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Sara Sadek

Affiliated Researcher and Coordinator

Expertise

Egypt, Iraq, Sudan

This individual is a guest contributor. MEI is not able to assist with contact requests.

Sara Sadek is an affiliated researcher and coordinator at the Center for Migration and Refugee Studies (CMRS) at the American University in Cairo. She obtained an MA in Refugee Studies from the University of East London. Since 2005, she has worked on  various research projects on Iraqi and Sudanese communities in Egypt, contributing to a report on Iraqis in Egypt and recently producing a paper on challenges of  integration for Iraqis in Arab states for the Henry L. Stimson Center’s forthcoming volume Transnational Challenges.

The Latest from Sara Sadek

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Biden v. Putin: Rival roadshows in an increasingly assertive Middle East
Photo by ABIR SULTAN/POOL/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Biden v. Putin: Rival roadshows in an increasingly assertive Middle East

    The U.S. and Russian presidents staged high visibility visits to the Middle East in the past week and a half. The visits were designed to assert each great power’s influence in the region at a time of escalating great power conflict. But both presidents cut a diminished figure on the regional stage at a time when leaders in Turkey, Iran, and Saudi Arabia are feeling increasingly empowered.

    July 25, 2022

    Biden's Middle East Trip: What It Means and What’s Next
    Photo by MANDEL NGAN/POOL/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Biden's Middle East Trip: What It Means and What’s Next

    The main objective of President Joe Biden’s trip to the Middle East last week was to signal to both partners and adversaries that the United States was serious about restoring its strategic position in the region, which has taken considerable hits in recent years.

    Ukraine’s critical minerals and Europe’s energy transition: A motivation for Russian aggression?
    Photo by Jens Büttner/picture alliance via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Ukraine’s critical minerals and Europe’s energy transition: A motivation for Russian aggression?

    Russia’s war launched on February 24, 2022, may have partly been motivated by Ukraine’s large reserves of critical metals and their global strategic importance in the production of advanced “green” energy technologies. The cutoff of access to Ukrainian sources, combined with the nature of the partnership between Moscow and Beijing — with China being the largest supplier of the necessary critical minerals — could endanger the very notion of the West’s energy transition.

    July 21, 2022

    The Middle East’s worsening dust storms are making it harder to deploy solar energy
    -/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The Middle East’s worsening dust storms are making it harder to deploy solar energy

    Recent months have seen unprecedented levels of dust storms in the Middle East. Hundreds of people were hospitalized because of breathing difficulties; public buildings, offices, and schools were closed; and flights were grounded. Sand and dust storms are not a new experience for the people of the region, but continuous exposure to thick blankets of dust — as seen in April and June 2022 — is quite alarming and has affected local communities and residents across the region from Syria to Iran.

    July 21, 2022

    Turkey and Sudan: An enduring relationship?
    Photo by Emin Sansar/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Turkey and Sudan: An enduring relationship?

    Sudan has a longstanding strategic partnership with Turkey, forged on the basis of shared ideology and fostered by growing economic and political ties, that has proven resilient to regime change. Khartoum has not abandoned its relationship with Ankara despite the ouster of former President Omar al-Bashir in 2019 or the opposition of Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Egypt, Turkey’s former regional rivals and more recent cautious partners.

    July 20, 2022

    As Turkey’s economic woes worsen, a new currency crisis is approaching
    Photo by OZAN KOSE/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • As Turkey’s economic woes worsen, a new currency crisis is approaching

    Turkey’s economic problems continue to go from bad to worse. Its foreign trade deficit has reached a monthly average of $8 billion this year. Amid the sharp rise in global energy prices this spring following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the country’s average gross energy imports shot up from $3-4 billion per month to $7-8 billion. A reduction in energy imports and the recovery of tourism this summer have not offset this, and the current account deficit continues to widen.

    July 20, 2022

    When elections don’t matter? How new parliamentarians can improve the politics of power-sharing arrangements
    JOSEPH EID/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • When elections don’t matter? How new parliamentarians can improve the politics of power-sharing arrangements

    Power-sharing arrangements remain a paradoxical phenomenon. As a powerful tool to stop the guns of conflict, they tend to kill the ingredients for peace by preventing politics from changing. Three countries with such arrangements have recently held elections in which outcomes have — ostensibly — led to such political change. Change, however, has yet to materialize and so far the elections have brought more of a perennial companion of power-sharing arrangements: political gridlock.

    July 19, 2022

    Monday Briefing: Biden’s realist roadshow
  • Commentary
  • Monday Briefing: Biden’s realist roadshow

    Read MEI’s weekly briefing featuring expert analysis of key regional developments for the week ahead.

    July 18, 2022

    Pensions, sovereign wealth funds, and industrial policy in the Gulf: A look at fund consolidation
    Photo by HAITHAM AL-SHUKAIRI/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Pensions, sovereign wealth funds, and industrial policy in the Gulf: A look at fund consolidation

    The last few years have seen a lot of consolidation in Gulf financial sectors. Not only do these mergers create economic benefits, the merged entities also become potent tools for economic development. The mega-funds and other major financial institutions are part of a trend where Gulf political elites sidestep ossified bureaucracies and instead centralize power in private entities over which they have even more control.

    July 18, 2022