Middle East Research and Information Project

Middle East Research and Information Project

Critical Coverage of the Middle East Since 1971

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MER Article

Letters

“America’s Egypt”: A Flawed Critique Tim Mitchell’s article “America’s Egypt” (MER 169) offers a sweeping critique of USAID, World Bank and other development agencies’ perspectives on and programs for Egyptian agriculture. Although he makes a number of interesting and useful points, his analysis of
(Author not identified) • 15 min read
MER Article

Amin, Eurocentrism

Samir Amin, Eurocentrism (trans. Russell Moore) (Monthly Review Press, 1989). The awakening of the Third World and the formation of nation states in the former colonies has brought about a liberalizing philosophy of cultural affirmation of local traditions. One could conveniently characterize this
Georg Stauth • 3 min read
MER Article

Layoun and Boullata

Mary Layoun, Travels of a Genre: The Modern Novel and Ideology (Princeton, 1990). Issa Boullata, Trends and Issues in Contemporary Arab Thought (SUNY, 1990).
Saree Makdisi • 4 min read
MER Article

Al-Naqeeb, State and Society in the Gulf

Khaldoun Hasan Al-Naqeeb, State and Society in the Gulf and Arab Peninsula: A Different Perspective (trans. L. M. Kenny and amended Ibrahim Hayani) (Routledge, 1990).
Roger Owen • 5 min read
MER Article

Dilemmas of Relief Work in Iraq

The allied attack on Iraq in January-February 1991, and the hardship inflicted on the civilian population, prompted many UN agencies and non-governmental organizations to mobilize relief efforts in the country. I spent seven weeks in May and June leading a relief team in southern Iraq. Relief work w
Atallah Kuttab • 4 min read
MER Article

The Iraq Sanctions Catastrophe

The continuing public health emergency in Iraq is taking a higher toll in civilian lives than the coalition bombing last January and February. This emergency could have been over by now if the Bush administration and its allies at the United Nations had accepted recommendations on humanitarian needs
James Fine • 5 min read
MER Article

Tilting Democracy

John Simpson of the BBC is one of the most judicious and conservative members of my profession. He bravely holds the record for “staying on” in Baghdad during the bombing, at a time when many reporters found they had to keep appointments elsewhere. In his new book, From the House
Christopher Hitchens • 4 min read
MER Article

Gatekeepers

The media have devoted a lot of space in recent months to the so-called political correctness issue, conjuring up a portrait of college campuses patrolled by ideological truth squads ready to punish any deviation from left-wing orthodoxy. In the July-August 1991 issue of Tikkun, Evan Carton hit the nail on
Al Miskin • 4 min read
MER Article

Democracy and Liberation Movements: The Case of the SPLA

The Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA) has been fighting a succession of Khartoum governments since 1983. Though its stated goal is to build a unified “new Sudan,” it is widely perceived as representing the interests of the south, where most of its fighting is done and which it now almost entirel
Gill Lusk • 5 min read
MER Article

Democracy Dilemmas in Jordan

On September 2, 1991, the public liberties committee of the lower house of the Jordanian parliament, the Chamber of Deputies, issued a shocking report on torture of political detainees in Jordanian prisons. The shock was not that no one knew these things, but rather that the report had been issued
Abla Amawi • 14 min read
MER Article

Liberalization and Democratization in the Arab World

Democracy has become a catchword of Middle Eastern politics, replacing in some ways the concern with Arab socialism of the 1950s and 1960s. Can a combination of political and economic liberalism, of multi-party democracy and a market economy, help Arab governments enhance their efficiency and acquire legitimacy? Will it reduce
Gudrun Kramer • 12 min read
MER Article

Iranian Populism and Political Change in the Gulf

From the political perspective, the main consequence of the Persian Gulf War has been the restoration of the status quo ante. In Iraq and Kuwait, dissidents who had expected the military defeat of Saddam Hussein to usher in a new era of freedom and democracy have been sorely disillusioned. In the sh
Eric Hooglund • 7 min read

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