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Jean-Pierre Cassarino

Professor

Expertise

North Africa

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Jean-Pierre Cassarino holds a professorship at the Robert Schuman Center for Advanced Studies (RSCAS/European University Institute, Florence) where he directs the Return migration and Development Platform (http://rsc.eui.eu/RDP/). He is also research associate at the Tunis-based Institut de Recherche sur le Maghreb Contemporain (IRMC). Since the mid-1990s, he has published extensively on international migration, particularly on return migration and has carried out numerous field surveys investigating returnees’ manifold patterns of reintegration. Selected publications include: (ed.) Unbalanced Reciprocities: Cooperation on Readmission in the Euro-Mediterranean Area, The Middle East Institute Press, Washington, 2010; (ed.) “Conditions of Modern Return Migrants”, International Journal on Multicultural Societies, Vol. 10, Issue 2, UNESCO, Paris, 2008; (ed.) Return Migrants to the Maghreb Countries: Reintegration and development challenges, RSCAS, European University Institute, Florence, 2008; Tunisian New Entrepreneurs and their Past Experiences of Migration in Europe: Networks, Resource Mobilisation, and Hidden Disaffection. Ashgate Publishers, Aldershot, 2000. Email: [email protected]

The Latest from Jean-Pierre Cassarino

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Little Amal Walks Across America
  • Podcast
  • Little Amal Walks Across America

    MEI’s Senior Vice President Kate Seelye speaks with award-winning theater director and writer Amir Nizar Zuabi – Artistic Director of the ‘Amal Walks Across America’ tour.  They discuss the upcoming U.S. tour of Little Amal, an internationally celebrated 12-foot-tall puppet of a 10-year-old Syrian refugee girl traveling across the world carrying a message of hope and compassion for displaced people everywhere.

    More episodes

    August 28, 2023

    Saudi Arabia’s Deterrence Options Against Iran
    Photo by Ryan Olson/Bloomberg via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Saudi Arabia’s Deterrence Options Against Iran

    Of all the challenges to Saudi Vision 2030, arguably none is greater than Iran’s threat to Saudi national security. To succeed, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman must protect the kingdom, which will require not only fortifying its defenses against further Iranian and Houthi attacks but also establishing a level of deterrence against Tehran.

    August 28, 2023

    Building back better with gender in mind: Centering Turkey’s women and girls in earthquake recovery
    Photo by Boris Roessler/picture alliance via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Building back better with gender in mind: Centering Turkey’s women and girls in earthquake recovery

    Gender-blind development policies leave women and girls behind and exacerbate their vulnerabilities before, during, and after disasters, as was made clear by the Feb. 6, 2023 earthquake that struck southeastern Turkey and northwestern Syria. By viewing disasters as gendered development problems, we can better understand the differential impact the Feb. 6 earthquake had on women and girls in Turkey and make more impactful policy recommendations.

    August 25, 2023

    From oil wells to power cells: How Saudi Arabia and its Gulf neighbors are securing their future through battery technology
    Photo by AMER HILABI/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • From oil wells to power cells: How Saudi Arabia and its Gulf neighbors are securing their future through battery technology

    As the world shifts toward a more sustainable future, the GCC states are also embracing this profound transition, moving from oil wells to power cells. With their vast resources, strategic location, and commitment to sustainability, the Gulf countries are uniquely positioned to become major players in the global battery supply chain. By embracing the potential of battery technology, these nations are not just preparing for a post-oil future but are actively shaping it.

    August 24, 2023

    A US security guarantee to Israel should help to advance Israeli-Palestinian peace, not avoid it
    Photo by DEBBIE HILL/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • A US security guarantee to Israel should help to advance Israeli-Palestinian peace, not avoid it

    It has been nearly 70 years since Israel first asked the U.S. to sign a bilateral defense treaty. Ever since then, the idea of a formal security agreement has resurfaced from time to time, only to be struck down, due to an understanding that it does not serve the two sides’ actual needs. Prime Minister Netanyahu is currently floating the idea once again, but the U.S. can make use of his interest in a security upgrade to revive a different idea instead: the decade-old security plan for the two-state solution, known as the Allen Plan.

