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Sara Sadek

Affiliated Researcher and Coordinator

Expertise

Egypt, Iraq, Sudan

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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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Community Policing in the Middle East and Africa: A Matter of Context?
(AWAD AWAD/AFP via Getty Images)
  • Analysis
  • Community Policing in the Middle East and Africa: A Matter of Context?

    This article explores some of the challenges associated with introducing what is, in effect, a “Westernized” community policing concept to the Middle East and Africa. The authors are practitioners in this area from Northern Ireland and Jordan having in excess of 50 years policing experience between them. They have advised upon, trained and implemented programs on “Community Policing and Engagement” in the Middle East (Jordan, Qatar, Lebanon) as well as in the Horn and South East Africa, Central Asia, Eastern Europe and the Balkans. They argue that more attention needs to be paid to basic context setting and understanding of the perceptions of the beneficiary state and communities therein on, what can be, an alien concept of Community Policing/Engagement and Outreach. They further argue that problem solving and informal justice/dispute resolution mechanisms in the Middle East, Horn and Sub-Saharan Africa can form part of a new and bespoke package “fit for purpose” in these contexts. 

    February 26, 2020

    The UAE may have withdrawn from Yemen, but its influence remains strong
    Fighters with the UAE-trained Security Belt Forces loyal to the pro-independence Southern Transitional Council (STC) man a checkpoint near the south-central coastal city of Zinjibar in south-central Yemen, in the Abyan Governorate, on August 21, 2019.
  • Analysis
  • The UAE may have withdrawn from Yemen, but its influence remains strong

    On Feb. 9, 2020, after five years of involvement in Yemen’s civil war as part of the Saudi-led coalition, the UAE’s leadership celebrated the completion of its phased military withdrawal from the country in a ceremony at Zayed Military City. Although the UAE’s withdrawal has provided an exit strategy from the stalemate in Yemen, it neither suspends Abu Dhabi’s role in the coalition nor curtails Emirati influence on the ground.

    February 25, 2020

    Obstacles to the implementation of the Riyadh Agreement
    Yemeni Deputy Prime Minister Ahmed Saeed al-Khanbashi (R) and Southern Transitional Council (STC) representative Nasser al-Habci (L) are seen during a signing ceremony of 'Riyadh Agreement' between the Yemeni government and the United Arab Emirates (UAE)-backed separatist forces, Southern Transitional Council (STC) in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia on November 05, 2019.
  • Commentary
  • Obstacles to the implementation of the Riyadh Agreement

    Now that all of the implementation deadlines have come and gone, where do things stand with the Riyadh Agreement, signed in late 2019 by Yemen’s Hadi government and the Southern Transitional Council?

    February 24, 2020

    Why Erdogan can't afford to back down over conflict with Assad and Russia
     A displaced Syrian girl carries a bag of bread in a stadium which has been turned into a makeshift refugee shelter on February 19, 2020 in Idlib, Syria.
  • Analysis
  • Why Erdogan can't afford to back down over conflict with Assad and Russia

    Nearly a million civilians, 81 percent of them women and children, have been displaced from their homes in 90 days in Syria’s northwestern province of Idlib, amid a brutal military campaign by Syria’s Assad regime, Russia and Iran-backed militias.

    Why there’s little media coverage of the Lebanon and Iraq protests
    Lebanese protesters wave national flags during demonstrations to demand better living conditions and the ouster of a cast of politicians who have monopolised power and influence for decades, on October 21, 2019 in downtown Beirut. -
  • Analysis
  • Why there’s little media coverage of the Lebanon and Iraq protests

    Lebanese and Iraqi protesters have faced an uphill battle drawing global media attention since Arab Spring-like uprisings erupted in both countries last October. Coverage of the protests has been dwarfed by other major international news stories running concurrently with the uprisings, such as Brexit and the Hong Kong protests. The main implication of low coverage has been a lack of sustained international pressure on Lebanese or Iraqi political leaders to accommodate protester demands for wholesale systematic changes.

    February 24, 2020

    Middle East disinformation: 2020 prospects & solutions
    Engineers from the Israeli company
  • Analysis
  • Middle East disinformation: 2020 prospects & solutions

    Social media has transformed the information landscape in the Middle East over the past decade. The 2009 Green Revolution and the 2011 Arab Spring demonstrated the enormous power of platforms like Twitter and Facebook for political organizing. Popular perception in the U.S. at the time was that these services would democratize a region notorious for its strongman governments. But it also showed governments and militants in the Middle East how powerful social media campaigns can be, if co-opted for their own purposes.

    February 24, 2020

    The Crisis in Syria’s Idlib

    The Crisis in Syria’s Idlib

    February 21, 2020, 10:00 AM – 11:30 AM

    Middle East Institute, 1763 N Street NW, Washington, District of Columbia 20036

    EU and the Middle East
    Middle East Institute
  • Podcast
  • EU and the Middle East

    MEI scholar Przemysław Osiewicz joins host Alistair Taylor to discuss EU-Middle East relations and key policy issues, from Iran and Israel-Palestine to Libya and Syria.

    February 20, 2020

    How can Egypt capitalize on its start-up boom?
    Social entrepreneur, Amr Sobhy, CEO of Pushbots, works in the office space at Flat6Labs on November 7, 2012 in Cairo, Egypt.
  • Analysis
  • How can Egypt capitalize on its start-up boom?

    There has been a largely overlooked yet significant trend in entrepreneurship in Egypt, the Arab world’s most populous country. Much of this has been concentrated in the country’s two main economic centers, Cairo and Alexandria, but there are also signs of a broader and more inclusive trend. Despite this boom, few start-ups seem to have left much of a mark beyond the early development stages. A lack of access to finance has long been recognized as a key obstacle, yet the approaches taken by the government and international development lenders have proven largely ineffective. If this, along with other obstacles, can be addressed, the country’s nascent start-up scene could become a catalyst for economic development.

    February 20, 2020