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

Revolutionary Realism and the Struggle for Palestine

The discussion of socialist strategy in Palestine recorded in Towards a Socialist Republic of Palestine has lost none of its pertinence despite the fact that it was recorded some time ago, in 1976. Sadat’s initiatives have not yet revised the basic terms in which the problem has been set since 1948.
Fred Halliday • 27 min read
MER Article

From the Editors (May/June 1981)

The question of Palestine has consistently been of great importance to our work ever since the first issue of MERIP Reports was published ten years ago, in May 1971. More recently, in our introduction to “The PLO at the Crossroads” (July-August 1979), we wrote that MERIP is interested “in encouragin
The Editors • 3 min read
MER Article

A New International Division of Labor?

A number of theorists have recently put forth the notion of a “new international division of labor” in which the old colonial division of labor involving Third World exports of raw materials and imports of finished goods has been transcended. [1] According to this thesis, Third World countries have
James Petras • 7 min read
MER Article

"I Have Not Seen a Good Day in My Life"

Interview with Hilmi Zaki: Are you married? Yes, and my wife is an orphan. I chose an orphan woman so that she struggles with me the way I struggled when I was young. Her father was a lawyer -- he died when she was young. Where do you live?
(Author not identified) • 10 min read
MER Article

"I Am Definitely a Product of the Revolution"

Interview with Ibrahim Araq: We would like to begin by asking you the usual questions about your marital status, your salary, your age and so forth. I am 31, married, but with no children. I work as an accountant at the National Library in Cairo (Dar al-Kutub). My net monthly pay is 29.77 pounds.
(Author not identified) • 4 min read
MER Article

Formation of the Egyptian Working Class

The roots of the Egyptian working class reach back into nineteenth century when Muhammed ‘Ali (1805-1849), founder of the dynasty which ruled Egypt until 1952, initiated his abortive industrialization program. Beginning in 1819 his regime built European style factories in three major sectors: Milita
Joel Beinin • 31 min read
MER Article

Origins of the Algerian Proletariat

In the first part of this essay, not included here, Bennoune notes that in pre-colonial Algeria’s rural sector land was the basic factor of production, consisting of four predominant subsistence activities: agriculture, animal husbandry, fruit tree plantations and horticulture. Ecological conditions
Mahfoud Bennoune • 30 min read
MER Article

Introduction

The embryonic proletariat of the towns is in a comparatively privileged position. In capitalist countries, the working class has nothing to lose.... In the colonial countries the working class has everything to lose. —Frantz Fanon, The Wretched of the Earth Such are the workers of the Middle East.
James Paul • 7 min read
MER Article

From the Editors (January/February 1981)

The Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearings on the nomination of Gen. Alexander Haig to be Ronald Reagan’s secretary of state were indeed, as the general put it, “a special education.” Henry Kissinger’s former aide, a strong proponent of the notorious Christmas bombing of North Vietnam in 1972,
The Editors • 3 min read
MER Article

Davis, Israel: Utopia Incorporated

Uri Davis, Israel: Utopia Incorporated (London: Zed Books, 1977).
Joel Beinin • 4 min read
MER Article

Tawil, My Home, My Prison

Ramonda Hawa Tawil, My Home, My Prison (New York: Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 1979). This book is the autobiography of a woman in revolt, but whose revolt is accidental. Although its title suggests a high degree of political awareness, the author conveys very little of the depth and impact of the str
Fouzi El-Asmar • 3 min read
MER Article

Letter from the Horn

Khartoum, May 1980: Hundreds of Eritreans, Ethiopians and Somalis were rounded up and put in prison in nearby Omdurman when Ethiopian leader Menguistu Hailemariam visited here May 25 to help celebrate the eleventh anniversary of Sudanese President Jaafar al-Numayri’s seizure of power. The purpose of
Lynne Barbee • 7 min read

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Critical Coverage of the Middle East Since 1971

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