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The Middle East Institute Remembers Anthony Shadid
  • Analysis
  • The Middle East Institute Remembers Anthony Shadid

    The Middle East Institute is deeply saddened by the untimely death of Anthony Shadid, the Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist who covered the Middle East for the Boston Globe, Washington Post, and most recently the New York Times. Shadid died of an apparent asthma attack while on assignment in Syria. His insightful, humane reporting on the Middle East painted an uncommonly nuanced portrait of a region and people in turmoil, and will be sorely missed. Shadid's death is a terrible loss for journalism and the Middle East community.

    February 17, 2012

    The Village of Ghajar
    Middle East Institute
  • Podcast
  • The Village of Ghajar

    Audio recording from The Village of Ghajar

    February 16, 2012

    Hezbollah in the Wake of the Arab Spring
  • Video
  • Hezbollah in the Wake of the Arab Spring

    MEI scholar Randa Slim led a discussion about Hezbollah and its reaction to shifting regional dynamics in the wake of the Arab Spring. Although Lebanon has not experienced the same levels of unrest as its neighbors, Hezbollah is not immune from the regional instability resulting from the revolutions roiling the Middle East. Hezbollah is currently the principal orchestrator of a new governing coalition that is rife with internal divisions.

    October 11, 2011

    September 2011: Syria
  • Analysis
  • September 2011: Syria

    Amidst ongoing violence against protestors in Syria, Hande Ayan of the Center for Turkish Studies discusses the uneasy diplomatic relationship between Turkey and Syria and Turkey’s role in the political situation there. The September 2011 Bulletin also introduces MEI scholars Philip Frayne, who speaks on his Foreign Service career and offers his insights on how the US can support democratic transitions in the Middle East, and Randa Slim, who is interviewed on her experience in post-conflict reconciliation.

    October 7, 2011