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Research & Commentary Results

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8748 Results
Women's Prospects in Afghanistan: Oppression or Opportunity?
  • التحليل
  • Women's Prospects in Afghanistan: Oppression or Opportunity?

    Recent media reports indicate that fewer Afghan women turned out to vote for a President on August 20, 2009 than went to the polls five years ago, when in some districts female turnout had been even higher than that of males. Apprehension, convention, ennui, and disorganization led to families keeping their women home on election day, even as men dared to vote. The reversal of women’s rights, which they had only recently begun to exercise, is an ominous sign.

    April 12, 2012

    The Iranian Revolution at 30
    معهد الشرق الأوسط
  • التحليل
  • The Iranian Revolution at 30

    Originally posted January 2009

    It is only fitting that “The Iranian Revolution at 30” begin with an introductory essay by R.K. Ramazani and that this project be dedicated to him. For 55 years, Professor Ramazani has been a teacher and mentor to many scholars and practitioners of the Middle East. His body of work on Iran is unrivalled in its scope and originality. Many of his articles and books on Iranian foreign policy are standard works.

    April 10, 2012

    Iran Diplomacy: Letter from Berlin
    معهد الشرق الأوسط
  • التحليل
  • Iran Diplomacy: Letter from Berlin

    This article originally appeared in Foreign Policy’s Middle East Channel on April 9, 2012

    BERLIN – If at one time European governments believed the threat of a nuclear-armed Iran was far more frightening for the United States than for those across the Atlantic, those days are in the past. As talks near on Iran’s nuclear program, Tehran should know that European officials’ views are somewhere in the middle between America’s caution and Israel’s alarm.

    April 10, 2012

    Egypt and the Dynamics of Transition and Revolution
  • Video
  • Egypt and the Dynamics of Transition and Revolution

    Today, more than a year after the Tahrir Square protests toppled the Mubarak regime, tension remains between the old guard and the new. As the Muslim Brotherhood works to assert political authority, the military elite, as represented by the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, seeks to retain some vestige of power in government. Dr. Ghabra posits that the ongoing attempts on the part of the SCAF to retain control over Egypt's political future will not succeed, given the new political awareness and involvement of Egyptian citizens.

    April 9, 2012