In April 1989, economic riots triggered a political liberalization process
in Jordan. Initially promising, the political opening was first side-tracke
d at the time of the Madrid conference in 1991 and had effectively stalled
by summer 1994, as the government changed the electoral and other laws and
curbed public freedoms. In chronicling the retreats in liberalization from
1991 to the present, the author argues that while there have been numerous
pressures on the Jordanian political system since 1989, one can draw clear
causal relationships between these retreats and developments in the "peace
process".