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Lebanon joins a frayed Arab region
Photo by Houssam Shbaro/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Lebanon joins a frayed Arab region

    Lebanon and its citizens have endured many hardships in recent years. Two dimensions of Lebanon’s condition today are especially striking, however, and augur more difficult times ahead. First, Lebanon has become just another pauperized and increasingly militarized Arab country whose citizens rebel against state authorities. Simultaneously, the regional and international powers that once engaged in it for their own purposes seem less interested in saving it from its self-inflicted decline. 

    February 11, 2021

    Iran’s unrealized economic potential
    Photo by Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Iran’s unrealized economic potential

    The news coming out of Iran does not paint a pretty picture of its economy. Economic mismanagement, widespread corruption, weak legal and institutional capacity, and unfavorable business regulations, alongside the unprecedented U.S. financial and economic sanctions and the coronavirus pandemic, have been choking the Iranian economy. However, with a population of 85 million, half under the age of 30 and highly educated, as well as a strategic location on the Persian Gulf and vast reserves of energy and other natural resources, including wind and solar energy, Iran’s economy has incredible potential waiting to be unlocked.

    February 9, 2021

    Iran-US negotiations 2021: No 2015 redux by the standards of the Iranian economy
    Photo by Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto via Getty Images
  • Commentary
  • Iran-US negotiations 2021: No 2015 redux by the standards of the Iranian economy

    The core question for Iran watchers this year is the likelihood and nature of a renewed Iranian nuclear deal. However, the circumstances are very different and the respective bargaining power of the two sides does not mirror the negotiations in 2015. In particular, the macroeconomic backdrop is considerably worse today and the regime more desperate for sanctions relief than it seems.

    February 3, 2021

    The Turkey-Pakistan entente: Muslim middle powers align in Eurasia
  • Analysis
  • The Turkey-Pakistan entente: Muslim middle powers align in Eurasia

    In the 1950s, at the onset of the Cold War, Pakistan and Turkey were part of the Central Treaty Organization or CENTO, a pro-Western bloc of Muslim-majority states. Today, the two countries — both with troubled relations with the United States — are Muslim middle powers with a growing entente in a multipolar Eurasia. In recent years, cooperation between Pakistan and Turkey has strengthened not just in the defense, diplomatic, and economic realms, but also in the cultural space, causing geopolitical ripple effects in the Himalayas, the Arabian Peninsula, and the South Caucasus.

    January 29, 2021

    The Biden administration and the Middle East: Four-year policy goals
  • Analysis
  • The Biden administration and the Middle East: Four-year policy goals

    The Biden administration will face a number of major challenges in the Middle East over the next four years, from great power competition and climate change to cybersecurity and refugees and migration. But what realistically can it achieve in that time on the policy front? To better understand what’s possible, we asked 10 experts from across MEI to weigh in with their thoughts.

    2021 will be a defining year for Syria
    Photo by Muhammed Abdullah/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • 2021 will be a defining year for Syria

    In two months’ time, Syria’s crisis will turn 10 years old — a grim milestone for what has been the most deadly and destructive civil conflict in recent history.

    In the Middle East, cyber sovereignty hampers economic diversification
    Photo by KARIM SAHIB/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • In the Middle East, cyber sovereignty hampers economic diversification

    Rapid and unprecedented transformation in the Middle East, whether political, social, or technological, is forcing governments to reckon with enormous changes. Many governments are responding by attempting to pursue two contradictory paths forward — cyber sovereignty and digital transformation — and they might end up not achieving either.

    Key dates in the MENA region in 2020
    Photo by Mohammed Hamoud/Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Key dates in the MENA region in 2020

    This calendar lists key dates in the MENA region over the course of 2020 broken down by month.

    December 30, 2020

    Let justice be done: Respect for female land rights in the Middle East and North Africa
    Young Afghan girl holding bread.
  • Analysis
  • Let justice be done: Respect for female land rights in the Middle East and North Africa

    Ownership of economic resources is integral to exercising agency and to assuring the human security needed to live free from fear, want, and indignity. In agrarian societies, land and its natural resources are instrumental to financial, physical, and psychological wellbeing. Yet in half the world, secure land ownership is out of reach for most females. In the Middle East and North Africa (MENA), there is a huge gender-based gap in holding agricultural land, including where agriculture is a vital source of livelihood. In Egypt, Morocco, Sudan, Tunisia, and Jordan, most females, regardless of their education or socio-economic status are landless. Gender-based inequalities are often rooted in cultural norms that permit and exacerbate patterns of discrimination against females within the family and in economic transactions. These discriminatory attitudes trump humanistic and moral considerations, creating and reinforcing inequality. Discrimination against females in resource ownership has far-reaching implications for their lives, their families, and society. It is imperative to combat this regressive practice to ensure a dignified life for all.

