Current Analysis Three Updates on Palestinian Political Prisoners Update 1 on prisoners and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, from the halls of the State Department: Last week, the United States considered releasing Jonathan Pollard, an American convicted of espionage on behalf of Israel, in exchange for Israel doing, as political analyst Yousef Munayyer put it, “ Amahl Bishara • 4 min read
Current Analysis Patronizing Women President Barack Obama capped his visit to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia on Saturday by presenting [http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/30/world/middleeast/obama-saudi-arabia.html] the International Women of Courage award to Maha al-Muneef, a pediatrician and executive director of the anti-domestic violenc Sheila Carapico • 2 min read
Current Analysis "Journalists Are the Eyes of the World" on Guantánamo Lisa Hajjar’s spring lecture tour, entitled “Let’s Go to Guantánamo! An On-the-Ground Perspective on the Military Commissions,” explores secret renditions, black sites, torture, suppression of evidence, clandestineness and what it means to provide “legal counsel” to detainees in the post-September 1 Sheila Carapico • 2 min read
Current Analysis The Battle Over Higher Education in Iran The educated middle class that played an influential role in electing Hassan Rouhani to the Iranian presidency in June 2013 is anxious to see his promises of “prudence and hope” fulfilled. One area that Rouhani’s administration is expected to reform is higher education, which was targeted for politi Mohammad Ali Kadivar • 10 min read
MER Article Police Impunity in Imbaba A string of tiny lights bows from the awning of the Star of Freedom café across an unpaved plaza to the globe of the municipal lamppost, whose light the government has not turned on in years. Tabletops of tea and dominoes spread from the café’s cramped interior and fill the horseshoe-shaped plaza, r Matthew Hall • 19 min read
Current Analysis Behind the Kurdish Hunger Strike in Turkey To hear Mazlum Tekdağ’s story is enough to understand why 700 Kurdish political prisoners have gone on hunger strike in Turkey. His father was murdered by the state in front of his Diyarbakır pastry shop in 1993, when Mazlum was just nine years old. His uncle Ali was kidnapped by an army-backed deat Jake Hess • 17 min read
MER Article Fighting Over Drones After drones became the American weapon of choice in Pakistan sometime toward the end of the 2000s, a number of US counterinsurgency experts expressed their discomfort with the killer robots in various military-related forums. For these writers, the non-human nature of drones, their blunt force and Laleh Khalili • 9 min read
MER Article Anatomy of the US Targeted Killing Policy As President Barack Obama geared up for the 2012 campaign, he and his administration were eager to capitalize on their most bipartisan “victory” -- the targeted killing of Osama bin Laden on May 2, 2011. With the one-year anniversary of bin Laden’s death approaching, top officials took to podiums to Lisa Hajjar • 25 min read
Current Analysis Iranian Cyber-Struggles From the Green Movement in Iran in 2009 through the Arab revolts that began in 2011, social media have held center stage in coverage of popular protest in the Middle East. Though the first flush of overwrought enthusiasm is long past, there is consensus that Facebook, Twitter and other Web 2.0 appli Narges Bajoghli • 9 min read
Current Analysis Some Bad Ideas Can't Be Shot Down Some ideas are so absurd that they reveal interesting things about the times in which we live. Take, for example, an opinion piece [http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/31/opinion/drones-for-human-rights.html?_r=1] by Andrew Stobo Sniderman and Mark Hanis in today’s New York Times suggesting that human ri Darryl Li • 3 min read
MER Article Lampedusa More than 52,000 would-be migrants have landed on the tiny Italian island of Lampedusa in 2011. Roughly half of the arrivals are young Tunisian men looking for job opportunities in Europe. Most of the others are Sahelians, sub-Saharan Africans or South Asians fleeing the violence in Libya. In many c Amanda Ufheil-Somers • 5 min read
MER Article Conspiracy of Near Silence Shortly before the US-led invasion and occupation of Iraq in 2003, the administration of President George W. Bush began paying a great deal of public attention to the suffering of Iraqi women under the regime of Saddam Hussein. In speeches and meetings with Iraqi women in exile, the Bush administration Nadje Al-Ali, Nicola Pratt • 13 min read