1 to 10 of about 16
Spot analysis from Carnegie scholars on events relating to the Middle East and North Africa.
In an interview, Leena El-Ali explains what the Qur’an really says about the rights of women.
In reforming Egypt’s personal-status law, how it’s done is as important as who does it.
Lebanon’s youths are fed up with the traditional reflexes of sect that keep the population divided.
Mélisande Genat discusses the fluid identities in Sinjar, where even the Islamic State’s presence did not greatly alter ties.
Iraq’s Sunni community is currently facing a crisis of authority and identity.
Though Christians are indigenous to the Arab world, their numbers have steadily declined in the Middle East.
An arcane dispute between Egypt’s president and Al-Azhar is really about moral leadership in society.
Frederic Wehrey discusses his new edited book on the factors behind sectarianism in the Middle East.
Though it is fighting in Syria, the Turkestan Islamic Party remains firmly focused on Xinjiang.