An ideal primer on contemporary Middle East Politics, covering the entire MENA region from an interdisciplinary perspective
This compelling volume examines important and cross-cutting themes in the study of contemporary Middle East and North African politics and international relations in the current climate. Drawing together contributions from scholars based within the region and beyond, it weaves together essential interdisciplinary, conceptually rich, and forward-looking content. Chapters cover population and youth, civil–military relations, soft power and geopolitical competition, regionalization and internationalization of conflict, the role of oil in reconstruction efforts, extra-regional actors, environmental politics, and specifically, the Israel–Palestine conflict. Students are supported with an extended and innovative glossary, including key concepts, actors and abbreviations.
New Perspectives on Middle East Politics serves as an ideal primer and companion volume for scholars of contemporary Middle East Studies, as well as for policy professionals, journalists and the general reader engaging and re-engaging with the region.
- Mohamed Abdelraouf, Gulf Research Centre, Jeddah, United Arab Emirates
- Dina Arakji, Carnegie Middle East Center, Beirut, Lebanon
- Eyad Al Refai, Lancaster University, Lancashire, England and King Abdulaziz University, Saudi Arabia
- Philipp Casula, University of Basel, Switzerland
- Ishac Diwan, Paris Sciences et Lettres and Ecole Normale Superieure, Paris, France
- Seif Hendy, American University in Cairo, Egypt
- Simon Mabon, Lancaster University, Lancashire, England
- Robert Mason, Lancaster University, Lancashire, England
- Neil Partrick, freelance consultant, UK
O autorze
Robert Mason is a fellow of the Sectarianism, Proxies and De-sectarianisation project at Lancaster University and non-resident fellow with the Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington, and currently sits on the International Studies Association (ISA) Foreign Policy Analysis Section Executive Board. He was associate professor of Middle East Studies at the American University in Cairo (2016–2019), visiting scholar in the Department of Near Eastern Studies at Princeton University in 2019, and visiting research fellow at the University of Oxford in 2016. He is the author or editor of numerous books, including Reassessing Order and Disorder in the Middle East: Regional Imbalance or Disintegration? (2017), Egypt and the Gulf: A Renewed Regional Policy Alliance (2016), and Muslim Minority-State Relations: Violence, Integration, and Policy (2016).