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The Daoud family is a Druze political family from Rashaya. Politically, the family is represented by the Lebanese Arab Struggle Movement which Faisal Daoud headed between 1986 and 2014. [9] Salim Daoud – Former MP Faisal Daoud – Former party leader and MP; son of Salim Tarek Daoud – Current party leader and parliamentary candidate; son of ...
Large clans are typically more traditional and have political and economic ties to its unit. Instead, extended families are generally the boundaries of which these kin groups separate. The Lebanese household serves as the center of these kin groups. There are little variations in kinship patterns in the rural and urban areas of Lebanon. The ...
Pages in category "Political families of Lebanon" The following 14 pages are in this category, out of 14 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. *
Lebanese political institutions often play a secondary role to highly confessionalized personality-based politics. Powerful families play an independent role in mobilizing votes for both local and parliamentary elections. A lively panoply of domestic political parties, some even predating independence, exists. The largest parties are all ...
Lebanon has hundreds of registered political parties. After 2005, when the assassination of former Prime Minister Rafic Hariri precipitated the Cedar Revolution, the political landscape became polarized between two rival alliances, the March 8 Alliance and the March 14 Alliance. Both names refer to dates of mass demonstrations during the ...
Political families of Lebanon (19 C, 14 P) Lebanese Druze families (1 C, 3 P) A. Al Solh family (11 P) B. Boulos family (4 P) ... Pages in category "Lebanese families"
Political families of Lebanon (19 C, 14 P) K. Lebanese politicians of Kurdish descent (3 P) L. Lebanese Sunni politicians (1 C, 13 P) T. Politicians from Tripoli ...
In modern Lebanon, many families still retain the honorific noble titles of Sheikh, Muqaddam, Emir & Bey.The Lebanese government formally recognizes their rights by including the honorific titles in the official Lebanese ID documents (with title preceding the first name; except for the Turkish Bey title which follows the first name).