MER Article Editor's Picks (Spring 2016) Abboud, Samer. Syria (Cambridge: Polity Press, 2016). Abu Saif, Atef. The Drone Eats with Me: A Gaza Diary (Boston: Beacon Press, 2016). Al-Hardan, Anaheed. Palestinians in Syria: Nakba Memories of Shattered Communities (New York: Columbia University Press, 2016). Alper, Loretta and Jeremy Earp. The Occupation of the American Mind (Media (Author not identified) • 1 min read
MER Article Shenker, The Egyptians Jack Shenker, The Egyptians: A Radical Story (London: Penguin, 2016). Jack Shenker’s book is the definitive account of the 2011 Egyptian uprising to date. Many scholars and journalists have taken as their point of departure the notion that the uprising was a one-off democratizing experiment that failed. With his Joshua Stacher • 2 min read
MER Article Becoming Arab American Scholars have long found that while pan-Arab organizations in the United States called themselves Arab American, few individuals adopted that appellation as a personal identity, preferring Iraqi, for instance, or Syrian. So I was struck, while interviewing 45 Palestinian Americans attending high school in Palestine, that so many of them Louise Cainkar • 10 min read
MER Article Financial Citizenship and the Hidden Crisis of the Working Class in the "New Turkey" Substantial political, economic and social changes have taken place in Turkey since the early 2000s. Much of this transformation has happened on the watch of the Justice and Development Party (best known by its Turkish acronym, AKP), which has been in power since 2002. Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, founder of the Basak Kus • 12 min read
278_wilson MER Article North Africa's Invisible Refugees It is December 2014, and on a chilly desert night in a refugee camp, a family sits in a circle inside their tent. Each family member wraps as much of his or her person as possible in a shared blanket. The mother, Almuadala, is making tea on a charcoal furnace. (Author not identified) • 9 min read
MER Article Letter from Ellinikon On a bright and sunny day in early April, outside a terminal at what was once the Ellinikon International Airport in Athens, I listened as Javad, 16, told the story of the second refugee flight of his life. Javad (not his real name) is a member of the Hazara ethnic Parastou Hassouri • 5 min read
MER Article Growing Up In Wartime For years prior to the March 2011 uprising in Syria, writers of the sketch comedy series Buq‘at Daw’ (Spotlight) used symbolism and wordplay to mount a not-so-subtle challenge to the regime on state television. [1. Rebecca Joubin, “Resistance Amid Regime Cooptation on the Syrian Television Series Buq‘at Daw’ Hayden Bates, Rebecca Joubin • 12 min read
278_clarke_guran MER Article Mobilizing in Exile The neighborhood of Narlıca sits on the outskirts of the small city of Antakya, Turkey. A spread of low-rise, brick-and-cement buildings separated by unpaved roads, Narlıca was a lightly populated working-class suburb prior to the outbreak of civil war across the border in Syria. Today, with that war dragging into Gözde Guran, Killian Clarke • 16 min read
MER Article Putting Refugee Work Permits to Work For decades, humanitarian experts and international organizations have called upon host countries to give more work permits to refugees. Permits are posed as a way to alleviate the poverty of refugees and lessen their dependency on aid. Host countries have traditionally shunned the notion, however, fearing the creation of permanent Vicky Kelberer • 5 min read
MER Article Oasis in the Desert? From the summer of 2012 through 2014, there were rapid influxes of refugees from Syria into the Zaatari camp in Jordan. The camp’s population spiked in early 2013—from 56,000 in January to a peak of 202,000 just four months later—overwhelming the UN High Commissioner for Charles Simpson, Denis Sullivan • 17 min read
MER Article Syrian Refugees in the Media It was September 2, 2015 when the Syrian refugee crisis abruptly came to dominate the English-language media. On that day broadcast and print outlets led with the iconic image of Alan Kurdi, 3, lying lifeless on a Turkish beach after his family’s failed attempt to cross the Mediterranean Sea Katty Alhayek • 4 min read
MER Article NGO Governance and Syrian Refugee "Subjects" in Jordan The typical image of the Syrian refugee camp in Jordan is one of suffering. Journalistic account after account introduces spectacular stories of devastation and loss. While perhaps dramatized, these tales are not false. Syrian refugee camps have forced hundreds of thousands of strangers to live toge Madeline Otis Campbell, Sarah Tobin • 18 min read