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Algeria’s opposition after the Hirak: Limitations and divisions
Photo by APP/NurPhoto via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Algeria’s opposition after the Hirak: Limitations and divisions

    The gradual fading out of protests in 2020 amid the surge of the pandemic was the result of both the system’s political maneuvers and the opposition’s own organizational and political weaknesses.

    February 22, 2022

    Algeria’s recurring food crises: The sign of an ailing economy
    Photo by Billal Bensalem/NurPhoto via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Algeria’s recurring food crises: The sign of an ailing economy

    Beset by severe socioeconomic grievances, Algeria is now facing the most challenging economic situation since the 1988 October Riots, when thousands of young people took to the streets to protest an economic crisis caused by the decline in oil prices, austerity measures, and a youth bulge that led to mass unemployment. The latest food shortages are not the first, however, and given the administration’s current approach, they are unlikely to be the last. While the authorities have blamed business owners and even consumer behavior for the crisis, the underlying drivers are more systemic and structural.

    February 1, 2022

    Expert Views: The UN, climate, and security
    Photo by John Minchillo - Pool/Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Expert Views: The UN, climate, and security

    On Dec. 13, 2021, at a United Nations Security Council (UNSC) meeting, a draft resolution that would have recognized climate change as a security threat was rejected. The resolution, co-sponsored by Niger and Ireland, would have incorporated climate change as a security risk within the U.N. framework of conflict prevention strategies. What are the potential implications of this and what comes next? We asked seven experts to weigh in with their thoughts.

    Iran to remain a key partner for Ethiopia in the Tigray conflict
    Photo by Minasse Wondimu Hailu/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Iran to remain a key partner for Ethiopia in the Tigray conflict

    Ethiopia is Iran’s gateway to the Horn of Africa and the broader East Africa region. By helping Ethiopia in its ongoing conflict with the rebel Tigray Defense Forces, which represent the Tigray ethnic minority, Iran is preserving its so-called strategic depth in the region to bolster its influence.

    January 26, 2022

    Morocco’s New Challenges as a Gatekeeper of the World’s Food Supply: The Geopolitics, Economics, and Sustainability of OCP’s Global Fertilizer Exports
    Photo by FADEL SENNA/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Morocco’s New Challenges as a Gatekeeper of the World’s Food Supply: The Geopolitics, Economics, and Sustainability of OCP’s Global Fertilizer Exports

    Morocco’s phosphorus fertilizer industry, with its massive production capacity and international reach, has transformed the kingdom into a gatekeeper of global food supply chains. Morocco’s centrality to global food security rests with the fact that all food crops, indeed all plant life, require the element phosphorus to grow and Morocco possesses over 70% of the world’s phosphate rock reserves, from which the phosphorus used in fertilizers is derived. By becoming one of the world’s leading fertilizer exporters, instead of continuing to just export the raw material, Morocco has enriched its economy and elevated its international standing. In Sub-Saharan Africa in particular, the kingdom’s combination of joint venture partnerships in local fertilizer production and deft direct outreach to farmers has resulted in a remarkable boost in African agricultural yields and the notable expansion of Morocco’s soft power influence across the continent.

    Tunisia’s Kais Saied becomes an ordinary politician
    Photo by FETHI BELAID/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Tunisia’s Kais Saied becomes an ordinary politician

    While some of Saied’s rhetoric as well as his symbolic and legislative decisions may appear to some as revolutionary, the post-July 25 political system has thus far maintained continuity from both the pre- and post-revolutionary way in which the state governs: a top-down, policing approach with deference to — and reinforcement of — existing socio-economic hierarchies. In presiding over and perpetuating this system, whether with verve or reluctantly, Saied has become an ordinary politician, following in the footsteps of many others who have held positions of power.

    January 14, 2022

    COVID-19, security, and governance in the Sahel
    Photo by OLYMPIA DE MAISMONT/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • COVID-19, security, and governance in the Sahel

    In a volatile international environment, unpredictability reigns. Perhaps nowhere is this more true than in the Sahel, where myriad existing security challenges have only been exacerbated by the devastating impact of COVID-19. Despite significant stabilization efforts, the situation is growing increasingly complex and various interrelated vulnerabilities weigh heavily on the region’s security agenda, including the pandemic, terrorist threats, chronic economic instability, climate change, skyrocketing demographics, and weak governance systems, as well as unprecedented food insecurity and extreme poverty.

    January 12, 2022

    وضعت الحكومة المغربية الجديدة أولويات الميزانية، لكن هل يمكنها توفير مواردها؟
  • Commentary
  • وضعت الحكومة المغربية الجديدة أولويات الميزانية، لكن هل يمكنها توفير مواردها؟

    بعد شهرين في السلطة، أعطت الحكومة المغربية الجديدة إشارات إلى أنها تريد إعطاء الأولوية للتنمية الاجتماعية والتعافي من الآثار المطولة لكوفيد 19 على البلاد. ومع ذلك، فإن استقرار الاقتصاد الكلي، والموارد المالية المحدودة، وزيادة الإنفاق الدفاعي تحد من مدى قدرة الدولة على متابعة وتمويل خطط التنمية الاجتماعية التي تشتد الحاجة إليها.

    Desalination in Libya: Challenges and opportunities
    Photo by ABDULLAH DOMA/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Desalination in Libya: Challenges and opportunities

    For the MENA region, groundwater is a hidden but significant problem, as many countries extract more than is being recharged and most lack solid legal frameworks and national water policy regulations to determine use. As a result, there are questions and concerns about the current status of groundwater aquifers, especially with the increasing impact of climate change, as well as the type of sustainable alternative solutions that could assist in conserving them. Libya is no exception to this broader regional trend, and the country suffers from growing water scarcity.

    December 20, 2021

    Sudan-Russia relations after the October coup: The view from Moscow
    Photo by ASHRAF SHAZLY/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Sudan-Russia relations after the October coup: The view from Moscow

    Since late October, Sudan has been mired in a state of intense political turmoil. On Oct. 25, Gen. Abdel Fattah al-Burhan seized power in a coup d’état, placed civilian Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok under house arrest, and declared a state of emergency. In response to intense international pressure, Burhan and Hamdok signed a 14-point deal on Nov. 21, which reinstated Hamdok as prime minister and resulted in the release of political prisoners. While this agreement thwarted Sudan’s descent into a military dictatorship, mass protests persist and the opposition Forces of Freedom and Change (FFC) have rejected the deal.

    December 20, 2021