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Ragui Assaad

Professor

Expertise

North Africa

This individual is a guest contributor. MEI is not able to assist with contact requests.

Ragui Assaad is Professor at the Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs at the University of Minnesota. He has written extensively on labor market and youth issues in the Middle East and North Africa. The author acknowledges the able research assistance of Stefan Johansson in the preparation of this essay.

The Latest from Ragui Assaad

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Data for Disaster Management: Mind the Gap
Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Data for Disaster Management: Mind the Gap

    Organizations working on disaster management need to find sustainable and scalable ways to mitigate the increased risks and to minimize the loss of lives and livelihoods when a disaster hits. This essay focuses on the role data plays in disaster management and on how innovations in this area can benefit humanitarian actors and can help them to transform the way in which they operate.

    August 4, 2016

    India's Crude Oil Imports from Iran
  • Analysis
  • India's Crude Oil Imports from Iran

    When U.S. and European nuclear-related sanctions against Iran took effect in 2011, India was compelled to reduce its crude oil imports from Iran and to diversify its sources of supply.[1] As a result, the country’s crude oil imports from Iran dropped by 1.33% and 37.81% in 2012 and 2013, respectively.

    August 4, 2016

    Israeli-Russian Relations: Respect and Suspect
  • Analysis
  • Israeli-Russian Relations: Respect and Suspect

    Israeli-Russian relations have attracted unusual levels of interest in recent months, against the backdrop of Russia’s military intervention in Syria and the unprecedented creation of a ‘de-confliction’ mechanism between the I.D.F. and the Russian forces. As is so often the case in today’s hyper-connected media and political environment, this small nucleus of reality was blown out of proportion and portrayed as nothing short of a strategic love affair.

    Madaya: Portrait of a Syrian Town Under Siege
    Middle East Institute

    Madaya: Portrait of a Syrian Town Under Siege

    August 3 – January 1, 1970, August 3 - 12:00 PM – 12:00 AM
    January 1 - 12:00 PM – 12:00 AM

    The Middle East Institute, 1761 N St. NW, Washington, District of Columbia 20036

    The Shifting Definition of ISIS' Caliphate
  • Analysis
  • The Shifting Definition of ISIS' Caliphate

    Even as ISIS forces are pushed further back behind their lines of greatest extent, a number of groups from around the world are eager to throw their loyalty behind the faltering so-called Islamic State. Groups like Boko Haram in Nigeria, al-Shabab in Somalia, and Islamic State in Libya have declared not only their support but their allegiance to the group.

    August 2, 2016

    The Rise of Islamism and Single-Party Rule in Malaysia
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • The Rise of Islamism and Single-Party Rule in Malaysia

    This essay demonstrates that beneath the surface is a tangle of festering problems that have contributed to the progressive alienation of elements within Malaysian society and rendered them susceptible to the appeal of transnational jihadist influences. The rise of Islamist radicalism is one of the more visible and worrisome signs of the erosion of the authority of Malaysia’s long-standing ruling party, the United Malay National Organization (UMNO).

    August 2, 2016

    Monday Briefing: The Battle for Aleppo, Turkey's Gulen Extradition Request, and IMF talks in Cairo
  • Analysis
  • Monday Briefing: The Battle for Aleppo, Turkey's Gulen Extradition Request, and IMF talks in Cairo

    In this week’s Monday Briefing, MEI experts Charles Lister, Gonul Tol, and Paul Salem provide analysis on recent and upcoming events including the battle for Aleppo, Turkey’s extradition appeal for Fatullah Gulen, and IMF talks in Cairo this week on Egypt’s request for more than $12 billion in loans.

    All Eyes on Aleppo
    Charles Lister, Senior Fellow

    Turkey After the Failed Coup
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Turkey After the Failed Coup

    July 27, 2016: A conversation with MEI scholar and director of the Center for Turkish Studies Gonul Tol, hosted by Paul Salem.

    The Dangerous Stipulation of Islamic Exceptionalism
  • Analysis
  • The Dangerous Stipulation of Islamic Exceptionalism

    Is the religion of Islam “exceptional” in how it relates to politics? The argument at the center of Shadi Hamid’s new book is that it is. This is not a novel argument, but one likely to be misused.

    July 28, 2016

    After the Boats: Refugee Reception and the Production of Irregularity in Italy’s Migration Crisis
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • After the Boats: Refugee Reception and the Production of Irregularity in Italy’s Migration Crisis

    This essay discusses the reception, protection and integration of refugees and migrants in Italy, where there has been widespread entry of people into positions of precariousness and vulnerability, living in informal settlements, often without humanitarian protection or residence permits. It is a situation that highlights the longer-term implications of the crisis and the shortcomings of the responses that have so far been put in place.

    July 28, 2016

    Resolving Egypt’s Housing Crisis Crucial to Long-Term Stability
  • Analysis
  • Resolving Egypt’s Housing Crisis Crucial to Long-Term Stability

    With a population growing at a rate of approximately 2 percent per year, Egypt is faced with an urbanization crisis, as many of its cities find themselves increasingly overcrowded. Egypt’s housing crisis affects millions across the country, and, if the Sisi government is looking to further consolidate its power, it must ensure that it maintains the support of the country’s poor urban communities, which have historically revolted against worsening living conditions.

    July 27, 2016