    August 23, 2023

    Creators' Corner with Jude Chehab

    Creators' Corner with Jude Chehab

    August 22, 2023, 5:30 PM – 7:30 PM

    Eaton Cinema Room, 1201 K St NW, Washington, District of Columbia 20005

    Ben Samuels | 'Taking the Edge Off the Middle East' Ep. 3
  • Podcast
  • Ben Samuels | 'Taking the Edge Off the Middle East' Ep. 3

    Middle East Focus Presents: ‘Taking the Edge Off the Middle East’ with Brian Katulis

    A series of casual conversations with leading policy professionals on the most important happenings in the Middle East today – hosted by MEI VP for Policy Brian Katulis.

    Ben Samuels – U.S. correspondent for Haaretz – sits down with Brian to discuss how he got into journalism, the state of politics in Israel, and the country’s ongoing judicial overhaul. 

    *Note: this episode was recorded on June 8, 2023.

    Lebanon needs a renewed donor support strategy
    Francesca Volpi/Bloomberg via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Lebanon needs a renewed donor support strategy

    Lebanon needs a new aid strategy to preserve the country’s ability to one day recover. What is required is a donor strategy that walks on two legs: a first leg that offers a big reconstruction push conditioned on economic and institutional reforms and, in parallel, a second leg that provides urgent support to the Lebanese population.

    August 22, 2023

    The dangerous precedent set by Tehran's recent international deals
    Photo by Vuk Valcic/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The dangerous precedent set by Tehran's recent international deals

    When discussing the recent deal between Tehran and Washington to release five American prisoners in exchange for Iran gaining access to $6 billion in seized assets in South Korea, Iranian officials use a specific key phrase: “honorable diplomacy.” According to Iranian officials, “honorable diplomacy” means dealing with America and Europe from a position of strength. They claim that, even after the brutal suppression of the 2022 protests, they have successfully used their leverage with foreign adversaries to win unexpected concessions — a claim that, while potentially exaggerated, points to an unprecedented series of developments in recent months.

    August 21, 2023

    Making sense of the Taliban’s counterterrorism assurances
    (Photo by Mohammad Noori/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Making sense of the Taliban’s counterterrorism assurances

    Two years on from the Taliban’s takeover of Kabul, Afghanistan’s neighbors are increasingly concerned that their return to power has emboldened terrorist groups and networks, which are using the hospitable environment to regroup, rearm, and recruit substantially. The main question now for Afghanistan’s neighbors in the region, and the international community more broadly, is just how reliable the Taliban’s counterterrorism assurances to other states really are.

    August 18, 2023

    Power cuts in Egypt: A political liability for Sisi ahead of the upcoming elections
    Islam Safwat/Bloomberg via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Power cuts in Egypt: A political liability for Sisi ahead of the upcoming elections

    A brutal heat wave tormenting Egypt since mid-July, resulting in lengthy and repeated power cuts, has turned into a political liability for President Abdel-Fattah el-Sisi ahead of his expected campaign to run for a third, six-year term early next year.

    August 18, 2023

    Peshmerga reform hangs in the balance in Iraq’s Kurdistan Region
    Photo by SAFIN HAMID/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Peshmerga reform hangs in the balance in Iraq’s Kurdistan Region

    Efforts to reform the Iraqi Kurdish security forces known as the Peshmerga are at serious risk of failing. Tensions between the ruling parties of Iraq’s Kurdistan Region are not new, but the working relationship between the leaders of the Kurdistan Democratic Party and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan has collapsed over the past year. As a result, officials within the Ministry of Peshmerga Affairs are no longer capable of preventing the politics of partisan self-interest from consuming the reform project. The prospects for the depoliticization and unification of the Peshmerga have rarely seemed more remote.

    August 17, 2023