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Attiya Ahmad

Post-Doctoral Fellow

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Attiya Ahmad is Georgetown University’s 2009-10 Center for International and Regional Studies Post-Doctoral Fellow. She recently completed her PhD in Cultural Anthropology at Duke University. Dr. Ahmad’s work brings together scholarship on Islamic studies, globalization, diaspora and migration studies, economic anthropology, and political economy.

 

The Latest from Attiya Ahmad

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Is a renewed JCPOA a threat to Israel?
Photo by Fatemeh Bahrami/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Is a renewed JCPOA a threat to Israel?

    The renewal of the international agreement on Iran’s nuclear program does not undermine Israeli national security per se but rather a longstanding tenet of Israel’s strategic thinking: that it must be able to fully eradicate any challenge to its military superiority deep inside enemy territory.

    August 26, 2022

    Morocco’s green mobility revolution: The geo-economic factors driving its rise as an electric vehicle manufacturing hub
    Photo by BALINT PORNECZI/Bloomberg via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Morocco’s green mobility revolution: The geo-economic factors driving its rise as an electric vehicle manufacturing hub

    Rabat’s recent announcement that it would soon sign an agreement for the construction of a “gigafactory” to make electric vehicle (EV) batteries has placed Morocco in pole position to become a green mobility leader in the Middle East and North Africa.

    Iraq's Deepening Political Crisis
  • Podcast
  • Iraq's Deepening Political Crisis

    Ten months on from last October’s elections, Iraq still does not have a new government and faces a deepening political crisis. To understand the current situation’s perils and what may be next for the future of the country, we are joined by Farhad Alaaldin, chairman of the Iraq Advisory Council, and Robert Ford, MEI Senior Fellow and former Ambassador to Syria and Algeria. 

    August 25, 2022

    What Iran’s emerging demographic “tsunami” means for Tehran
    Photo by Eric Lafforgue/Art in All of Us/Corbis via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • What Iran’s emerging demographic “tsunami” means for Tehran

    Officials in the Islamic Republic of Iran have been warning about an emerging demographic “tsunami” as local and international forecasts suggest the country could have one of the five largest elderly populations by 2050. Nearly 11% of Iranians are now over 60 years old, and this figure could significantly increase going forward.

    August 25, 2022

    The diplomatic ice is breaking in the Gulf. What does that mean for the region?
    Photo by Iranian Presidency/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The diplomatic ice is breaking in the Gulf. What does that mean for the region?

    The announcements in mid-August that both the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait will be returning their ambassadors to Tehran after six years provided the latest indication that the diplomatic ice has started to break in the Gulf region.

    August 23, 2022

    Trump Didn’t Kill the Carter Doctrine—It Was Born Dead
  • Commentary
  • Trump Didn’t Kill the Carter Doctrine—It Was Born Dead

    The United States and its Gulf Arab partners need a new security arrangement that effectively shares the burden of defending against Iranian hostility and goes beyond deterrence.

    August 22, 2022

    Iran-Venezuela relations: Presidents, postures, and pressures
    Photo by Iranian Presidency / Handout/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Iran-Venezuela relations: Presidents, postures, and pressures

    In June, Iran and Venezuela signed a 20-year road map on cooperation. As much as Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi has wanted to differentiate himself from his predecessor, his Venezuela policy has so far closely resembled that of Hassan Rouhani during the latter’s second term.

    August 22, 2022

    الاستقرار في المغرب هو استقرار الأسعار
  • Commentary
  • الاستقرار في المغرب هو استقرار الأسعار

    مثل الولايات المتحدة وأوروبا، شهد المغرب بدوره ارتفاعًا في معدلات التضخم مؤخرًا، مسجلة معدلا وصل 6.4 في المائة خلال يوليو 2022، وهو تضخم قادم من الخارج، يسمى ب”التضخم المستورد”. فبفضل سياسته النقدية المتينة، تمكن البلد من إبقاء التضخم عند الحد الأدنى في الماضي، لكن الوضع تغير الآن، كما أن السياسة النقدية المحلية غير قادرة على مواجهة العوامل الخارجية التي أدت إلى الارتفاع الأخير في الأسعار.

    August 22, 2022

    Is Chechnya’s leader a ticking time-bomb for Russian-Turkish relations?
    Photo by Sefa Karacan/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Is Chechnya’s leader a ticking time-bomb for Russian-Turkish relations?

    Chechen strongman and close Putin ally Ramzan Kadyrov claims he met with Turkish officials to discuss cooperation. If true, the claim would signify Turkey’s possible backsliding on some of its previous commitments as well as trigger a negative reaction from Ukraine.

    August 19, 2022

    Stability in Morocco is price stability
    Photo by STR/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Stability in Morocco is price stability

    Like the U.S. and Europe, Morocco, too, has seen inflation rates rise recently. Morocco was able to keep inflation to a minimum over the past decade, but now things have changed and domestic monetary policy seems unable to address the external factors driving the recent rise.

    August 18, 2022