Tunisia’s Ghannouchi Points to Country’s Democratic Advances, New Constitution

Tunisia’s Ghannouchi Points to Country’s Democratic Advances, New Constitution

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

By: Thomas Omestad

Tunisia’s dominant Islamist movement, which voluntarily ceded political power to a caretaker government last month, is intent on demonstrating “co-existence” between Islamists and secularists and “the compatibility of Islam” with democracy, human rights and consensus politics, the movement’s leader said at an informal meeting with specialists at the U.S. Institute of Peace (USIP) on February 24.

Type: Analysis and Commentary

Religion

Common Strategies for Women in Transition Countries

Common Strategies for Women in Transition Countries

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

By: Steven E. Steiner

An expert dialogue on women in transition countries brought together 14 women leaders from Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, and Tunisia to work together and identify issues specific to each country and determine common problems. USIP’s Steven Steiner summarizes their recommendations on how to overcome the challenges.

Type: Peace Brief

Gender

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 and Commentary

Economics & Environment

Tunisian Academic Leaders Cite Worrying Delays in Economic, Political Progress

Tunisian Academic Leaders Cite Worrying Delays in Economic, Political Progress

Monday, March 25, 2013

By: Viola Gienger

Tunisian officials are running out of time to address the country’s biggest political and economic challenges since the 2011 revolution and restore the quickly-eroding trust of its citizens, several academic leaders said during a visit to Washington organized by the U.S. Institute of Peace, a Georgetown University program and the Project on Middle East Democracy.

Type: Analysis and Commentary

Conflict Analysis & Prevention