The State in Arab and Islamic Theory: Roots and Challenges
The concept of the nationstate did not enter Arab political discourse in earnest until the second half of the twentieth ...
Read moreThe concept of the nationstate did not enter Arab political discourse in earnest until the second half of the twentieth ...
Read moreThe most vulnerable victims of the scars of war — whether physical, psychological, or cultural — are children. One type ...
Read moreThe crisis in Syria — together with the broader escalation in Islamist militancy, proxy wars, and shifting political alignments — ...
Read moreThe Kurdish question is one the most vital national struggles in the region. Its trajectory is most easily observed in ...
Read moreThe psychology of terrorism is a nascent field in psychological scholarship. It has emerged in recent years as part of ...
Read moreRevolutionary Islamist movements, whether Sunni or Shi’ite, share many of the same goals and tactics. Despite apparent ideological and dogmatic ...
Read moreIn its 123rd monthly book (March 2017), Al-Mesbar Center pursues its research into the phenomenon of “Da’esh” further by attempting to ...
Read moreWestern academic circles and think tanks have taken interest in Islamic studies and various Muslim minorities in Europe and America. ...
Read moreAs international media coverage of the “Islamic State” has consistently shown, the organization uses Islamic jurisprudential rulings more than a ...
Read moreCrises in human societies manifest in political, social, and religious dimensions. Mismanagement of such crises, however, compounds their impact ...
Read moreThe phenomenon of Shi’ism in the Maghreb can be viewed from two angles: a cultural-religious angle and a political one. ...
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