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EU Energy Security & the Maghreb
  • Podcast
  • EU Energy Security & the Maghreb

    North Africa and the Sahel Program Director Intissar Fakir speaks to Alberto Rizzi – pan-European fellow at the Rome Office of the European Council on Foreign Relations – about existing and future energy partnerships between the European Union and the Maghreb. In the wake of energy market disruption caused by the conflict in Ukraine, what alternative fuel sources are the EU looking towards – and how does this align with current production capacities in Maghreb countries?

    January 24, 2023

    What the United Nations’ 6th Climate Assessment tells us about the Mediterranean’s climate future
    Fadel Senna /AFP/Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • What the United Nations’ 6th Climate Assessment tells us about the Mediterranean’s climate future

    The latest U.N. IPCC report details the alarming changes that Mediterranean countries will experience in the coming decades due to climate change, highlighting three critical areas — warming and droughts, declining ecosystems, as well as socioeconomic and public health risks.

    December 19, 2022

    As terrorist groups expand in the Sahel, is Algeria the missing link?
    Photo by OLYMPIA DE MAISMONT/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • As terrorist groups expand in the Sahel, is Algeria the missing link?

    Over the past two years, the steady expansion of terrorist and fundamentalist threats in the Sahel has not gotten the attention it deserves. Algeria’s regional diplomatic clout, military might, and experience in fighting terrorism could help Sahelian states ward off an imminent political and security collapse.

    December 6, 2022

    Morocco and Israel: Economic Opportunities, Military Incentives, and Moral Hazards
    Photo by JACK GUEZ/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Morocco and Israel: Economic Opportunities, Military Incentives, and Moral Hazards

    The December 2020 Moroccan-Israeli normalization deal has evolved from a vehicle enabling Morocco to gain long-sought U.S. recognition of its claims on Western Sahara to a broader strategic partnership with Israel. But the relationship further strains relations with neighboring rival Algeria.

    Dispatches from Sharm el-Sheikh: Reviewing COP27 from the MENA perspective
    Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images
  • Commentary
  • Dispatches from Sharm el-Sheikh: Reviewing COP27 from the MENA perspective

    Participating in COP27 provided a unique opportunity to view the proceedings firsthand and evaluate the effectiveness of the meeting in advancing critical climate priorities that can alter the alarming trajectory of future climate change.

    November 29, 2022

    US priorities in Sudan: Stability or democracy?
    Photo by ASHRAF SHAZLY/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • US priorities in Sudan: Stability or democracy?

    Sudan is geostrategically important to U.S. interests in both Africa and the Middle East. The country’s military rulers, Lt.-Gen. Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and his deputy Lt.-Gen. Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo (also known as “Hemedti”), are banking on that fact as they seek to press the Biden administration to focus its Sudan policy on stability, rather than supporting calls for democracy.

    November 21, 2022

    Algerians’ clandestine exodus: A complex national tragedy
    Photo by JORGE GUERRERO/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Algerians’ clandestine exodus: A complex national tragedy

    The growing wave of Algerians illegally trying to reach Southern European shores while risking death is by no means a new development. But these perilous trans-maritime voyages are also a reminder of the bleak political and economic situation in which Algeria finds itself three years after the 2019 protest movement sparked hope for fundamental change.

    October 19, 2022

    Saied’s new rules for Tunisia’s elections
    Photo by FETHI BELAID/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Saied’s new rules for Tunisia’s elections

    With the decree of a new election law on Sept. 15, President Kais Saied continues rebuilding the formal political mechanisms of the Tunisian state — what some see as a “third republic.” The new law sets the terms for the legislative elections scheduled to be held on Dec. 17, 2022, and it comes only shortly before nominations for candidacies for those elections begin on Oct. 17.

    October 17, 2022

    Will Italy’s MENA policy change under the new government?
    Photo by VINCENZO PINTO/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Will Italy’s MENA policy change under the new government?

    Although Italians have elected the most far-right government of the postwar era, the future might be marked more by evolution than drastic change, at least in the short term. This is especially true when it comes to Italian foreign policy, including toward the Middle East and North Africa.

    Time to go local in Libya
    Photo by MAHMUD TURKIA/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Time to go local in Libya

    On Sept. 2, the United Nations appointed a new special envoy for Libya, Senegalese diplomat Abdoulaye Bathily. But to have any chance of success, Bathily will need to reach out to local-level Libyan leaders who oppose the status quo preferred by Libya’s national politicians.

    Algeria & France: Untangling Past and Present
  • Podcast
  • Algeria & France: Untangling Past and Present

    French President Emmanuel Macron’s recent visit to Algeria brought talks of cooperation and reconciliation to the fore in an otherwise fraught relationship. France and Algeria share a long and painful history, including 132 years of colonial occupation and an eight year war of devastation. In an effort to unpack the motivations and context behind Macron’s visit, MEI Senior Fellow and Director of the North Africa and the Sahel Program Intissar Fakir speaks with Francis Ghilès, Senior Research Fellow with the Barcelona Center for International Affairs.

    September 2, 2022