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Research & Commentary Results

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156 Results
What is Germany Bringing to Tunisia’s Security Sector?
  • التحليل
  • What is Germany Bringing to Tunisia’s Security Sector?

    Tunisia is an important security partner for Germany, and a key part of the Federal Republic’s enhanced security involvement in the MENA region. Germany is due to release a new strategy for working on security sector assistance and reform abroad, which will give direction to work in Tunisia and elsewhere. Examining how Germany has performed according its own stated principles in Tunisia highlights policy points for this new strategy, covering greater commitment to governance, gendered security and transparency. With German security spending on the rise, there is a lot to play for.

    August 13, 2019

    Tunisia’s patrician president embodied its strengths, values, and vulnerabilities
    Tunisia President Beji Caid Essebsi's National Funeral
  • التحليل
  • Tunisia’s patrician president embodied its strengths, values, and vulnerabilities

    Laudatory statements and obituaries are pouring in for Béji Caïd Essebsi, who died last Thursday, July 25, in Tunis, and have emphasized his singular landmark accomplishment: serving as Tunisia’s first democratically elected president. While Essebsi’s legacy as president will be mixed, and he may not have been the greatest promoter of democratic praxis, he did emerge as Tunisian democracy’s greatest defender. What he leaves Tunisia and the world is a brilliant incomplete experiment, and, despite the growing resilience of Tunisians tested at the borders and in unruly borderlands, still a fragile experiment.

    August 2, 2019

    Freshwater Resources in the MENA Region: Risks and Opportunities
    A young Palestinian draws water from a tank
  • التحليل
  • Freshwater Resources in the MENA Region: Risks and Opportunities

    A reliable supply of freshwater is a prerequisite for sustainable socioeconomic development, as well as for sociopolitical stability and human prosperity, especially in semi-arid and arid regions of the world. The Middle East and North Africa’s freshwater resources are under immense pressures and are facing significant risks to their sustainability due to overexploitation, climate change, and interstate competition over their use that extends beyond the region’s boundaries.

    July 10, 2019

    Monday Briefing: Iran exceeds nuclear deal enrichment limits
  • التحليل
  • Monday Briefing: Iran exceeds nuclear deal enrichment limits

    In this week’s Monday Briefing, MEI experts Alex Vatanka, Gonul Tol, Gerald Feierstein, Marvin G. Weinbaum, Rauf Mammadov, and Robert S. Ford provide analysis on recent and upcoming events including Iran’s announcement that it has exceeded its enriched uranium limit, Turkey’s purchase of Russia’s S-400s missile defense system over American objections, an Emirati announcement that it will downsize military involvement in Yemen, the resumption of intra-Afghan peace talks, Russia’s continuing embrace of OPEC+ oil production cuts, and the emergence of potential threats to Tunisia’s democracy.

    Tunisia's search for political leadership
  • Podcast
  • Tunisia's search for political leadership

    With elections set for the fall, Tunisian voters are searching for leaders to emerge who can tackle issues of political fragmentation, long standing economic problems, growing protests, and a volatile regional environment with civil war in Libya on one side and political upheaval in Algeria on the other. Sarah Yerkes, a fellow with the Carnegie Endowment’s Middle East program, and Sharan Grewal, postdoctoral fellow at the Brookings Center for Middle East Policy, join host Alistair Taylor to discuss.

    May 7, 2019

    Diaspora Activism in France and Italy and Tunisia’s Democratic Transition
    Tunisia Marks 8th Anniversary of the Revolution 1-14-19
  • التحليل
  • Diaspora Activism in France and Italy and Tunisia’s Democratic Transition

    Scholar Charles Tilly does not believe that social capital can, by itself, build democracy. In fact, according to Tilly, citizens lacking favorable environmental and historical conditions — even if highly engaged — cannot establish a democracy. If establishing democratic institutions is such an arduous task for citizens living under dictatorship, what political leverage do those living in the diaspora possess? This article explores how the Tunisian diasporas in Italy and France have sought to help implement the transition to democracy.

    March 19, 2019

    A thaw in Tunisian-Syrian relations
    Tunisian protestors wave their national and the Syrian flags on May 6, 2013.
  • التحليل
  • A thaw in Tunisian-Syrian relations

    Observers of political affairs in the Arab world are keeping a close eye on the upcoming Arab League summit, set to be held at the end of March in Tunis. Although Syria will not participate in the meeting, the question of when, or how, to bring Damascus in from the cold after an eight-year suspension from the body will be the most important issue on the agenda.

