Every year, the United States uses foreign aid as a foreign policy tool. The Arab Spring gave the United States an opportunity to achieve a historically difficult task in the Middle East: promoting and establishing democracy across the Middle East. This study examines United States foreign aid, primarily military and economic aid, and the success it has on the ruling governing bodies in Libya and Egypt. Does American foreign aid lead to stability of the recipient government? The majority of published works regarding foreign aid effectiveness utilize a large-n case study over several decades without thoroughly examining each case. The following study focuses on research from 2011-2016 with only two cases allowing for more in depth research
Egypt was selected as a country that has experienced drastic changes in government recently; due to...
This paper examines the role foreign influence had on the outcomes of the 2011 Arab Spring Revolutio...
This article evaluates the political economy of U.S. aid in Egypt, arguing that transnational actors...
Every year, the United States uses foreign aid as a foreign policy tool. The Arab Spring gave the Un...
The study deals with the endless questions that always raised by many educated Arabs , who oppose t...
Since the 1980s, the United States has promoted human rights and democracy as a major part of its fo...
Many factors have been used to explain durable authoritarianism in the Middle East and North Africa ...
Several key components of American foreign policy in its internationalist form are based upon the U....
After the fall out of the Arab Spring in 2010, most of the countries in the Middle East and North Af...
This study examines the extent to which American aid is a positive force in promoting economic devel...
The unprecedented Arab Spring crisis that erupted in late 2010 and spread rapidly across the Middle ...
Why does the U.S. give foreign aid? There are compelling humanitarian and economic reasons, yet the ...
Abstract: The United Arab Emirates (UAE) is one of four major donors of foreign aid in the Arab Worl...
This report provides an overview of Egyptian politics and current issues in U.S.-Egyptian relations....
This monograph examines the possibility of Egypt leading the Arab world again, and how that effort, ...
Egypt was selected as a country that has experienced drastic changes in government recently; due to...
This paper examines the role foreign influence had on the outcomes of the 2011 Arab Spring Revolutio...
This article evaluates the political economy of U.S. aid in Egypt, arguing that transnational actors...
Every year, the United States uses foreign aid as a foreign policy tool. The Arab Spring gave the Un...
The study deals with the endless questions that always raised by many educated Arabs , who oppose t...
Since the 1980s, the United States has promoted human rights and democracy as a major part of its fo...
Many factors have been used to explain durable authoritarianism in the Middle East and North Africa ...
Several key components of American foreign policy in its internationalist form are based upon the U....
After the fall out of the Arab Spring in 2010, most of the countries in the Middle East and North Af...
This study examines the extent to which American aid is a positive force in promoting economic devel...
The unprecedented Arab Spring crisis that erupted in late 2010 and spread rapidly across the Middle ...
Why does the U.S. give foreign aid? There are compelling humanitarian and economic reasons, yet the ...
Abstract: The United Arab Emirates (UAE) is one of four major donors of foreign aid in the Arab Worl...
This report provides an overview of Egyptian politics and current issues in U.S.-Egyptian relations....
This monograph examines the possibility of Egypt leading the Arab world again, and how that effort, ...
Egypt was selected as a country that has experienced drastic changes in government recently; due to...
This paper examines the role foreign influence had on the outcomes of the 2011 Arab Spring Revolutio...
This article evaluates the political economy of U.S. aid in Egypt, arguing that transnational actors...