his publications include Arab Spring and Its Legacies and Perspectives on Turkey’s Multi-Regional Role in the 21st Century.Political Science and International StudiesElectionsMiddle EastPolitics and governmentAfricaPolitics and governmentComparative governmentPolitical scienceReligion and politicsElectoral PoliticsMiddle Eastern PoliticsAfrican PoliticsComparative Public PolicyGovernance and GovernmentPolitics and ReligionElections.Middle EastPolitics and government.AfricaPolitics and government.Comparative government.Political science.Religion and politics.Electoral Politics.Middle Eastern Politics.African Politics.Comparative Public Policy.Governance and Government.Politics and Religion.324.6Ashwarya Sujata1895268MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9911065990503321Comparative Electoral Politics and the Quest for Representation in West Asia and North Africa4547841UNINA