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Higher Education and the Middle East: Serving the Knowledge-based Economy
  • Analysis
  • Higher Education and the Middle East: Serving the Knowledge-based Economy

    This is the first of three volumes examining the internationalization of higher education and the Middle East. The 12 essays included in this volume explore some of the changes that are taking place and the challenges that lie ahead as Middle Eastern countries seek to build sustainable higher education systems and strengthen their economies. Within the dynamic global higher education landscape, is the Middle East a stagnant backwater or a center of creative initiative? What are, and should be the roles of foreign partners and providers?

    July 16, 2010

    Introduction to The State of the Arts in the Middle East: Volume VI: Creative Arab Women
  • Analysis
  • Introduction to The State of the Arts in the Middle East: Volume VI: Creative Arab Women

    Creative Arab Women is the sixth edition of the MEI Viewpoints series on the State of the Arts in the Middle East. The 14 essays in this collection offer a glimpse into the rich and varied cultural output of Arab women in the region and the diaspora. Partly reminiscences and partly calls to action, they are essays of survival and empowerment that add a deeply personal dimension to the subject of the role of Arab women as cultural producers. MEI is grateful to Dr.

    July 1, 2010

    Getting Down to Business in Iraq
    Middle East Institute
  • Video
  • Getting Down to Business in Iraq

    The Middle East Institute is proud to host Thomas W. Donovan, an expert in Iraqi business law, specializing in international investment. Drawing upon his background as a corporate attorney and managing partner of the Iraq Law Alliance, PLLC, Mr. Donovan will discuss the particular nuances of doing business in post-war Iraq and how the 2009 Status of Forces Agreement may change the way in which international investors interact with their Iraqi partners. Mr.

    June 27, 2010

    Gulf Carbon Trading
    Middle East Institute
  • Video
  • Gulf Carbon Trading

    The Middle East Institute is proud to host Justin Dargin, research fellow at the Dubai Initiative, for a discussion of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in the Gulf and the pursuit of an effective carbon trading plan. Dargin will also examine the effect which this hot-button issue has upon the region's geopolitical relations, energy efficiency, natural gas utilization, renewable energy, and conservation of natural resources.

    June 17, 2010

    As the US Plans Its Exit, the Iraqis Find Reason to Worry
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • As the US Plans Its Exit, the Iraqis Find Reason to Worry

    This Commentary was originally published as an op-ed in The National May 31, 2010.

    ‘What does the US want from Iraq?” This was the question of a university educator during a large gathering of Iraqi politicians, students, journalists and activists we met during a 10-day trip to Baghdad and Kurdistan sponsored by Washington’s Stimson Center earlier this month.

    June 1, 2010

    Yemeni Football and Identity Politics
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Yemeni Football and Identity Politics

    The Republic of Yemen occupies the southwest corner of the Arabian Peninsula. Unlike its oil-rich neighbors, Yemen is the poorest country in the Arab world. Like other countries football (soccer) is Yemen’s most popular sport. Football has been played in parts of Yemen since before the turn of the 20th century, and since the 1970s, the game’s popularity has increased significantly.

    May 2, 2010

    Iraq's Petroleum Industry: Unsettled Issues
  • Analysis
  • Iraq's Petroleum Industry: Unsettled Issues

    Iraq has the world’s third-largest oil reserves. However, the development of Iraq’s petroleum sector has been severely hampered by decades of war, sanctions, underinvestment, the exodus of scores of technocrats, and sabotage. Repairing Iraq’s oil infrastructure and expanding exploration, development, and production is of paramount importance to the country’s future. In June 2009, the Iraqi Oil Ministry embarked on an effort to help meet this challenge by offering service contracts to international oil companies (IOCs) in two rounds of tenders.

    April 26, 2010

    Political and Legal Obstacles in Iraq
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Political and Legal Obstacles in Iraq

    Since June 2009, the Government of Iraq (GoI) has secured nearly a dozen major oil field technical service agreements with international oil companies (IOCs) after two highly publicized bidding rounds. The deals are seen as the cornerstone of Iraq’s economic development in the coming years. While future oil production has been rather optimistically projected as high as 12 million barrels per day (bpd) by 2020, significant obstacles to the development of the oil and gas industry remain.

    April 26, 2010

    The Status of Forces Agreement and Investing in Iraq: Risky Business?
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • The Status of Forces Agreement and Investing in Iraq: Risky Business?

    In spite of ongoing security and political instability, Iraq remains one of the most fertile yet volatile regions in the world for emerging business opportunities, specifically in the petroleum industry. Since the completion of the widely successful “surge” and implementation of the Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA), Iraq has experienced slow but steady improvements in security and economic opportunities in the petroleum sector. As a result, there has been an influx of international companies eager to engage Iraq’s ministries for access to these lucrative markets.

    April 26, 2010

    The Arab Gulf States: Beyond Oil and Islam
  • Video
  • The Arab Gulf States: Beyond Oil and Islam

    The Middle East Institute is proud to host Sean Foley, author of The Arab States: Beyond Oil and Islam (Lynne Rienner, 2010), for a discussion about the politics of the Gulf states and their role in the global economy. In the book, Foley presents a fresh picture of these states as cosmopolitan and tolerant societies that face many of the same socio-economic problems that other states do – including those that lack oil.

    April 22, 2010

    Transnational Networks and Local Challenges: Iraqis in Cairo
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Transnational Networks and Local Challenges: Iraqis in Cairo

    Originally posted March 2010

    It is estimated that over four million Iraqi refugees have fled to neighboring countries in the region since the 2003 war began. While migration continued after the war, the peak of this influx was witnessed particularly in and after 2006 due to the acceleration of violence in central and southern Iraq. More particularly, the majority of these refugees fled due to direct threats to their lives and their immediate families.

    April 19, 2010

    Taiwan and the Gulf: The Sky’s the Limit?
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Taiwan and the Gulf: The Sky’s the Limit?

    Dubai’s Burj Khalifa and Taiwan’s Taipei 101 tower, the world’s two tallest skyscrapers, differ in height by a stunning 1,076 feet, are separated by nearly 4,000 miles of ocean, and are situated in countries and regions which, linguistically and culturally, have little in common ― except business.