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Travelogue of a Nigerian Codesria Laureate in Lebanon (January–July 2006, July–November 2008)
  • Analysis
  • Travelogue of a Nigerian Codesria Laureate in Lebanon (January–July 2006, July–November 2008)

    On December 18th 2004, I discovered the Lebanese Emigration Research Centre (LERC), Notre Dame University, Zouk over the internet while searching for a post-doctoral research fellowship program on Lebanese studies in either Australia or New Zealand. I contacted the Director, Guita Hourani, who was instrumental in my winning the Codesria post-doctoral fellowship award. Elated, I departed for Beirut, Lebanon on February 21, 2006.

    December 14, 2010

    Kān Yāmā Kān: Curriculum Development in the GCC – Adopting (Adapting) Models of Higher Education
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Kān Yāmā Kān: Curriculum Development in the GCC – Adopting (Adapting) Models of Higher Education

    Once upon a time in the land where the light of creation first shone, the fertile grounds around Baghdad nurtured the House of Wisdom.[1] Even as Europeans were looking for the light at the end of the Dark Ages, Caliph Haroon al-Rasheed and his son Caliph al-Mamoon had made Baghdad a center of learning. In Baghdad, scholars put words on “real” paper. They preserved Aristotle, Plato, Hippocrates, Euclid, Ptolemy, Pythagoras, and Brahmagupta and translated Greek, Persian, and Indian manuscripts.

    December 14, 2010

    Partnerships, Collaborations, and International Education in the UAE: The Question of Context and Relevancy
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Partnerships, Collaborations, and International Education in the UAE: The Question of Context and Relevancy

    Education reform is essential for the continued social and educational development of the United Arab Emirates (UAE).[1] The country has grown considerably over the past decade, and opportunities for business and professional opportunities have expanded. Educational development has been deemed necessary for the citizens of the country to take advantage of such opportunities.

    December 14, 2010

    A New Paradigm of Educational Borrowing in the Gulf States: The Qatari Example
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • A New Paradigm of Educational Borrowing in the Gulf States: The Qatari Example

    More than in any other world region, the Arab Gulf states are experiencing a “higher education boom” in terms of the quantity and quality of institutions and programs now available. Over the past two decades, the Gulf states have imported a Western, largely American, model of higher education to address inefficiencies in labor markets and invest in their economic futures, to meet national reform agendas, and in some cases, to function as profit-making ventures.

    December 14, 2010

    Internationalization of Higher Education in Jordan
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Internationalization of Higher Education in Jordan

    There is a growing need in Jordan for universities to establish joint programs with overseas universities in countries such as the United Kingdom and to uphold partnerships with universities in the United States, Europe, and the Gulf states. Public universities are already highly regarded. Private universities are also seeking partnerships or joint programs with foreign institutions.

    December 14, 2010

    External and Internal Partnerships in Israeli Education
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • External and Internal Partnerships in Israeli Education

    Educational reform in Israel has repeatedly shifted from expecting individual excellence to expecting access for all. Excellence and access reflects the early history of the country when Jewish funders from France, England, and Germany established educational systems for Jewish children. The Zionist organizations that structured much of the curriculum and the external funding streams insured the Jewish schools were far better funded than the British-supported schools during the Mandate.

    External Partnerships

    December 14, 2010

    Benefitting from the Knowledge Economy? Examining Secondary Education Reform in Jordan
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Benefitting from the Knowledge Economy? Examining Secondary Education Reform in Jordan

    Jordan today, in spite of the scarcity of its natural resources, is at the forefront of the region’s states in several areas, primary among them are education, economic growth rates, and the qualifications of the Jordanian youth who have always proved their excellence nationally and abroad.

    — King Abdullah II[1]

    December 14, 2010

    Arab Voices: What They Are Saying to Us, and Why It Matters
    Middle East Institute
  • Podcast
  • Arab Voices: What They Are Saying to Us, and Why It Matters

    The Middle East Institute is pleased to invite you to a lecture and book signing by James Zogby, President of the Arab American Institute. The Arab world has been vastly misunderstood in the West. Zogby's Arab Voices: What They Are Saying to Us, and Why It Matters asks the questions, collects the answers, and shares the results that will help readers better understand the Arab world. The book brings into stark relief the myths, assumptions, and biases that prevent many from understanding the greater Middle East region and its people.