    December 28, 2020

    Palestinian refugees can no longer be sidelined
    A man cleans in a street near destroyed buildings in the Palestinian camp of Yarmuk southern Damascus on November 1, 2018. - Former residents of the Palestinian camp of Yarmuk are desperately counting on help from abroad to help raise the once-bustling neighbourhood back out of the rubble.
  • Commentary
  • Palestinian refugees can no longer be sidelined

    On Dec. 3, MEI’s Program on Palestine and Palestinian-Israeli Affairs convened a webinar on the future of Palestinian refugees and their place in the policy discourse following the election of President-elect Joe Biden and the departure of the Trump administration. Below is a summary of the major takeaways from the event, organized by topic.

    December 16, 2020

    Economic desperation and dependence are driving the Palestinian Authority’s political decisions
    Photo by Issam Rimawi/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Economic desperation and dependence are driving the Palestinian Authority’s political decisions

    Faced with the Trump and Netanyahu governments’ persistent dismissal of the Palestinians and their rights, the PA has spent the better part of the last three years threatening to terminate all relations with Israel, and even to withdraw the Palestine Liberation Organization’s (PLO) recognition of Israel. The deteriorating situation culminated in Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’ May 2020 declaration that the Palestinian leadership was absolved “of all the agreements and understandings with the American and Israeli governments.” Notwithstanding previous similar warnings from Abbas in recent years, the announcement prompted speculation among Palestinian political parties, Palestinians at home and in the diaspora, scholars, activists, and journalists over the future of Palestinian politics in the post-Oslo era.

    December 2, 2020

    DIY futures in the Middle East: What if small got bigger?
    Photo by Marwan Naamani/picture alliance via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • DIY futures in the Middle East: What if small got bigger?

    It’s difficult to look at the Middle East and consider its future optimistically. Much of the analysis of the region centers on crisis and collapse. There is plenty of both, fueled by wars and civil conflicts, poverty, extremism, and more. Given the human toll, focusing on all this is natural. It is also necessary if solutions to deeply rooted problems are ever to be developed, leading to a better future.A related risk is becoming blinded to “weak signals” — early indicators of what could become features of potential alternative futures. Weak signals are developments that are emerging outside the dominant norms and trends of today. In the Middle East, probably the most dominant norm is the inability of governments throughout the region to provide security and prosperity for their citizens. The COVID-19 pandemic is making this even more apparent, and markedly worse. It is not just the obvious failed states — as Steven Cook recently observed, “sometimes state failure is a more chronic condition.” But in the midst of this — and fueled by it — there is evidence of activities at the local level to create what is missing. Could these be signals of a future different than the one it is so easy to expect for the region?

    December 1, 2020

    State of play for Middle East cybersecurity leaders
    Photo by VALERY SHARIFULIN/TASS via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • State of play for Middle East cybersecurity leaders

    This new white paper distills the findings of the Middle East Institute panel “State of Play for Middle East Cybersecurity Leaders,” a discussion held in September 2020 about the unique threats, best practices, and corporate landscape in the Middle East and North Africa region.

    November 25, 2020

    The UAE eyes AI supremacy: A key strategy for the 21st century
    Photo by Rustam Azmi/Getty Images)
  • Analysis
  • The UAE eyes AI supremacy: A key strategy for the 21st century

    The (UAE is laying the groundwork for regional supremacy in AI. By fostering a web of novel institutions and partnerships, the Gulf state aims to augment its capacity to execute lofty AI policy initiatives. Further signaling its resolve, Abu Dhabi is lavishing the nascent sector with a host of incentives: financial privileges, office space, and even health care coverage. The embrace of AI comes as the UAE is cultivating emerging technologies as a means of boosting and diversifying its rentier economy, as well as signaling its innovation capacity and viability as a global trade powerhouse.

    November 19, 2020