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Higher Education and the Middle East: Serving the Knowledge-based Economy
  • Analysis
  • Higher Education and the Middle East: Serving the Knowledge-based Economy

    This is the first of three volumes examining the internationalization of higher education and the Middle East. The 12 essays included in this volume explore some of the changes that are taking place and the challenges that lie ahead as Middle Eastern countries seek to build sustainable higher education systems and strengthen their economies. Within the dynamic global higher education landscape, is the Middle East a stagnant backwater or a center of creative initiative? What are, and should be the roles of foreign partners and providers?

    July 16, 2010

    Introduction to The State of the Arts in the Middle East: Volume V
  • Analysis
  • Introduction to The State of the Arts in the Middle East: Volume V

    This edition of MEI Viewpoints features essays that shed light on the relationship between artistic production and changing societal conditions and norms. Clayton Keir discusses “rap” music in Iran – its integration of Western and Persian cultural influences, politics, and popularity. Brigid Maher reflects on the making of Veiled Voices, her award-winning documentary film that profiles three female Muslim religious leaders from Egypt, Lebanon, and Syria.

    July 1, 2010

    In Search of a Voice: Arab Soccer Players in the Israeli Media
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • In Search of a Voice: Arab Soccer Players in the Israeli Media

    Soccer is the most popular sport in Israel. As such, it is also a strategic research site in which to study Israeli society and its complex social and ethnic relations.

    May 2, 2010

    Walls and Goals: The Israeli-Palestinian Encounter in Football
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Walls and Goals: The Israeli-Palestinian Encounter in Football

    Dedicated to the memory of Israel Tzvi Raab Z”L, a true lover of the game

    The long, complex encounter between the Israeli and Palestinian people has been examined in many cinematic and literary creations. In this essay, I will explore several that use football as a lens to read opposing political agendas and as a means to resolve conflict.

    May 2, 2010

    A Step on the Path to Peace: How Basketball is Uniting Arab and Jewish Youth in Jerusalem
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • A Step on the Path to Peace: How Basketball is Uniting Arab and Jewish Youth in Jerusalem

    Basketball is a game where all five players need to share the ball. If it is played with great teamwork, the sum of the parts is greater than the individual. It’s a great forum for building trust. A lot of the game happens with things you can’t see. Communication and trust with teammates is the key. It seems to me that the same can be said of peacemaking.

    –R.C. Buford, General Manager of the NBA’s San Antonio Spurs[1]

    May 2, 2010

    The Migration of Syrian Christians
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • The Migration of Syrian Christians

    Originally posted April 2010

    “The question is no longer one of who remains or who departs, but how to leave and how to remain?”[1]

    April 19, 2010

    The Kurds of Iran: A Look at their Past, Present and Future
    Middle East Institute
  • Video
  • The Kurds of Iran: A Look at their Past, Present and Future

    The Middle East Institute is proud to host Carol Prunhuber, Sharif Behruz and Idris Ahmedi and for a lecture about the political, social and human rights status of Iran's Kurds, one of the country's largest ethnic groups. Iran's Kurdish population has long pushed for autonomy, and in 1979 Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini declared a "holy war" against the Kurds in Iran seeking self-rule. Since then the relationship between Iran's Kurds and the Islamic Republic has been characterized by frequent military crackdowns.

    March 16, 2010

    Introduction to The State of the Arts in the Middle East: Volume IV
  • Analysis
  • Introduction to The State of the Arts in the Middle East: Volume IV

    Literature, visual art, and photography not only serve an aesthetic purpose, but often act as mediums through which their creators explore deeply personal experiences and their broader social implications. In this, the fourth volume of MEI’s “The State of the Arts in the Middle East,” Najat Rahman considers the works of the Palestinian artists Emily Jacir and Eman Haram, and W. Scott Chahanovich (with Pauline Pannier) discusses the memoirs of the Moroccan-born writer Abdellah Taïa.

    March 1, 2010

    The Khamenei-Ahmadinejad Regime and the Challenge of the Iranian Opposition
    Middle East Institute
  • Video
  • The Khamenei-Ahmadinejad Regime and the Challenge of the Iranian Opposition

    The Middle East Institute is proud to host Iranian scholars Ali Alfoneh and Alex Vatanka for a discussion about the ongoing unrest in Iran and the implications for the stability and future of the Islamic Republic. With the Green Movement having proved its staying power, some scholars and analysts are starting to predict the beginning of the end for the regime of Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei, while others dismiss the idea as wishful thinking and argue that the Islamic Republic is here for the long-term.

    February 3, 2010

    Iranian Migrants in the Arab Countries of the Persian Gulf
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Iranian Migrants in the Arab Countries of the Persian Gulf

    This essay examines migration from the Iranian coastal region of the Persian Gulf to the nearby Arab countries. At the center of this research are questions of cross-border relationships, the construction of transnational spaces in border migration, and strategies for maintaining networks in both the home and host countries.

    February 2, 2010