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Research & Commentary Results

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936 Results
Ukraine and the Middle East
معهد الشرق الأوسط
  • التحليل
  • Ukraine and the Middle East

    Introduction

    The political crisis in Ukraine and subsequent annexation of Crimea by Russia have sent reverberations throughout the Middle East, where Western and Russian influences continue to weave a complex geopolitical web. MEI interviewed four of its scholars to produce this detailed account of the challenges the conflict poses to the region’s political, security, and economic conditions.

    March 27, 2014

    Libya and U.S. Long-Term Engagement
  • التحليل
  • Libya and U.S. Long-Term Engagement

    Libyan popular and political support for engaging the international community offers the United States and Western partners an opportunity to help stabilize a North African energy producer and encourage orderly political change. Conversely, a failure to act could have costly, long-term regional and international security consequences. Domestic political limitations to direct U.S. government engagement, along with other issues that compete for attention and resources, are constraints on a more active policy. Moreover, Libyans themselves would not tolerate a dominating U.S. role.

    March 26, 2014

    Bad Neighbor, Good Neighbor: Libya-Egypt Relations
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  • Bad Neighbor, Good Neighbor: Libya-Egypt Relations

    In 2011, many observers predicted that relations between Libya and Egypt would become closer after both countries underwent similar revolutions followed by attempts at democratic transition. But three years later, the realization of this prediction appears unlikely. Political realities and ideological differences have led to a relationship that is contentious at best.

    March 21, 2014

    Jawad Nabulsi: Egypt’s Urban Activist
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  • Jawad Nabulsi: Egypt’s Urban Activist

    Jawad Nabulsi was looking straight at the policeman the moment he was shot in the face. The black-clad officer raised the barrel of his gun, pointed it directly at Nabulsi’s eyes, and pulled the trigger.

    It was 11pm on January 28, 2011. The “Friday of Rage,” as protesters called it, would later be labeled the bloodiest day in the revolution that toppled autocrat Hosni Mubarak.

    March 18, 2014

    Egypt Needs Bold Economic Leadership
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  • Egypt Needs Bold Economic Leadership

    Coverage of Egypt over the past three years has focused on the dramatic political events, yet it was the dire economic situation that created the pressure for the multiple uprisings. And if economic decline is not reversed over the next few years, Egypt might fall over an economic precipice that risks rendering the country eventually ungovernable. Security and political reform are urgently necessary in their own right, and will have a positive effect on the economy if achieved, but bold structural economic reform is also necessary to reverse Egypt’s downward spiral.

    March 14, 2014

    Libya on the Brink: Insecurity, Localism, and the State Not Back In
    معهد الشرق الأوسط
  • التحليل
  • Libya on the Brink: Insecurity, Localism, and the State Not Back In

    This essay is part of the Middle East-Asia Project (MAP) series on “’Civilianizing’ the State in the Middle East and Asia Pacific Regions.” The series explores the past and ongoing processes of Security Sector Reform (SSR) in Asia-Pacific countries and examines the steps already taken and still needed in the MENA region. See More

    March 12, 2014

    All Retributive Justice, No Restorative Justice in the Post-Arab Spring Middle East
    معهد الشرق الأوسط
  • التحليل
  • All Retributive Justice, No Restorative Justice in the Post-Arab Spring Middle East

    In the wake of the revolutionary fervor that has swept the Middle East and North Africa since the beginning of 2011, retributive justice has taken precedence over restorative justice approaches as countries seek to address human rights violations.

    March 6, 2014

    Egypt's Quiet Revolution: Sustainable Agriculture
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  • Egypt's Quiet Revolution: Sustainable Agriculture

    The Egyptian revolutionary motto, “bread, freedom, social justice,” which echoed over 18 days until Hosni Mubarak’s ouster on February 11, 2011, illustrated how restricted access to food had become one of the people’s main grievances. In the aftermath of the revolution, infused by a renewed sense of ownership of their country, many citizens launched environmental initiatives with a focus on sustainable agriculture.

    March 6, 2014

    Transitional Economics in Egypt
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  • Transitional Economics in Egypt

    In December 2012, the Central Bank of Egypt announced that the country’s foreign reserves had reached an alarming low of $15 billion, less than 50 percent of its holdings following Hosni Mubarak’s ouster in February 2011. At that point, the Bank was no longer capable of providing the treasury with the monthly dollar transfers necessary for the purchase of basic food and energy imports, and thus had to rely on foreign borrowing to cover these imports and debt service as well as to support local currency.

    February 27, 2014

    The Arab Awakening: Determinants and Economic Consequences
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  • The Arab Awakening: Determinants and Economic Consequences

    Economist Zubair Iqbal explains the daunting economic challenges facing Arab countries in transition following the Arab Awakening and the different trajectories stemming from those nations’ policy responses. Tunisia and Egypt provide an instructive case study: the former made hard fiscal decisions and has embraced sound economic principles and achieved broad support for a reform plan, while the latter, suffering from more difficult political conditions, has been faced with limited policy options that increase the risk for long-term challenges.

    February 25, 2014

    Al Qaeda's Expansion in Egypt: Implications for U.S. Homeland Security
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  • Al Qaeda's Expansion in Egypt: Implications for U.S. Homeland Security

    Testimony of MEI Resident Scholar Mohamed Elmenshawy before the House Committee on Homeland Security Subcommittee on Counterterrorism and Intelligence, delivered February 11, 2014.  Click here for video clips and additional testimony from this hearing.

    February 25, 2014

    Church-State Relations in Egypt
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  • Church-State Relations in Egypt

    The Christmas visit of Egypt’s interim president Adly Mansour to the Coptic Cathedral in Cairo occasioned much commentary in the Egyptian press about a new era in church-state relations. Indeed, newspaper headlines heralded the visit as the first undertaken by an Egyptian president to a Coptic patriarch to offer congratulations on a Coptic holiday. The interim president’s magnanimity in making the visit was set in stark contrast to the parsimonious attitude of Hosni Mubarak, who would typically leave such obligatory greetings to a lesser figure in the Egyptian government.

    February 24, 2014