By December 2010, Tunisians had lived under President Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali for over twenty years. His regime jailed critics, censored the press, and rigged elections — but on the surface, Tunisia looked calm.
That calm broke on 17 December 2010. A street vendor named Mohamed Bouazizi, humiliated by police in the town of Sidi Bouzid, set himself on fire in protest. He died weeks later — but his act lit a fuse that authority could not control.
From one town to the whole country: Protests spread fast: Sidi Bouzid to nearby towns, then to the capital Tunis by early January 2011. This is what historians call the December Revolution (also known as the Jasmine Revolution) — weeks of mass street protest that grew too large and too widespread for the regime to crush.
Crowds chanted 'Dégage!' ('Get out!') and demanded jobs, dignity, and an end to police brutality. Ben Ali tried concessions — sacking ministers, promising reform — but by mid-January it was too late.
- 17 December 2010 — Bouazizi's self-immolation in Sidi Bouzid sparks the first protests.
- Late December–early January — protests spread to Kasserine, Thala, and other towns; security forces fire on crowds.
- 8–10 January 2011 — violent crackdowns kill dozens; anger grows instead of fading.
- 13 January 2011 — Ben Ali promises not to seek re-election and pledges reforms — too little, too late.
- 14 January 2011 — Ben Ali flees to Saudi Arabia. His 23-year rule ends in under a month of sustained protest.
How this answers the inquiry question: This micro's inquiry question is 'How did the protest movement challenge authority?' The December Revolution is the clearest answer: ordinary Tunisians — not an army, not a political party — brought down a president through weeks of sustained, leaderless street protest. That is a direct, physical challenge to state authority.
For Paper 1, a source describing these events (a news report, a protester's diary, a government statement) is a window into how contemporaries understood the uprising as it happened — which is exactly what Q1 (content) and Q3 (perspectives) reward you for noticing.
Free preview
This is the free notes preview
You're reading the free notes. Aimnova Pro unlocks the full study experience — and you can try it free for 7 days:
- FlashcardsLock in vocabulary and key terms with spaced repetition.
- Practice questionsAnswer exam-style questions and get instant AI marking.
- Mock exams & past-paper vaultSit full mocks and see exactly how examiners award marks.
- Personalised study planA daily plan built around your exam date and weak areas.
Toppling a president is one kind of challenge to authority. But once Ben Ali was gone, someone had to build a new political system — and that meant new parties competing to define post-revolution Tunisia.
The most striking newcomer was Ennahda ('Renaissance'), a moderate Islamist party led by Rachid Ghannouchi. Banned and persecuted for decades under Ben Ali, Ennahda suddenly operated freely — and won the largest bloc of seats in the October 2011 election for a Constituent Assembly tasked with writing a new constitution.
A party as a source of challenge: Ennahda's rise was itself a challenge to the old authority's whole way of ruling. Ben Ali's regime had built its legitimacy partly on suppressing political Islam. A once-banned Islamist party winning power showed how completely the old order had been swept away.
Ennahda's dominance did not last unchallenged, though. Secular and left-leaning Tunisians worried about an Islamist party controlling the new constitution, and the assassination of two secular politicians in 2013 deepened a political crisis.
Out of that crisis rose Nidaa Tounes ('Call of Tunisia'), a secularist party founded in 2012 by Beji Caid Essebsi, a veteran politician from the pre-revolution establishment. Nidaa Tounes united anti-Islamist voters — trade unionists, business figures, and former officials from Ben Ali's era — and narrowly defeated Ennahda in the 2014 parliamentary and presidential elections.
Ennahda
- Moderate Islamist party, led by Rachid Ghannouchi
- Banned and persecuted under Ben Ali
- Won most seats in the 2011 Constituent Assembly election
- Agreed to step aside during the 2013–14 crisis to protect the transition
Nidaa Tounes
- Secularist, big-tent party founded 2012 by Beji Caid Essebsi
- Drew support from ex-regime officials and anti-Islamist voters
- Won the 2014 parliamentary and presidential elections
- Formed a coalition government that included Ennahda
Perspectives across sources: A source produced by an Ennahda supporter and one produced by a Nidaa Tounes supporter will describe the same 2011–14 period very differently — one as liberation, the other as a dangerous drift. For Q3, that disagreement IS the perspective you are asked to examine: it shows the revolution's meaning was contested, not settled, even among people who had all opposed Ben Ali.
Memorize terms 3x faster
Smart flashcards show you cards right before you forget them. Perfect for definitions and key concepts.
Ben Ali's regime controlled newspapers, radio and television closely. So when protests began, activists turned to a space the state struggled to police: social media.
Facebook was hugely popular in Tunisia by 2010, and Twitter let short bursts of news travel fast. Activists used both to share videos of protests and police violence, organise marches, and get information past state censors — including footage that foreign broadcasters like Al Jazeera then picked up and rebroadcast, feeding the story back into Tunisia.
Organise
Activists used Facebook groups and pages to plan where and when protests would happen next, coordinating across towns without needing formal leadership.
Publicise
Phone videos of protests and crackdowns were uploaded and shared, showing the wider world — and other Tunisians — what state media refused to report.
Bypass censorship
The regime tried blocking sites and hacking activist accounts, but the sheer volume of posts and shares outran its ability to control the story.
Facebook organised the crowd, phone videos publicised the violence, and both together outran the censor.
Don't overstate it: Social media helped the revolution spread fast, but it did not cause it alone. Unemployment, repression and Bouazizi's death were the underlying grounds for revolt; social media was the tool that let already-angry Tunisians find each other quickly. Exam answers that credit 'Facebook' as the sole cause miss the deeper context — keep cause and tool separate.
Worked example — reading a social-media source
Imagine a source: a Facebook post from a 22-year-old Tunis activist, dated 10 January 2011, sharing a video of police firing on a crowd, captioned 'Share this — they don't want you to see it.'
| Skill | How you'd use this source |
|---|---|
| Content (Q1) | It shows footage of police violence and reveals that activists deliberately intended posts to spread — direct evidence of how protest was publicised. |
| Context (Q2) | Origin (ordinary young activist, not a journalist), purpose (to spread awareness and evade censorship), time (during the peak protest week) — all shape it as urgent, first-hand, but one-sided evidence. |
| Perspective (Q3) | It gives the protester's viewpoint only — compare it with a government statement from the same week to see how sharply the two sides' accounts of 'what happened' diverge. |
Same skill, any source: Whether the source is a Facebook post, a newspaper article, or a party manifesto, you ask the same three questions: what does it say (content), who made it and why (context), and how does its view compare with others (perspective).