    December 8, 2010

    The Realities of Power Sharing in the Next Iraqi Government
    Middle East Institute
  • Podcast
  • The Realities of Power Sharing in the Next Iraqi Government

    MEI is proud to host Reidar Visser of the Norwegian Institute for International Affairs for a discussion on the current political situation in Iraq based on his latest publication, The United States and the Iraqi Transition, 2005-2010 (Just World Books, 2010). The book examines Iraq's process of democratization over the last five years and the impact of regional and international players, not least the US government, in shaping Iraq's new political system.

    December 7, 2010

    Oman Emerges: An American Company In An Ancient Kingdom
    Middle East Institute
  • Podcast
  • Oman Emerges: An American Company In An Ancient Kingdom

    MEI is proud to host author Lois Critchfield for a discussion about her new book, Oman Emerges: An American Company In An Ancient Kingdom. When Oman's Sultan Qaboos bin Said deposed his father in 1970, he inherited a neglected country with a modest oil income, but virtually no one qualified to advocate for his interests to the executives of Shell Oil – until he met James Critchfield, the author's late husband.

    December 1, 2010

    Turkey's Engagement in Iraq: Challenges and Opportunities for US Foreign Policy
    Middle East Institute
  • Podcast
  • Turkey's Engagement in Iraq: Challenges and Opportunities for US Foreign Policy

    The Middle East Institute's Center for Turkish Studies is proud to host Qubad Talabani, Charles Dunne, Can Oguz, and Gonul Tol for a discussion on Turkey's engagement in Iraq and its ramifications for US policy. In the aftermath of the US withdrawal from Iraq, vital US interests – including improving regional stability, limiting Iranian influence, maintaining an independent Iraq and preventing Iraq from becoming a haven for international terrorists – are still at stake in Iraq and the region.

    November 30, 2010

    The Economic Outlook For the Middle East Region
    Middle East Institute
  • Podcast
  • The Economic Outlook For the Middle East Region

    The Middle East Institute is proud to host the IMF's Masood Ahmed for a discussion about the economic prospects in the MENA region. Specifically, he will discuss the prospects for the Middle East and North Africa region in light of the global economic recovery that has begun to gain traction after the deepest downturn in recent history. The region's oil-exporting countries are benefiting from solid oil prices, and oil importers are recovering from last year's economic slowdown.

    November 17, 2010

    Deja Vu in the Occupied Palestinian Territories: Economic Activity; Political Despair
    Middle East Institute
  • Podcast
  • Deja Vu in the Occupied Palestinian Territories: Economic Activity; Political Despair

    Amira Hass is an award-winning correspondent for the Israeli daily, Ha'aretz. In her over 20 years covering Palestinian affairs in the occupied territories for Ha'aretz, Ms. Hass has lived three years in Gaza, and thirteen in Ramallah, the West Bank. She is the author of the highly acclaimed book "Drinking the Sea at Gaza" (Henry Holt, N.Y.) and "Reporting from Ramallah: An Israeli Journalist in an Occupied Land" (Semiotext). She also wrote the foreword and afterword of "Diary of Bergen Belsen 1944–1945 by Hanna Levy Hass (Haymarket Books).

    November 8, 2010

    MEI 64th Annual Conference
    Middle East Institute
  • Podcast
  • MEI 64th Annual Conference

    Rethinking a Middle East in Transition
    Introduction:
    Speaker: Wyche Fowler

    Panel 1: America's Middle East Policy
    Speakers: David Makovsky, Joost Hiltermann, Suzanne Maloney, Amb. Edward Djerejian
    Moderated by: Amb. Barbara Bodine

    Panel 2: New Approaches to Non-State Armed Actors
    Speakers: Peter Neumann, David Kilcullen, Robert Malley, Peter Neumann
    Moderated by: Roger Hardy

    Keynote Luncheon Address
    Speaker: Dr. Saeb Erakat

    November 4, 2010