Migration and Social Development in Morocco
Originally posted May 2010
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.
Originally posted May 2010
Originally posted May 2010
“There is no way back, cross or die”
(A young boy from the rural area living in Tangier while trying to cross to Spain).
MEI Podcast, 4 May, 2012,Hamas’s Shifting Political Calculations
MEI Podcast, 4 May, 2012,Hamas’s Shifting Political Calculations
MEI Podcast, 4 May, 2012,Hamas’s Shifting Political Calculations
MEI Podcast, 4 May, 2012,Hamas’s Shifting Political Calculations
MEI Podcast, 4 May, 2012,Hamas’s Shifting Political Calculations
The Spring 2012 issue of the Middle East Journal is now online at IngentaConnect and ready for members to read (free with your membership with MEI). The print edition will also be shipping soon. To access the Journal online, use our guide to activate your access through IngentaConnect.
Articles in this issue:
Originally posted February 2011
Originally posted February 2011
In the Western context, notions of sustainable development often refer to the need to adjust existing economic models in order to maintain better balances between economic growth and social needs, while protecting local ecologies and reducing the negative impact of growth on the global environment.
Dr. Makram-Ebeid, along with ten other liberal and leftists members, recently resigned from Egypt's Constituent Assembly in protest over its Islamist majority, leaving only five women and five Christians remaining in the assembly. With the transition process in turmoil, a diverse coalition of Egyptian generals, liberals, bureaucrats, and judges are turning to the courts to attempt to diversify the composition of the Constituent Assembly, which is currently almost entirely dominated by Islamists – both Salafists and members of the Muslim Brotherhood.
MEI Podcast, 1 May, 2012, Egypt’s Troubled Transition, Dr. Mona Makram-Ebeid
MEI Podcast, 1 May, 2012, Egypt’s Troubled Transition, Dr. Mona Makram-Ebeid