When the history of the present is eventually written, 2011 may well be most closely associated with the ‘Arab spring.’ Attention will undoubtedly centre on the revolutions of Tunisia and Egypt, as well as the currently ongoing protests against leaderships from the Gulf to Yemen and violent reaction from the Libyan and Syrian regimes
Brazilian flags have been highly visible on Ramallah streets over the past few days, almost as much ...
The recent election campaign for the Egyptian People’s Assembly turns the limelight once again to th...
“It might be the winter of politics in Tunisia but it is definitely the spring of the media”: the st...
A month on from President Ben Ali’s ouster in Tunisia, a wave of protest has swept across the Arab w...
In response to the political convulsions in Egypt, Barack Obama stated from Dar el Salaam that the U...
Following the overthrow of the Tunisian and Egyptian presidents in the last two months, the Arab upr...
The intensity and the extent of popular anger against the tyranny and incompetency of Hosni Mubarak’...
By Professor Saad N Jawad Senior Research Fellow at the Middle East Centre, LSE & Dr Sawsan I al-Ass...
“Algeria is ‘sitting on a volcano’.” We will continue to sift for opportunities to support reform, a...
The peace talks between the Israeli and Palestinian negotiators that started in the summer of 2013 u...
The domestic policies of Egypt’s military government have come under great international scrutiny du...
When, on March 17th 2011, the UN Security Council passed UNSC 1973 authorising UN members to establi...
On 17 March, 2011, South Africa joined a number of other permanent and non-permanent members of the ...
The ‘Global 1989’ as event (and LSE IDEAS research project) remains a critical point of disjuncture ...
By Sarah E. Yerkes. The relationship between the United States and Egypt has reached one of its lowe...
Brazilian flags have been highly visible on Ramallah streets over the past few days, almost as much ...
The recent election campaign for the Egyptian People’s Assembly turns the limelight once again to th...
“It might be the winter of politics in Tunisia but it is definitely the spring of the media”: the st...
A month on from President Ben Ali’s ouster in Tunisia, a wave of protest has swept across the Arab w...
In response to the political convulsions in Egypt, Barack Obama stated from Dar el Salaam that the U...
Following the overthrow of the Tunisian and Egyptian presidents in the last two months, the Arab upr...
The intensity and the extent of popular anger against the tyranny and incompetency of Hosni Mubarak’...
By Professor Saad N Jawad Senior Research Fellow at the Middle East Centre, LSE & Dr Sawsan I al-Ass...
“Algeria is ‘sitting on a volcano’.” We will continue to sift for opportunities to support reform, a...
The peace talks between the Israeli and Palestinian negotiators that started in the summer of 2013 u...
The domestic policies of Egypt’s military government have come under great international scrutiny du...
When, on March 17th 2011, the UN Security Council passed UNSC 1973 authorising UN members to establi...
On 17 March, 2011, South Africa joined a number of other permanent and non-permanent members of the ...
The ‘Global 1989’ as event (and LSE IDEAS research project) remains a critical point of disjuncture ...
By Sarah E. Yerkes. The relationship between the United States and Egypt has reached one of its lowe...
Brazilian flags have been highly visible on Ramallah streets over the past few days, almost as much ...
The recent election campaign for the Egyptian People’s Assembly turns the limelight once again to th...
“It might be the winter of politics in Tunisia but it is definitely the spring of the media”: the st...