    February 28, 2019

    Everyday Violence and Security in Tunisia
    Security Forces | Ettadhamen Riot | Tunisia | 12/28/18
  • التحليل
  • Everyday Violence and Security in Tunisia

    Since the intensive campaign of civil resistance that culminated in the January 2011 ousting of President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali after 24 years in power, Tunisia has undergone a political transition that has produced a new constitution, unharnessed civil society, and delivered much-needed political and economic reforms. Although the transition process has also included security sector reform (SSR), Tunisians remain insecure — subjected to a steady, unabated diet of everyday violence.   

    February 19, 2019

    Weekly Briefing: Failed Arab Economic Summit in Beirut underscores divisions
  • التحليل
  • Weekly Briefing: Failed Arab Economic Summit in Beirut underscores divisions

    In this week’s Weekly Briefing, contributors Paul Salem, Marvin G. Weinbaum, William Lawrence, Ruba Husari, and Jean-François Seznec provide analysis on recent and upcoming events including the Arab Economic Summit held in Beirut this weekend, Afghanistan’s upcoming presidential elections, strikes in Tunisia, the Trump administration’s next steps on Iranian oil policy, and Saudi Aramco’s $10B bond issue.

    Saudi-Tunisian relations: Balancing fiscal support and foreign policy
    Tunisian President and Saudi Crown Prince meetings
  • التحليل
  • Saudi-Tunisian relations: Balancing fiscal support and foreign policy

    While Tunisia remains geographically and politically distant from Saudi Arabia, its economic troubles may offer an opportunity for the kingdom to leverage fiscal aid to secure stronger bilateral ties.

    December 10, 2018

    Elections in Tunisia and hope for democratic reform
  • Video
  • Elections in Tunisia and hope for democratic reform

    Leading up to long-awaited municipal elections, Tunisia is at a crossroads. The beginning of 2018 saw widespread protests and social unrest in both cities and rural areas, as economic stagnation and unemployment continue to worsen. However, the vote currently set for May 6 signals an opportunity for Tunisian youth, women, and minorities to make their voices heard.

    March 29, 2018

    Nadia el-Fani: a soldier of secularism fights on
  • التحليل
  • Nadia el-Fani: a soldier of secularism fights on

    Returning to Tunisia for the first time in six years after facing charges of blasphemy for the making of “Laicite Inshallah,” her 2011 film about religious hypocrisy and government complicity with Islamist elements during and after President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali’s regime, veteran filmmaker Nadia el-Fani experienced an emotional moment.

    Standing on the stage at the Carthage Film Festival’s November 2017 screening of her film, “It Doesn’t Even Hurt,” which depicts her simultaneous battles with breast cancer and death threats from Islamist extremists, she began to weep.

    February 15, 2018

    Protests in North Africa: parallels and prospects
  • Video
  • Protests in North Africa: parallels and prospects

    Seven years after the outbreak of the Arab Spring in North Africa, demonstrators are taking to the streets again. In Tunisia, protesters demand change to new austerity laws, which compound already stagnant economic conditions and youth unemployment. Protests have also occurred in the small town of Jerada in Morocco following the deaths of two young miners. Both of these movements reflect ongoing socio-economic inequalities and were met with governmental crackdown.

    February 2, 2018

    Indonesia and Tunisia: Democracy as a Distinctive Link
    معهد الشرق الأوسط
  • التحليل
  • Indonesia and Tunisia: Democracy as a Distinctive Link

    Not until the early 1950s did ties develop between newly independent Indonesia and Tunisia, then still a French protectorate. Importantly, those ties were based mainly in politics, and not in religion. At the time, the Tunisian national movement, led by Habib Bourguiba, seems to have regarded Indonesia as an inspirational model of anti-colonial struggle. Bourguiba was also attracted to the idea of “non-alignment” advanced by Indonesian President Ahmed Sukarno Indonesia, among others. Today, more than six decades after having achieved independence, Tunisia again stands at a watershed in its political development — transitioning from an authoritarian to a democratic system. These circumstances have given the relationship between Indonesia and Tunisia a fresh tailwind.

    January 30, 2018

    Tumult in Tunisia
    معهد الشرق الأوسط
  • Podcast
  • Tumult in Tunisia

    Widespread protests have rocked Tunisia in recent weeks in response to a series of tax increases, exposing a general frustration among the population who have yet to see the fruits of the 2011 revolution. Are these the growing pains of a nascent democracy, or is Tunisia at another breaking point? Dokhi Fassihian (Freedom House), Eric Goldstein (Human Rights Watch), and Tunisian journalist and researcher Asma Ghribi join Paul Salem to discuss.

    January 25, 2018