USIP-Wilson Center Series on Arab Spring Impacts Concludes

USIP-Wilson Center Series on Arab Spring Impacts Concludes

Thursday, June 13, 2013

By: USIP Staff

In the last of a five-part series of papers and meetings on “Reshaping the Strategic Culture of the Middle East,” regional specialist Adeed Dawisha told an audience at the U.S. Institute of Peace (USIP) on June 12 that, contrary to some expectations, no clear political or ideological breach has opened up between the revolutionary states of the Arab Spring and the region’s status quo powers.

Type: Analysis

EnvironmentEconomics

 Egypt’s 'Jon Stewart' and Media Are Hounded by Politics, Economics

Egypt’s 'Jon Stewart' and Media Are Hounded by Politics, Economics

Friday, April 5, 2013

The arrest of a popular TV satirist is among the latest government measures and economic conditions that one newspaper editor says threaten to strangle the newfound independence of Egypt’s media. Lina Attalah, the chief editor of Egypt Independent briefed an audience at USIP on factors hampering freedom of expression in her country.

Type: Analysis

The Peace Puzzle: Appendices and Resources

The Peace Puzzle: Appendices and Resources

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

By: Daniel C. Kurtzer;  Scott B. Lasensky;  William B Quandt;  Steven L. Spiegel;  Shibley Z. Telhami

The last 20 years of American efforts to resolve the Arab-Israeli conflict have seen many more failures than successes. The Peace Puzzle offers uniquely objective account of the American role in the post-Cold War era. In writing The Peace Puzzle, the members of USIP's Study Group on Arab-Israeli Peacemaking had broad access to key policymakers and official archives in their research process, making this book one of few that offers a comprehensive history from the Madrid Conference through the...

Type: Book