Crucial Fault Lines in the Middle East:

Author(s):  
Thomas J. Volgy ◽  
Kelly Marie Gordell ◽  
Paul Bezerra
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Keiko Sakai ◽  
Kota Suechika
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-20
Author(s):  
Helen Thompson

Abstract Although Brexit had its short-term roots in economic and constitutional legitimation issues, it cannot be explained without considering the European geopolitical space, the EU's contrasting political formations in the security and economic spheres, and the fault lines these produce. Seen from a long-term geopolitical perspective, there have been recurrent problems in Britain's efforts to deal with the EU and its predecessors, and persistent patterns of crisis. The geopolitical environment, especially around NATO and energy security in the Middle East, first rendered non-membership of the EEC a problem, then made entry impossible for a decade, helped make EU membership politically very difficult for British governments to sustain, and then constrained the May governments’ Article 50 negotiations. These problems have a singularly British shape, but they cannot be separated from more general fault lines in the European geopolitical space.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roberta Gatti ◽  
Daniel Lederman ◽  
Rachel Yuting Fan ◽  
Arian Hatefi ◽  
Ha Minh Nguyen ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

Subject Religious communities and their COVID-19 responses. Significance Across the Middle East, responses by religious leaders and given communities to government-imposed restrictions to combat COVID-19 have varied widely, ranging from support to ambiguity to outright resistance. Impacts Support for prevention measures from both Sunni and Shia senior clerics in Iraq should help avoid new fault lines. In Lebanon, popular anger towards corrupt sectarian parties will resurface once the health crisis recedes. Israel’s approach in enforcing compliance among the ultra-Orthodox will compound community mistrust of public health authorities. In controlled Gulf environments, any conservative discontent over restrictions on worship is unlikely to find public voice. Bahrain would be the most likely flashpoint in the Gulf for sectarian confrontations if infections spiked.


2017 ◽  
Vol II (II) ◽  
pp. 177-189
Author(s):  
Farhat Kounain ◽  
Ahmed Saeed Minhas ◽  
Ghulam Qumber

The paper is an attempt to encompass the geo-political and geo-strategic fault lines which could put the region in a perpetual strategic dilemma leading to initiation of a strategic tug of war between the Middle Eastern Powers. The author has highlighted various pros and cons of establishment of an independent Kurdistan and its implications on the entire Middle Eastern Region. Moreover the author has analyzed various practical reasons behind the non-establishment of an independent state. Furthermore last part of paper focuses on the global and regional reactions on the establishment of new Kurd state followed by few policy options.


2008 ◽  
Vol 40 (4) ◽  
pp. 550-552 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julie Peteet

Every society has subterranean fractures—ethnic, regional, racial, tribal, or sectarian. Given the right confluence of events, these can erupt and take on new life. When imperial and colonial powers produce a body of knowledge about those they rule, they often construct sociodemographic categories along these very fault lines. In the Middle East, this process has coincided with an attempted regional remapping using imagined and yet real (although newly configured) social categories. With the democracy project fading, the mosaic—in which the region is conceptualized as a multitude of discrete sociocultural units based on sect, ethnicity, and tribe—has appeared. Complex social categories are distilled into bounded categories whose correspondence to reality is problematic.


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