Maged Mandour

Maged Mandour is a political analyst who writes openDemocracy’s “Chronicles of the Arab Revolt” column, which covers the affairs of the Arab world with a special focus on social change in the post-Arab Spring Middle East. He research interests include political violence, state repression, class formation, and capitalist development in the Arab world, as well

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May El-Sadany

May El-Sadany is the Nonresident Fellow for Legal and Judicial Analysis with TIMEP. She has previously worked at Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights and the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, among other places. Ms. El-Sadany’s published work has covered legal and constitutional issues in Egypt, human rights issues in Syria, sectarian violence in the Middle

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Mieczyslaw Boduszynski

Mieczyslaw (Mietek) Boduszynski is Assistant Professor of Politics and International Relations at Pomona College in California, where he teaches U.S. foreign policy and courses on the Middle East and North Africa. He previously served for a decade as a U.S. Foreign Service Officer with postings in Albania, Kosovo, Japan, Egypt, Libya, and Iraq. https://timep.org/author/mboduszynski/

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Jessica Noll

JESSICA NOLL is a Ph.D. candidate at Helmut Schmidt University in Hamburg, Germany. Her research focuses on the political and economic power of the military in Egypt. From October 2017 to May 2018 she was a visiting research fellow at POMED. Between 2014 and 2018 she was a Ph.D. fellow and research assistant in the Middle East

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Yezid Sayigh

Sayigh is a senior fellow at the Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut, where his work focuses on the Syrian crisis, the political role of Arab armies, security sector transformation in Arab transitions, the reinvention of authoritarianism, and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and peace process. http://carnegieendowment.org/experts/412

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Zeinab Abul-Magd

Zeinab Abul-Magd is an Associate Professor of Middle Eastern history. She received her PhD in history and political economy from Georgetown University, in 2008, and her MA in Arab Studies and Islamic Law also from Georgetown University, in 2003. She received her B.S. in Political Science from Cairo University, Egypt, in 1996. She specializes in

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Mohamed Elmenshawy

Mohamed Elmenshawy is a former resident fellow at The Middle East Institute. He writes a weekly column for Egyptian daily Al Shorouk News. In August 2009, he was selected to join the U.N. Secretary General’s High Representative for the Alliance of Civilizations initiative, as part of its Rapid Response Media Mechanism. http://www.mei.edu/profile/mohamed-elmenshawy

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