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Filling the Gap or Digging a Void? The Role of NGO-initiated CBOs in Service Delivery in Dhaka, Bangladesh
Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Filling the Gap or Digging a Void? The Role of NGO-initiated CBOs in Service Delivery in Dhaka, Bangladesh

    This essay offers preliminary observations from nine months of fieldwork in Dhaka. It focuses in particular on one organization, a collection of NGO-initiated CBOs across Dhaka—Nogor Bostibashi Unnyan Sangstha (NBUS), or Urban Slum Development Agency—to highlight the complexities of NGO-initiated CBO service provision and encourage debate about how to move forward.

    December 8, 2015

    Dealing with Daesh: Stay the Course
  • Analysis
  • Dealing with Daesh: Stay the Course

    This article was first published in The Hoover Institution’s The Caravan.

    Daesh or ISIS does not represent an existential threat to any state except Syria and Iraq.  It occupies and controls ungoverned space in the region between Iraq and Syria and in parts of northern Africa; and its self-proclaimed Caliphate has benefited from the seizure of some income producing assets in these areas.  Daesh depends on the dynamism of success and expansion, both of which have been in short supply of late.

    December 4, 2015

    Community and Governance in Chongqing, China
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Community and Governance in Chongqing, China

    In 2009 the State Council approved the city’s urban-rural master plan, which includes housing projects that can integrate rural-urban migrants with the urban-registered population, in line with the plan to increase China’s urban population and its domestic consumer market. Minxin Jiayuan (MX) was the first of 21 planned public-rental housing projects in Chongqing to be built. This essay discusses the system of governance and ‘self-management’ that obtains in this complex and others.

    December 3, 2015

    Sandy Berger (1945-2015)
  • Analysis
  • Sandy Berger (1945-2015)

    The Middle East Institute (MEI) is saddened to learn of the passing of Sandy Berger, who died today at age 70. Berger was among the nation’s most distinguished public servants, serving as National Security Advisor to President Clinton from 1997-2001.  He was also a member of MEI’s International Advisory Committee.

    December 2, 2015

    Mega Projects and the Limits of Urban Planning in Megacities: The Case of Istanbul in the AKP Era
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Mega Projects and the Limits of Urban Planning in Megacities: The Case of Istanbul in the AKP Era

    This essay examines the politics of the Istanbul Master Plan, which was created by the Istanbul Metropolitan Planning and Urban Design Center (IMP), focusing on the role of non-governmental organizations. The essay addresses three main questions. First, to what have NGOs been involved in the formulation, implementation, and oversight of the Istanbul Master Plan? Second, what form has their activism taken and what has been the response of the AKP government? And third, what are the prospects for achieving the balance between conservation and development originally envisioned by the Istanbul Master Plan?

    December 1, 2015

    Food Needs Drive Cairo Residents to the Rooftops
  • Analysis
  • Food Needs Drive Cairo Residents to the Rooftops

    On the rooftop of a three-story brick building tucked inside a dusty alley of ‘Izbat al-Nasr, a poor and informal neighborhood southeast of Cairo, Leila Hussein crouches, tending to the basil and rocket she grows. The incessant cackling of geese, chickens, and pigeons emanating from the roof of a similarly run-down, red brick structure opposite the street gives an eerie, rural soundtrack to her meticulous work.

    November 30, 2015

    A Mosque Grows in Lanham: New Institutions Seek to Rebrand Islam in America
  • Analysis
  • A Mosque Grows in Lanham: New Institutions Seek to Rebrand Islam in America

    Something is different about Greater Washington’s new Islamic center in Lanham, Maryland, which recently opened after several years of construction. It boasts an aquatics hall complete with a swimming pool for doing laps and a traditional Turkish bathhouse with separate sections for men and women. It has outdoor tennis courts, a chess club, and several guest villas inspired by 16th century Ottoman architecture. A female chaplain is already on staff, ready to issue fatwas alongside her male colleagues.

    November 30, 2015

    Charting a Course for Syria after Paris and Vienna
  • Analysis
  • Charting a Course for Syria after Paris and Vienna

    The shooting down of a Russian SU-24 by Turkey on November 24 has ratcheted the Syrian crisis to a new level of urgency.  This escalation, combined with the horrific attacks in Paris and the security situation still unfolding across Europe, is understandably dominating the news cycle.  Amidst this tumult, however, the results of the Vienna Summit of November 14 have been largely buried.  In truth, the downing of the Russian fighter and the massacre in Paris underscore the importance of looking again at what came out of the Vienna talks and what steps the U.S.

    Space Matters: Civil Society in Indonesia at the Crossroads
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Space Matters: Civil Society in Indonesia at the Crossroads

    The enactment of the Gubernatorial Regulation (Peraturan Gubernur / Pergub) 228/2015 introduced new restrictions on public demonstrations in Jakarta. Though this measure was soon thereafter revised, subsequent warnings by police raise questions about the scope of freedom of expression in Indonesia as well as the current and future role of civil society there.

    November 24, 2015

    Keynote by Amb. Robert Ford at MEI's 2015 Annual Awards Banquet
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Keynote by Amb. Robert Ford at MEI's 2015 Annual Awards Banquet

    Robert S. Ford, senior fellow at The Middle East Institute and former U.S. Ambassador to Syria and Algeria, delivered the keynote address at MEI’s Annual Awards Banquet on November 12, 2015, in Washington, D.C.

    November 20, 2015

    Obama's Mideast Legacy and the Next Administration
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Obama's Mideast Legacy and the Next Administration

    The first panel at MEI’s 69th Annual Conference featured Prem Kumar (Albright Stonebridge Group), Michael Singh (The Washington Institute for Near East Policy), Tamara Cofman Wittes (The Brookings Institution), Robin Wright (The New Yorker, U.S. Institute of Peace and the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars), and moderator Elise Labott (CNN).

    November 20, 2015

    Egypt’s Military Business: The Need for Change
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Egypt’s Military Business: The Need for Change

    The Egyptian state today faces one acute crisis after the other. To be fair, the Egyptian military cannot be held responsible for creating these crises. However, it is unlikely that Egypt will be able to resolve them unless and until the armed forces divests itself of the power and the privileges associated with the immense economic power and privileges it has accumulated.

    November 20, 2015