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Ali Nehme Hamdan

Expertise

Levant, Syria

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Ali Nehme Hamdan is a PhD candidate in the Department of Geography at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). His dissertation research, under the title “Exile, Place, and Politics: Syria’s Transnational Civil War,” is supported by grants from the Social Science Research Council (SSRC) and the American Center for Oriental Research, a branch of the Council of American Overseas Research Centers. It studies the geopolitics of the Syrian Opposition in exile, exploring the networks of activists, politicians, and militants in Turkey and Jordan. Past publications include “On Failing to ‘Get it Together’: Syria’s Opposition between Realism and Idealism,” Middle East Report 277, 28-34; and “Breaker of Barriers? Notes on the Geopolitics of the Islamic State in Iraq and Sham,” Geopolitics 21:3, 605-627. 

E-Mail: [email protected]

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The Displaced as Actors in Syrian Politics
  • Analysis
  • The Displaced as Actors in Syrian Politics

    For the Assad regime in Damascus, displacement has become an essential tactic in shaping the terms of its encounter with dissent, alongside violence and detention. At the same time, the process of displacement has not unfolded in a coherent or predictable manner. Rather, displacement in the Syrian conflict is a product of choices, chief among them the regime’s choice to erase, rather than accommodate, political Opposition in Syria. It is also the result of how the Opposition responds to these challenges. This essay explores how Opposition networks have adapted pragmatically to displacement and exile. Far from accepting the terms of the conflict passively, Syria’s diverse opposition continues to mobilize in the face of ongoing state oppression.

    December 21, 2016