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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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Women’s rights under the Taliban: The socio-economic consequences of political exclusion
Photo by OMER ABRAR / AFP
  • Analysis
  • Women’s rights under the Taliban: The socio-economic consequences of political exclusion

    One of the first things the Taliban did after capturing power in August 2021 was to abolish the Afghan Ministry of Women’s Affairs and re-establish the Ministry for the Propagation of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice. The environment within which Afghan girls and women had found avenues of employment, education, and empowerment over the previous two decades had been lost. Many families now had to deal with acute poverty, mental health issues, and even suicides.

    March 7, 2024

    A report card on women’s integration into Arab militaries
    Photo by Yassine Gaidi/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • A report card on women’s integration into Arab militaries

    A look at what Arab countries have done to implement the year 2000 UN Security Council resolution on women, peace, and security, especially in terms of increasing women’s presence in the armed forces.

    March 6, 2024

    Interview With Rashid Al Khalifa – Bahraini Artist, Collector And Founder of RAK Art Foundation
  • Podcast
  • Interview With Rashid Al Khalifa – Bahraini Artist, Collector And Founder of RAK Art Foundation

    Director of MEI’s Arts & Culture Center Lyne Sneige interviews HH Sheik Rashid Al Khalifa – artist, collector and founder of the RAK Art Foundation and a participating artist in MEI’s current exhibition “The Sea of Life: Modern and Contemporary Art from The Kingdom of Bahrain”

    March 6, 2024

    As Western options narrow, Yemen's anti-Houthi forces vie for US military support
    Photo by KHALED ZIAD/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • As Western options narrow, Yemen's anti-Houthi forces vie for US military support

    In recent weeks, Yemen’s main anti-Houthi leaders have increasingly been sending the same message to the US, urging it to provide support in the fight against the Houthis on the ground. The provision of military assistance is still hypothetical but seems more and more plausible given developments in Yemen, triggered by the Houthis’ continuing attacks on maritime shipping in the Red Sea.

    March 6, 2024

    The many lives of Oman’s forts
    Photo by Burair Alkishri for Sekka.png
  • Arts & Culture
  • The many lives of Oman’s forts

    Home to around 1,000 forts, castles, and watchtowers, Oman has long used its historical structures to showcase the country’s rich history. Now, as part of an effort to promote cultural tourism, the sultanate is looking to develop more of them with a focus on the arts and cultural activities, giving its centuries-old heritage sites a new lease on life.

    March 5, 2024

    History rewrite: Did Saddam try to kill Bush?
    Photo by Diana Walker/Getty Images
  • Commentary
  • History rewrite: Did Saddam try to kill Bush?

    In his new book, Steve Coll casts doubt on whether Iraqi intelligence had actually tried to assassinate former President George H. W. Bush in Kuwait in April 1993. If the Kuwait plot were a fabrication, it would fit yet another brick in the wall of many well documented falsehoods and misunderstandings that led to the US invasion. Unfortunately for that allegation, the plot was very likely to have been quite real.

    March 5, 2024

    The Gaza Mono-Logues
  • Arts & Culture
  • The Gaza Mono-Logues

    Selected readings from the renowned Ashtar Theatre Play

    March 4, 2024, 6:00 PM – 7:30 PM

    Middle East Institute, 1763 N St NW,

    Why US naval presence in the Middle East matters
  • Commentary
  • Why US naval presence in the Middle East matters

    The recent Houthi attacks on commercial shipping in the Red Sea have highlighted the critical importance of US Naval force presence in the Middle East.

    When the decades’ long commitment of US ground troops to Afghanistan ended with the debacle of a withdrawal in 2021, the headquarters of the US Navy’s Fifth Fleet in Bahrain once again became the anchor to US regional presence and the core protector of national interests in the region.

    Egypt’s Economy: Missed Opportunities and Flawed Priorities
  • Commentary
  • Egypt’s Economy: Missed Opportunities and Flawed Priorities

    For the past several decades, successive Egyptian governments have practised the economic equivalent of riding a skateboard without a helmet; risky but manageable in the short run as long as one doesn’t encounter any obstacles. However, the inevitable has happened. Egypt’s economy smashed into not one, but two, major obstacles; a pandemic, which it just managed to stagger away from (World Bank, 2021), followed by the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine.