Podcasts about century international

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Best podcasts about century international

Latest podcast episodes about century international

History As It Happens
The Palestinians' Economic Catastrophe

History As It Happens

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2025 47:48


When tracing the origins of today's war and devastation in Gaza, it may be easy to overlook economic inequality in favor of political or ideological explanations. In this episode, political analyst and public opinion expert Dahlia Scheindlin says a chief cause of the decades-long Israeli-Palestinian conflict was the severe poverty of Palestinians living in the West Bank and Gaza, where unemployment was sky high even before the Hamas attacks of Oct. 7, 2023. There was a time when Israelis believed peace was necessary for Israel's economy to thrive, and that Palestinian growth could substitute for a Palestinian state. A generation later, Gaza is rubble. Further reading: The Economic Foundation for Peace in Israel and Palestine by Dahlia Scheindlin for The Century Foundation. Dr. Dahlia Scheindlin is a political analyst and a public opinion researcher who has advised on nine electoral campaigns in Israel and worked in 15 other countries over 25 years. She is a Haaretz (English) columnist and a Century International policy fellow. She is the author of The Crooked Timber of Democracy in Israel: Promise Unfulfilled, listed on Foreign Affairs' Best Books of 2024.

Babel
Dahlia Scheindlin: Israel's Political Turmoil

Babel

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2025 33:52


This week on Babel, Jon Alterman speaks with Dr. Dahlia Scheindlin, a Tel Aviv-based political analyst and Haaretz columnist. Scheindlin also serves as a fellow at Century International and has advised on eight national Israeli election campaigns over a twenty-year period. Together, they discuss the sources of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's staying power, as well as his ongoing efforts to remodel key state institutions. Then, Jon continues the conversation with Ninar Fawal and Will Todman to evaluate how the changes underway in Israel might affect bilateral relations with the United States. Transcript: "Dahlia Scheindlin: Israel's Political Turmoil," CSIS, April 3, 2025. Scheindlin's latest article: "The Escape Artist: How Netanyahu Lies and Why People Still Believe Him," Haaretz, April 1, 2025.

Yeni Şafak Podcast
Bülent Orakoğlu-Türkiye'nin özellikle Ortadoğu'daki nüfuzunun artması katil ve soykırımcı İsrail'in en büyük korkusu oldu?

Yeni Şafak Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2025 5:02


ABD merkezli düşünce kuruluşu Century International'dan Aron Lund, “İsrail'in en büyük korkusu Türkiye'nin gelip bu yeni Suriye düzenini koruması ve bu düzenin Hamas ve diğer İsrail karşıtı grupların üssü haline gelmesi” ifadelerini kullandı. Reuters haber ajansına konuşan uzmanlar Türkiye'nin Suriye'deki artan etkisini kırmak için İsrail'in, ABD nezdinde lobi faaliyetleri yürüttüğünü bildirdi. Kaynaklar İsrail'in, Suriye'nin zayıf ve merkezi yapısını kuramayan bir devlet olarak kalmasını istediğini bildirdi. Suriye'de kanlı Baas Esad rejiminin devrilmesi ardından ülkede Türkiye'nin yardımı ile yeni bir yönetim veya devlet kuruldu. Türkiye'nin yeni Suriye Cumhurbaşkanı Ahmed Şara ile kurduğu yakın ilişkilerin her geçen gün daha da ileri gitmesi Reuters Ajansı'na göre İsrail'i aşırı rahatsız etti.

Intercepted with Jeremy Scahill
Biden's Indifference to Palestinian Lives Is Sending the Middle East Into the Abyss

Intercepted with Jeremy Scahill

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2024 58:38


In the face of growing international pressure, the Biden administration has continued to double down on a policy of blanket support for Israel, even as it presses ahead with a possible military offensive against the town of Rafah that many observers have warned could trigger the largest humanitarian crisis of the war so far. This week on Intercepted, co-hosts Jeremy Scahill and Murtaza Hussain discuss the Biden administration's approach to the conflict with Thanassis Cambanis, director of the foreign policy think tank Century International. Cambanis explains how Biden's policy toward Israel is pushing the entire Middle East to the brink of a regional war that could inflict far greater suffering than we have seen to date, in an area which U.S. policymakers claim to be trying to exit.If you'd like to support our work, go to theintercept.com/join, where your donation, no matter what the amount, makes a real difference.And if you haven't already, please subscribe to the show so you can hear it every week. And please go and leave us a rating or a review — it helps people find the show. If you want to give us additional feedback, email us at Podcasts@theintercept.com. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The Foreign Affairs Interview
The Deepening Disconnect Over Gaza

The Foreign Affairs Interview

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2024 48:04


Four months after Hamas's October 7 attack, the war in Gaza continues with little reason to think that Israel is particularly close to achieving its declared goals. Meanwhile, the Middle East is on the precipice of a full-scale regional war—and it may be that that war has already begun. Dahlia Scheindlin is a pollster, a policy fellow at Century International, and a columnist at Haaretz. She is the author of the new book, The Crooked Timber of Democracy in Israel. Dalia Dassa Kaye is a senior fellow at the UCLA Burkle Center for International Relations and a Fulbright Schuman Visiting Scholar at Lund University. We discuss the domestic political landscape inside Israel, the risks of further escalation in the region, and whether there is a better path forward. You can find transcripts and more episodes of The Foreign Affairs Interview at https://www.foreignaffairs.com/podcasts/foreign-affairs-interview. 

TCF World Podcast
Sistani's Historic Legacy

TCF World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2023 38:36


During decades of turmoil, war, and regime change in Iraq, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani has played a critical, often overlooked role—steering Iraq away from sectarian conflict, promoting civic democracy over direct theocracy, and quietly seeking to calm regional tensions.   On this episode of Order from Ashes, Century International fellow Sajad Jiyad explains how Sistani has appealed to a majority of the world's millions of Shia Muslims with his indirect model of clerical authority, a stark contrast to the competing model of direct clerical rule advanced by his compatriots in Iran.    Jiyad has published a new political biography,  God's Man in Iraq: The Life and Leadership of Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, which offers the first comprehensive account of Sistani's legacy and draws on original sources and hundreds of interviews during decades of fieldwork inside Iraq. Jiyad    Observers of Iraq and of Shia power will find God's Man in Iraq an incomparable appraisal of Sistani's legacy—and an invaluable guide to the perilous transition that will follow his tenure.   You can learn more and order copies on the book's homepage.  God's Man in Iraq is also available in Arabic.   Read:  Commentary: "The Man Who Saved Iraq," by Sajad Jiyad (in English and Arabic) Book page: God's Man in Iraq: The Life and Leadership of Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, by Sajad Jiyad Arabic book page: رجل الله في العراق   Participants: Sajad Jiyad, fellow, Century International Thanassis Cambanis, director, Century International

TCF World Podcast
How Is the Gaza War Affecting the Middle East?

TCF World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2023 55:47


The Middle East has faced growing instability, violence, and the risk of a wider war ever since October 7.    Most attention is understandably focused on Israel, where 1,200 people were killed in a single day, and Gaza, where the death toll is steadily climbing past 11,000, the majority children and women.    But the wider region is experiencing a level of violence that is cause for alarm: near-daily clashes between Lebanon's Hezbollah and Israel; steady attacks on the U.S. military in Iraq and Syria; and increasingly bold military initiatives by Yemen's Houthi rebel forces.   How has the Gaza war changed the wider Middle East? What new dynamics are shaping conflicts and diplomacy among the regional powers and in the region's many simmering conflicts? How will America's bear hug of Israel affect other American interests in the Middle East?   Century International fellows Aron Lund, Sam Heller, and Thanassis Cambanis are joined by Michael Wahid Hanna from International Crisis Group to step back from the day-to-day developments of the Gaza war and assess the changing regional context.   Read:  Commentary: “It's Time for a Ceasefire in Gaza—and Then a New Push for Peace,” by Thanassis Cambanis, Dahlia Scheindlin, and Sam Heller Commentary: “America Needs to Prevent a Regional War in the Middle East,” by Sam Heller and Thanassis Cambanis Participants: Sam Heller, fellow, Century International Aron Lund, fellow, Century International Michael Wahid Hanna, director, U.S. program, International Crisis Group Thanassis Cambanis, director, Century International

LSE Middle East Centre Podcasts
Broken Bonds: The Existential Crisis of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood, 2013–22

LSE Middle East Centre Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2023 75:41


This event was the launch of 'Broken Bonds: The Existential Crisis of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood, 2013–22' by Abdelrahman Ayyash, Amr ElAfifi, and Noha Ezzat published by Century International. In this original Century International book, the authors argue that the Brotherhood is experiencing multiple crises—of identity, legitimacy, and membership—which accelerated after Egypt's military coup in July 2013. Through myriad stories and voices from within a fragmenting movement, the authors present a nuanced portrait of a once-formidable grassroots organization. Abdelrahman Ayyash is a fellow at Century International and director of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood working group. He holds an MA in global affairs from Bahcesehir University in Istanbul, Turkey. He translated three books on civil-military relations and the Muslim Brotherhood. Amr ElAfifi is the Research Manager at the Freedom Initiative, a DC-based NGO focused on human rights in the Middle East. His current dissertation research at Syracuse University explores the political psychology of trauma amongst political prisoners. Jeroen Gunning is Visiting Professor at the LSE Middle East Centre and Professor of Middle Eastern Politics and Conflict Studies at King's College London. His research focuses on political contestation in the Middle East, with a specific focus on the interplay between social movements, religion, electoral politics, repression, violence and structural change.

TCF World Podcast
Aid That Backfires

TCF World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2023 44:32


Foreign donors are propping up Lebanon's public institutions and services with the kind of aid they ordinarily provide to failed states. Will this aid create more problems than it solves for Lebanon's long-suffering people?   On this episode of Century International's Order from Ashes podcast, fellow Sam Heller discusses the alarming findings of his report, “Adopt a Ministry: How Foreign Aid Threatens Lebanon's Institutions.”   As Lebanon's crisis worsens, foreign donors have stepped in to take over many core functions normally fulfilled by the government. Is this aid, which is vital in the short term, threatening the viability and long-term recovery of Lebanon?    Donors, aid agencies, Lebanese officials and experts can start by getting honest about the tradeoffs, Sam argues. A first step toward changing the counterproductive aid dynamic requires a full picture of foreign support for Lebanon, so donors and the Lebanese government can coordinate aid to useful ends and not just perpetuate dependency and state breakdown.     Read:  Report: “Adopt a Ministry: How Foreign Aid Threatens Lebanon's Institutions,” by Sam Heller Commentary: “International Aid Keeps Lebanon Afloat. It Could Also Be Destroying Its Institutions,” by Sam Heller [in English and Arabic]   Participants: Sam Heller, fellow, Century International Thanassis Cambanis, director, Century International

The NewsWorthy
Special Edition: Israel, Hamas & War in Gaza

The NewsWorthy

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2023 16:41


Today we're talking about the attack in Israel and the now unfolding war. I'm speaking with Thanassis Cambanis, the director of Century International, an independent think tank that researches the human impact of global policy.   *We recorded this discussion on Wednesday. While a lot has continued to develop since then, we still think the conversation is relevant to help you understand more about what's happening and the groups involved. Learn more about our guests: https://www.theNewsWorthy.com/shownotes Sign-up for our bonus weekly email: https://www.theNewsWorthy.com/email Become an INSIDER for ad-free episodes: https://www.theNewsWorthy.com/insider To advertise on our podcast, please reach out to sales@advertisecast.com #Israel #Gaza #Hamas    

israel gaza insider israel hamas thenewsworthy century international thanassis cambanis
TCF World Podcast
Shia Power: Do Clerics Still Have Authority?

TCF World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2023 38:46


On this episode of the Order From Ashes podcast, Marsin Alshamary explains why, despite some setbacks, Shia clerics in Iraq still wield a great deal of authority.    Protest movements have rejected religion in politics, while corrupt politicians have sullied the reputations of religious factions. But clerics and their institutions remain powerful players in Iraqi society even as their roles change.   This episode of Order From Ashes is the second in “Shia Power,” a four-part series about the transformation of Shia politics in Iraq, and what Iraq's experience teaches us about the role of religion in politics everywhere.    In episode 1 of “Shia Power,” Sajad Jiyad and host Thanassis Cambanis chart the powerful role of religion and the Shia clergy in the creation of a new Iraqi order after Saddam Hussein. In episode 2, Marsin Alshammary draws on her fieldwork in the seminaries of Najaf to argue that clerical authority has not diminished, despite setbacks over the last twenty years. In episode 3, Taif Alkhudary chronicles the revolutionary efforts of the Tishreen protest movement to establish an alternative to religious politics. In episode 4, the final in this series, Ali Al-Mawlawi connects some of today's sectarian rhetoric to Iraq's long history of anti-Shia prejudice.   Read: Report: “Shia Clerics in Iraq Haven't Lost Their Authority,” by Marsin Alshamary Book: Shia Power Comes of Age Project: Shia Politics   Participants: Marsin Alshamary, assistant professor of political science, Boston College Thanassis Cambanis, director, Century International

TCF World Podcast
Shia Power: What's an Islamist?

TCF World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2023 53:16


On this episode of the Order From Ashes podcast, Sajad Jiyad plumbs the complex evolution of Shia Islamism during two decades at the center of Iraqi power.   This episode of Order From Ashes is the first in “Shia Power,” a four-part series about the transformation of Shia politics in Iraq, and what Iraq's experience teaches us about the role of religion in politics everywhere.    A new edited volume from Century International, Shia Power Comes of Age: The Transformation of Islamist Politics in Iraq, 2003–2023, maps the radical transformation of Shia Islamist politics in Iraq over the last two decades. Contributors include Taif AlKhudary, Ali Al-Mawlawi, Marsin Alshamary, Thanassis Cambanis, Maria Fantappie, Fanar Haddad, Sajad Jiyad, Renad Mansour, and Ben Robin-D'Cruz.   Sajad and Thanassi, directors of Century International's Shia Politics project, reflect on the lessons of Iraq's Shia Islamists for politicians, policymakers, and researchers.   In episode 1 of “Shia Power,” Sajad Jiyad and host Thanassis Cambanis chart the powerful role of religion and the Shia clergy in the creation of a new Iraqi order after Saddam Hussein. In episode 2, Marsin Alshammary draws on her fieldwork in the seminaries of Najaf to argue that clerical authority has not diminished, despite setbacks over the last twenty years. In episode 3, Taif Alkhudary chronicles the revolutionary efforts of the Tishreen protest movement to establish an alternative to religious politics. In episode 4, the final in this series, Ali Al-Mawlawi connects some of today's sectarian rhetoric to Iraq's long history of anti-Shia prejudice.   Read: Book: Shia Power Comes of Age Project: Shia Politics   Participants: Sajad Jiyad, fellow, Century International Thanassis Cambanis, director, Century International

Five Questions
Creeping Israeli Annexation

Five Questions

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2023 24:58


Dahlia Scheindlin and Yousef Munayyer discuss the process of creeping Israeli annexation of the West Bank. Scheindlin is a Fellow at Century International, a public opinion expert and an international political and strategic consultant, as well as a scholar and a writer. 

TCF World Podcast
Facing Iraq's Climate Catastrophe

TCF World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2023 36:20


In a miserable twist for the people who live there, Iraq has become a front-line test lab for the extreme effects of climate change. A combination of forces, accelerated by bad human decisions, has dramatically degraded Iraq's environment. And Iraq's experience is a harbinger of what's coming to the rest of the world.  On this episode of the Order From Ashes podcast, Century International fellow Zeinab Shuker explores the unhappy mix of factors that has made Iraq so inhospitable. Zeinab is leading “Living the Climate Emergency: Lessons from Iraq,” a new Century International project exploring how policymakers and researchers can draw on the case of Iraq and its neighbors to translate into action the growing consensus that the climate crisis is already here.  Century's Climate Emergency Project will connect field researchers, policymakers, and a wider audience through roundtables, public events, podcasts, and reports. Future research in this project will place today's crisis in a historical context; map the contours and human impact of climate change in Iraq and its neighborhood; and finally, drawing on the lessons of the extreme case in Iraq, make projections about the future and propose solutions.  Read:  “The Deep Roots of Iraq's Climate Crisis,” Century International report by , Zeinab Shuker “Iraq Is Overheating. How Can It Mitigate the Effects of Climate Change?,” Century International commentary by Zeinab Shuker Explore: Project homepage, “Living the Climate Emergency: Lessons from Iraq” Participants: Zeinab Shuker, fellow, Century International Thanassis Cambanis, director, Century International

POMEPS Conversations
Research Ethics and Israel's Annexation of the West Bank (S. 12, Ep. 30)

POMEPS Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2023 66:51


On this week's episode of the podcast, Rabab El Mahdi of the American University in Cairo, Janine Clark of the University of Toronto, Laryssa Chomiak of Centre d'Études Maghrébines à Tunis (CEMAT),  and Rima Majed of the American University of Beirut join Marc Lynch to discuss the ethical challenges and positionally of research. (Starts at 1:41). Dahlia Scheindlin of Century International and Yael Berda of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem to discuss their new article, "Israel's Annexation of the West Bank Has Already Begun," published in Foreign Affairs. (Starts at 36:37).  Thank you for listening to Season 12 of the POMEPS Middle East Political Science Podcast! Music for this season's podcast was created by Myyuh. You can find more of her work on SoundCloud and Instagram. You can listen to this week's podcast on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music, or SoundCloud:

TCF World Podcast
Lebanon's Botched Economic Rescue

TCF World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2023 43:38


Lebanon's ruling elites have sabotaged talks with the International Monetary Fund (IMF), which offered the last hope for reforms that could save the country's economy and improve life for millions of suffering people.  On this episode of the Order From Ashes podcast, researchers Sami Zoughaib, from The Policy Institute in Lebanon, and Sam Heller, from Century International, reveal how Lebanon's elites have misled the public on the reality of the country's dire situation. Without some course change, Zoughaib and Heller argue, Lebanon will not have the IMF program it needs to halt its economic collapse. But public pressure could still force elites to act responsibly—or at least hold those elites accountable. The two researchers discuss the findings in their new report, a joint production of Century International and The Policy Institute in Lebanon. It is part of “Networks of Change: Reviving Governance and Citizenship in the Middle East,” a Century International project supported by the Carnegie Corporation of New York and the Open Society Foundations. Read: “The Shadow Plan: How Lebanese Elites Are Sabotaging Their Country's IMF Lifeline,” by Sami Zoughaib and Sam Heller. Participants: Sami Zoughaib, economist and research manager at The Policy Initiative in Lebanon Sam Heller, fellow, Century International Thanassis Cambanis, director, Century International

TCF World Podcast
Power and Power in Lebanon

TCF World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2023 35:05


The scramble for electricity has produced new interest groups that will shape the evolution of Lebanon's decaying power sector, and the country's future. Lebanese people endure erratic and expensive electricity supplies—not because of some staggering technical challenge but because of corrupt, often criminal, monopolies that control the energy sector. On this episode of the Order From Ashes podcast, Century International fellow Zachary Cuyler talks about the competing interest groups that reap the benefits of Lebanon's failed electricity system.  Zack delves deeper into the dysfunction in Lebanon's electricity sector in his recent Century International commentary, “Lebanon's Grid Has Collapsed. What Comes Next?” Participants: Zack Cuyler, fellow, Century International Thanassis Cambanis, director, Century International

lebanon lebanese what comes next century international
TCF World Podcast
A Tale of Two Border Towns

TCF World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2023 36:41


The effort to secure Iraq's borders after the defeat of ISIS has created other, new sources of instability, as conflict supply chains adapt to new circumstances. A close look at two border towns in Iraq's western desert illustrates the law of unintended consequences. The Iraqi government, bordering countries, and the international community moved to more tightly control official border crossings in order to defeat ISIS. As a result, however, militias and smugglers have moved a great deal of commerce, legal and illicit, to other crossing points. In the meantime, people along once-prosperous trade routes suffer privation and violence, driving new conflicts. Researchers Renad Mansour and Hayder Al-Shakeri tell the tale of trade, smuggling, and conflict across Iraq's borders. The trajectory of trade route towns Rutba and Qaim help explain the mechanics of conflict supply chains and the unintended consequences of efforts to secure parts of the border without thinking of the spinoff effects. Participants: Haydar Al-Shakeri, research associate, MENA Program, Chatham House Renad Mansour, director, Iraq Initiative, Chatham House Thanassis Cambanis, director, Century International

tale iraq border towns iraqi century international
Trumpcast
What Next: Why Israelis Are Protesting

Trumpcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2023 29:13


Israel ground to a halt on Monday after a series of massive protests against planned judicial reforms. Though Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced the reforms will be delayed, getting them passed is a top priority for his far-right coalition government. How can the government—and country—move forward? Guest: Dahlia Scheindlin, international political and strategic consultant and fellow at Century International in Tel Aviv. If you enjoy this show, please consider signing up for Slate Plus. Slate Plus members get benefits like zero ads on any Slate podcast, bonus episodes of shows like Slow Burn and Amicus—and you'll be supporting the work we do here on What Next. Sign up now at slate.com/whatnextplus to help support our work. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

What Next | Daily News and Analysis
Why Israelis Are Protesting

What Next | Daily News and Analysis

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2023 29:13


Israel ground to a halt on Monday after a series of massive protests against planned judicial reforms. Though Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced the reforms will be delayed, getting them passed is a top priority for his far-right coalition government. How can the government—and country—move forward? Guest: Dahlia Scheindlin, international political and strategic consultant and fellow at Century International in Tel Aviv. If you enjoy this show, please consider signing up for Slate Plus. Slate Plus members get benefits like zero ads on any Slate podcast, bonus episodes of shows like Slow Burn and Amicus—and you'll be supporting the work we do here on What Next. Sign up now at slate.com/whatnextplus to help support our work. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Slate Daily Feed
What Next: Why Israelis Are Protesting

Slate Daily Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2023 29:13


Israel ground to a halt on Monday after a series of massive protests against planned judicial reforms. Though Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced the reforms will be delayed, getting them passed is a top priority for his far-right coalition government. How can the government—and country—move forward? Guest: Dahlia Scheindlin, international political and strategic consultant and fellow at Century International in Tel Aviv. If you enjoy this show, please consider signing up for Slate Plus. Slate Plus members get benefits like zero ads on any Slate podcast, bonus episodes of shows like Slow Burn and Amicus—and you'll be supporting the work we do here on What Next. Sign up now at slate.com/whatnextplus to help support our work. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

TCF World Podcast
Broken Bonds: Quitting the Brotherhood

TCF World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2023 42:48


Members have fled the Muslim Brotherhood in droves since its ouster from power in Egypt in 2013, frustrated that the organization can't take care of them, or provide meaning for their lives. Will the Brotherhood learn the lessons of its failures before its next, inevitable, comeback? In this final episode of Broken Bonds, Amr ElAfifi explores the Brotherhood's crisis of membership and the implications for policy.  Some have left the Brotherhood because they've lost trust in the leadership; others, because they say the organization “is not being brotherhood enough.” The Brotherhood's fractious trajectory after the Rabaa massacre of 2013 makes clear that there is no single Brotherhood path during a period of unprecedented violent repression.  The Brotherhood's scattered grassroots have followed divergent paths, some embracing militancy, some withdrawing to the private sphere, and others abandoning faith altogether.  The Brotherhood tried to claim the mantle of Islamist politics, but found itself beset by contradictions and crises. “Islamism,” like the Brotherhood, is not a clearly defined or monolithic movement.  Broken Bonds is a five-part special season of the Order From Ashes podcast. The first episode charted Abdelrahman Ayyash's personal coming of age in a Brotherhood milieu. In the second episode, Ayyash, Noha Khaled, and Amr ElAfifi mapped how the crises of identity, legitimacy, and membership simultaneously explain the organization's weaknesses, and staying power. In the third episode, Khaled dissected the identity crisis that has defined the Brotherhood since its establishment. In the fourth episode, Ayyash sketched the leadership vacuum and power struggles that have hobbled the Brotherhood since 2013. Broken Bonds explores the evolution of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood from the apex of its power, when it won Egypt's presidency in 2012, to the organization's disarray and marginalization today. The podcast season is a companion to a new book, Broken Bonds: The Existential Crisis of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood, 2013–22, published in February 2023 by TCF Press. Broken Bonds is part of “Faith and Fracture,” a TCF project supported by the Henry Luce Foundation. Participants: Amr ElAfifi, PhD candidate at Syracuse University; research manager, Freedom Initiative Thanassis Cambanis, director, Century International

TCF World Podcast
Broken Bonds: Leaders without Legitimacy

TCF World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2023 33:35


The Muslim Brotherhood is a hierarchical organization suffering a debilitating leadership vacuum. Now, the organization has to reinvent itself while most of its top cadres are in exile, dead, or in jail. Years after being forced to become a transnational organization because of its leadership's expulsion from Egypt, the Brotherhood is now at an even more complex crossroads. Its old strategies for managing its relationship with the Egyptian state, and maintaining a quasi-clandestine presence in Egypt, are no longer relevant.  Abdelrahman Ayyash explains the power struggles and inchoate efforts to create a coherent strategy among the Brotherhood's fragmented leadership after the 2013 coup and subsequent crackdown. The Brotherhood has been riven by power struggles and fundamental debates over resources, its international orientation, and the use of violence. This leadership crisis has hobbled the Brotherhood. This is the fourth episode of Broken Bonds, a five-part special season of the Order From Ashes podcast. The first episode charted Abdelrahman Ayyash's personal coming of age in a Brotherhood milieu. In the second episode, Ayyash, Noha Khaled, and Amr ElAfifi mapped how the crises of identity, legitimacy, and membership simultaneously explain the organization's weaknesses and its staying power. In the third episode, Khaled dissected the identity crisis that has defined the Brotherhood since its establishment. The fifth and final episode of Broken Bonds explores the crisis of membership and the implications for policy. Broken Bonds explores the evolution of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood from the apex of its power, when it won Egypt's presidency in 2012, to the organization's disarray and marginalization today. The podcast season is a companion to a new book, Broken Bonds: The Existential Crisis of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood, 2013–22, published in February 2023 by TCF Press. Broken Bonds is part of “Faith and Fracture,” a TCF project supported by the Henry Luce Foundation. Participants: Abdelrahman Ayyash, fellow, Century International  Thanassis Cambanis, director, Century International

TCF World Podcast
Broken Bonds: No Identity

TCF World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2023 34:14


Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood is suffering from an identity crisis, made worse by ongoing, violent state repression. Nearly a century since its founding, the Brotherhood hasn't reconciled its social and political aims. Noha Khaled plumbs the first of three crises besetting the Brotherhood: its internal identity conflict over what kind of organization it aspires to be.  Throughout its history, the Brotherhood has struggled to accommodate its mission as a religious and social service network, alongside its ambitions for political power. That ambivalence, or contradiction, forms the cornerstone of the Brotherhood's ongoing triple crisis. This is the third episode of Broken Bonds, a five-part special season of the Order From Ashes podcast. The first episode charted Abdelrahman Ayyash's personal coming of age in a Brotherhood milieu. In the second episode, Ayyash, Khaled, and Amr ElAfifi mapped how the crises of identity, legitimacy, and membership simultaneously explain the organization's weaknesses and its staying power. The remaining episodes of Broken Bonds go deeper into the crises of legitimacy and membership, and the implications for policy. Broken Bonds explores the evolution of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood from the apex of its power, when it won Egypt's presidency in 2012, to the organization's disarray and marginalization today. The podcast season is a companion to a new book, Broken Bonds: The Existential Crisis of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood, 2013–22, published in February 2023 by TCF Press. Broken Bonds is part of “Faith and Fracture,” a TCF project supported by the Henry Luce Foundation. Participants: Noha Khaled, writer and researcher Thanassis Cambanis, director, Century International

TCF World Podcast
Broken Bonds: Existential Crises

TCF World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2023 42:40


The Muslim Brotherhood tries to project an image of grassroots power and disciplined leadership. A trio of researchers takes a different view, describing a once-formidable organization that is under strain and out of touch. The Brotherhood, they argue, is experiencing multiple crises—of identity, legitimacy, and membership—which accelerated after Egypt's military coup in July 2013.  Based on unprecedented access to Brotherhood leaders, rank-and-file members, and internal dissenters, the three researchers—Abdelrahman Ayyash, Amr ElAfifi, and Noha Khaled—take a new granular view of the organization.  The Brotherhood and its detractors alike have misunderstood it as a mass ideological organization, missing its evolution into an elite membership organization disconnected from its constituents.  This is the second episode of Broken Bonds, a five-part special season of the Order From Ashes podcast. The first episode charted Ayyash's personal coming of age in a Brotherhood milieu. Remaining episodes of Broken Bonds go deeper into each of the three crises facing the Brotherhood and the implications for policy. Broken Bonds explores the evolution of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood from the apex of its power, when it won Egypt's presidency in 2012, to the organization's disarray and marginalization today. The podcast season is a companion to a new book, Broken Bonds: The Existential Crisis of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood, 2013–22, published in February 2023 by TCF Press. Broken Bonds is part of “Faith and Fracture,” a TCF project supported by the Henry Luce Foundation. Participants: Abdelrahman Ayyash, fellow, Century International  Amr ElAfifi, PhD candidate at Syracuse University; research manager, Freedom Initiative Noha Khaled, writer and researcher Thanassis Cambanis, director, Century International

TCF World Podcast
Broken Bonds: My Life as a Muslim Brother

TCF World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2023 40:56


What's it like to come of age in a Muslim Brotherhood family in Egypt's Nile Delta? Abdelrahman Ayyash recounts his childhood, political awakening, and disenchantment. Ayyash recounts his early history cocooned in a Brotherhood community that took care of its members' schooling, moral training, social life, and career counseling. And he recalls with stark frankness his shock, as a young blogger and political activist, at the political rigidity of the movement in which he'd been raised. Ayyash's personal journey from a young movement standout to dissident, critical researcher opens Broken Bonds, a five-part special season of the Order From Ashes podcast. The remaining episodes of Broken Bonds explore the triple crises facing the Brotherhood, the organization's likely resurgence, and how observers and policymakers mischaracterize the Brotherhood and its significance. Broken Bonds explores the evolution of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood from the apex of its power, when it won Egypt's presidency in 2012, to the organization's disarray and marginalization today. The podcast season is a companion to a new book, Broken Bonds: The Existential Crisis of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood, 2013–22, published in February 2023 by TCF Press. Broken Bonds is part of “Faith and Fracture,” a TCF project supported by the Henry Luce Foundation. Participants: Abdelrahman Ayyash, fellow, Century International  Thanassis Cambanis, director, Century International

TCF World Podcast
The Earthquake, Cholera, and Borders

TCF World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2023 31:14


The catastrophic earthquake that struck Turkey and Syria on February 6 had particularly dire consequences for the millions of displaced Syrians living near the epicenter. Many of them have moved multiple times to flee violence. Since September, an outbreak of cholera has rapidly spread across Syria and entered Lebanon. And to make matters worse, international humanitarian aid is only allowed to enter northern Syria through a single border crossing, which is closed because of earthquake damage. On this episode of the Order from Ashes podcast from Century International, Aron Lund discusses Syria's unending catastrophe, its origins in bad governance, and what donor nations can do to help. Years of war, drought, and climate change have ravaged Syria's water supply and infrastructure, forcing half of the population to drink unsafe water. Now, the earthquake has compounded the damage to Syria's built environment, exacerbating Syria's already dire humanitarian situation. Read more about the human and environmental origins of Syria's deadly cholera outbreak in Aron's Century International report “Cholera in the Time of Assad.” Participants: Aron Lund, fellow, Century International  Thanassis Cambanis, director, Century International

TCF World Podcast
Iraq's Heist of the Century

TCF World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2023 32:50


This fall, news broke that a web of thieves—including high-level officials—had stolen $2.5 billion in Iraqi government cash. The scam is only the most recent example of systemic corruption perpetrated by Iraq's elites since 2003. The country's new government has its work cut out for itself.  On this episode of the Order From Ashes podcast, Sajad Jiyad talks about the sordid theft and the way forward to fight corruption. Sajad shares more about the origins of Iraq's consociational system of power sharing, and public graft, in his report “Corruption Is Strangling Iraq.” Participants: Sajad Jiyad, fellow, Century International  Thanassis Cambanis, director, Century International

iraq heist iraqi sajad century international
TCF World Podcast
Progressive Policy: Shrinking America's Military Footprint

TCF World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2022 45:05


America maintains an enormous military infrastructure on the Arabian peninsula and in the Persian Gulf. How should the United States shrink this enormous footprint while continuing to protect its interests and those of its sometimes difficult partners in the region? On this episode of the Order From Ashes podcast, Becca Wasser considers some of the practical ways in which a progressive-minded United States could shift away from its overinvestment in military bases. Despite the war in Ukraine and rising tensions with China, the United States retains a massive and problematic military footprint in the Middle East, which creates moral hazard and often locks Washington into military solutions ill-suited for complex policy problems. Figuring out how to get the balance right in the Middle East can help the United States strike a more healthy, and less militarized, balance throughout the world. This episode of Order from Ashes is part of a regular series on progressive foreign policy in the United States. We're looking to start a constructive conversation about the specifics of a progressive foreign policy that remains invested and engaged in the world, while moving away from reflexive militarism and toward a framework based on rights and values. Participants: Becca Wasser, senior fellow, Center for a New American Security Thanassis Cambanis, director, Century International

TCF World Podcast
Progressive Policy: Replacing the War on Terror

TCF World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2022 39:24


Progressives have done a good job articulating the problems with bad policies, especially the Global War on Terror, which worsened the problems it was supposed to solve. But what is the better, progressive alternative? On this episode of the Order From Ashes podcast, New America fellow Alex Stark outlines some of the specific ingredients of a policy that tries to promote genuine stability.  Sound, progressive counterterrorism would build on a complex and sustainable vision of stability, rooted in rights and better governance. Instead of seeking to eliminate violent groups, it has designated as terrorists, a progressive counterterrorism policy would invest in accountability and development, along with military operations, to marginalize violent groups.  This episode of Order from Ashes is the first in a regular series on progressive foreign policy in the United States. We're looking to start a constructive conversation about the specifics of a progressive foreign policy that remains invested and engaged in the world, while moving away from reflexive militarism and toward a framework based on rights and values. Participants: Alex Stark, fellow, New America Thanassis Cambanis, director, Century International

The Michael Brooks Show
TMBS ReAir: 63 - A 21st Century International & the Prodigal Kanye Returns? ft. Wosny Lambre & Harvey Kaye

The Michael Brooks Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 23, 2022 99:11


TMBS 63 aired on October 30th, 2018. Episode summary: After the results in Brazil we talk about the importance of building an international movement to combat global fascism. Shoutout to students in Brazil for their work immediately confronting the fascist power of Bolsonaro Wosny Lambre (@BigWos) joins us to talk Beto's barber shop visit and is Kanye back? Harvey J. Kaye (@harveyjkaye) joins us in studio to tell baseball stories and what it means to be an American. TMBS ReAirs come out every Tuesday, wherever you get your podcats and on The Michael Brooks Show YouTube Channel. This program has been put together by The Michael Brooks Legacy Project. To learn more and rewatch the postgame content visit https://www.patreon.com/TMBS

Lakewood Daf Yomi #DafBySruly Reid Bites
The Early 20th Century International Debate: Can a Woman Make a שליח for Chalitzah?

Lakewood Daf Yomi #DafBySruly Reid Bites

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2022 29:27


TCF World Podcast
From Protests to Movements: Learning

TCF World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2022 37:42


The United States and Lebanon are, in some ways, very different political contexts, and yet organizers face strikingly similar dilemmas and pitfalls in both countries. Both Nicole Carty and Jean Kassir have been actively involved in politics since 2011—Carty in the United States and Kassir in Lebanon. In this episode of “Transnational Trends in Citizenship”—the new season of Order from Ashes—the two activists share their insights. In their experience, movements go through similar cycles. Carty and Kassir emphasize the importance of developing movement infrastructure to avoid the pitfalls associated with these cycles, and to capitalize on moments of mass mobilization—to seize opportunity. Movements must also be able to create moments, not just react to them.  A lack of transmission of skills between generations and a disconnect between movements causes stagnation and the repetition of mistakes. Both activists describe learning lessons from movements across the globe in terms of tactics, discourse, and political imagination. And both emphasize careful thinking about learning and the transmission of skills.  By fostering both transnational and intergenerational learning, movements may have some hope of avoiding the familiar pitfalls. This podcast is the final of a special eight-part season of Order from Ashes, as part of “Transnational Trends in Citizenship: Authoritarianism and the Emerging Global Culture of Resistance,” a TCF project supported by the Carnegie Corporation of New York and the Open Society Foundations.  Participants include:  Jean Kassir, co-founder of Lebanese media platform Megaphone Nicole Carty, core team member, Momentum, a social movement incubator and training institute Naira Antoun, director, Transnational Trends in Citizenship, Century International

TCF World Podcast
From Protests to Movements: Skill-Building

TCF World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2022 32:00


No matter how big they are, protests alone do not create political change. They must be nurtured into something more enduring: a movement. Movements are neither protests nor organizations. Ivan Marovic cut his teeth as a student activist in Serbia in the 1990s and as a leader of the Optor movement that brought down Slobodan Milosevic. Since then, he has worked with dissidents and movements all over the world. In this episode of “Transnational Trends in Citizenship”—the new season of Order from Ashes—Marovic talks about the importance of skill-building for movements. Unlike many other factors that affect movements, skill-building is something that can be controlled. The skills of organizing, communicating, strategic planning, and tactical innovation must be nurtured at the grassroots level. This is all the more crucial in authoritarian settings where crackdowns seek to break any civil society networks and may seek to eliminate leadership. Marovic emphasizes the importance for movements of learning, self-reflection, and time spent together. This podcast is part of “Transnational Trends in Citizenship: Authoritarianism and the Emerging Global Culture of Resistance,” a TCF project supported by the Carnegie Corporation of New York and the Open Society Foundations. Participants:  Ivan Marovic, director of field education, International Center on Nonviolent Conflict in Washington, DC Naira Antoun, director, Transnational Trends in Citizenship, Century International

TCF World Podcast
Police Reform Is a Global Industry

TCF World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2022 32:48


For the last decade and more, popular outrage at police brutality has driven mass protests in both the Middle East and the West. Opposition to police excesses—from crackdowns on protests in Egypt and Iraq to the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis in 2020—has highlighted the need for change.  In this episode of “Transnational Trends in Citizenship”—the new season of Order from Ashes— anthropologist Hayal Akarsu and sociologist Alex Vitale argue that policing crises around the globe are connected; that is, they are all part of one broad crisis with different local permutations. These permutations may include repressive political policing, long-term corruption and ineffectiveness, everyday policing, or a combination of these, as well as economic factors such as increasing inequality. As awareness of the climate crisis deepens, the role of police in protecting corporate interests may become an increasingly prominent feature of the crisis of policing legitimacy.  Police reform is, more than ever before, a global industry, which circulates experts, tools, standards, models, and training programs. As such, police reform is a key part of foreign policy initiatives, diplomacy efforts, and development programs. A transnational framework enables us to see these connections. This podcast is part of “Transnational Trends in Citizenship: Authoritarianism and the Emerging Global Culture of Resistance,” a TCF project supported by the Carnegie Corporation of New York and the Open Society Foundations.  Participants include: Hayal Akarsu, assistant professor of anthropology, Utrecht University Alex Vitale, professor of sociology, Brooklyn College and the CUNY Graduate Center Naira Antoun, director, Transnational Trends in Citizenship, Century International

TCF World Podcast
Who's Afraid of Gender?

TCF World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2022 38:14


From Poland to the studios of Fox News, reactionaries have recast progressive ideas about gender as a militant “gender ideology” that threatens society and its values. These politicians and pundits stoke this and other “moral panics”—mass frenzies of fear about practices, ideas, or identities that supposedly threaten a country's innocence or moral character.  Moral panics are an increasingly prominent feature of the political landscape around the world, and they increasingly focus on gender. This episode of “Transnational Trends in Citizenship”—the new season of Order from Ashes—draws on examples from Egypt, Poland, and elsewhere to show how leaders, media, and other actors cultivate, promote, and even invent these moral panics. These actors exploit moral panics to rapidly construct social coalitions that might not otherwise coalesce. And in case after case, moral panics are shown to be about power—more policing of the marginalized; stifling social and economic change that would cost the elite; fighting democratic reforms; and redirecting grievances toward scapegoats.  This podcast is part of “Transnational Trends in Citizenship: Authoritarianism and the Emerging Global Culture of Resistance,” a TCF project supported by the Carnegie Corporation of New York and the Open Society Foundations.  Participants include: Lobna Darwish, gender and human rights officer, Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights Kate Korycki, assistant professor of gender, sexuality, and women's studies, Western University Canada Naira Antoun, director, Transnational Trends in Citizenship, Century International

TCF World Podcast
Beyond Exceptionalism: On the “Middle East,” Gender, and Sexuality

TCF World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2022 30:56


Pundits, policymakers, and even academics often treat the Middle East as “exceptional”—a region of primordial violence and war, stuck in premodern social dynamics. But such conflict is not unique to the region—the United States and Europe have, of course, fought in multiple wars, though often not on their own soil. It is because of these assumptions that news coverage of the war in Ukraine is viewed with justifiable shock, but the media often treats violence in Iraq or Syria  as relatively unremarkable—the Middle East is supposed to be used to war.  In this episode of Order from Ashes, the scholars Karma R. Chávez and Maya Mikdashi talk about moving beyond the common exceptionalizing frameworks that surround region, gender, and sexuality. They argue that, if straight and queer sexualities are analyzed together—rather than treated as if the condition of LGBTQ minorities is solely its own separate issue—observers can better understand how state and social power operate. Queer or marginalized genders and sexualities are policed or controlled, but so too are straight sexualities and all genders, in ways that are fundamental to how state power operates. The broader implication of their analysis: when we stop seeing the Middle East as exceptionally authoritarian, backward, and violent—and stop seeing the United States and Europe as particularly democratic and civilized—the transnational contours of war and power become clearer. This podcast is part of “Transnational Trends in Citizenship: Authoritarianism and the Emerging Global Culture of Resistance,” a TCF project supported by the Carnegie Corporation of New York and the Open Society Foundations.  Participants: Karma R. Chávez, chair and associate professor in the Department of Mexican American and Latina/o Studies, University of Texas, Austin Maya Mikdashi, assistant professor in the Department of Women's, Gender and Sexuality Studies and a lecturer in the program in Middle East Studies, Rutgers University Naira Antoun, fellow, Century International

POMEPS Conversations
Contested Legitimacies, Digital Authoritarianism, Century International (S. 11, Ep. 30)

POMEPS Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2022 63:47


Jannis Julien Grimm of the Freie University of Berlin joins Marc Lynch on this week's podcast to discuss his new book, Contested Legitimacies: Repression and Revolt in Post-Revolutionary Egypt. The book explores this resilience of contentious politics through a multimethod approach that is attuned to the physical and discursive interactions among key players in Egypt's protest arena. (Starts at 0:46). Marwa Fatafta of Access Now discusses digital authoritarianism, content moderation, and the potential impact of Elon Musk's takeover of Twitter. (Starts at 33:13). Thanassis Cambanis of Century International discusses their new project on citizenship, armed groups, and comparing the United States, Europe, and the Middle East. (Starts at 48:22). Music for this season's podcast was created by Bashir Saade (playing Ney) and Farah Kaddour (on Buzuq). You can find more of Bashir's work on his YouTube Channel.

TCF World Podcast
Are We Really in an Age of Militias?

TCF World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2022 28:24


A cursory survey of contemporary media, policy, and academic landscapes suggests that we live in an age of militias, in which they are increasingly prevalent actors and a growing political challenge in armed conflicts. But are there really more militias now than ever before? Or is there just more attention given to them?  In this episode of “Transnational Trends in Citizenship”—the new season of Order from Ashes—scholar Jacob Mundy discusses what might be driving the “militiafication” of thinking about mass organized violence. The legacies of “new war” theories and the emerging global order—in which North Atlantic powers no longer call all the shots—are essential to understanding the alleged age of militias.  While there are ways in which militias play an important role in constituting the global terrain of organized violence, this role does not appear to be proportionally larger in recent years than in previous decades. How can we explain, then, the disproportionate intellectual and policy weight given to militias?  This podcast is part of “Transnational Trends in Citizenship: Authoritarianism and the Emerging Global Culture of Resistance,” a TCF project supported by the Carnegie Corporation of New York and the Open Society Foundations.  Participants include: Jacob Mundy, associate professor in peace and conflict studies, Colgate University Naira Antoun, director, Transnational Trends in Citizenship, Century International

TCF World Podcast
Gender, Religion, and Militias

TCF World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2022 32:34


Discussions of self-styled Islamist armed groups, such as the Islamic State, tend to heavily focus on gender and religion. Yet these elements are almost always never considered in analyses of white supremacist groups. What accounts for this difference and why does it matter? In this episode of “Transnational Trends in Citizenship”—the new season of Order from Ashes—we speak with scholar Amanda Rogers about overlooked aspects of militias and nonstate armed groups in transnational perspective. Common frameworks that emphasize violence do not have the tools to fully understand how these ideological movements function. Important elements that tend to be overlooked in such approaches include gender and religion.   Rogers identifies other gaps in discussions of armed groups: Even though analyses of Islamist groups incldue gender, they usually treat women as peripheral. And wildly different groups—Hezbollah, the Islamic State, al-Qaeda, the Taliban, and Hamas—are treated as the same analytical unit simply because of their supposed connection to Islam. When it comes to white supremacist groups, however, religion is barely considered at all, even thought many o have an explicit religious ideology.  This podcast is part of “Transnational Trends in Citizenship: Authoritarianism and the Emerging Global Culture of Resistance,” a TCF project supported by the Carnegie Corporation of New York and the Open Society Foundations. Participants include: Naira Antoun, director, Transnational Trends in Citizenship, Century International Amanda Rogers, fellow, Century International 

TCF World Podcast
A Global Perspective on the Crisis in Citizenship

TCF World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2022 43:43


A worldwide crisis in citizenship and rights has made it clear that no country's struggle is entirely exceptional. Today's episode of Order from Ashes kicks off a new season of the podcast: Transnational Trends in Citizenship. Today, Naira Antoun, director of Century International's Transnational Trends in Citizenship project, talks with Century International director Thanassis Cambanis about the connections between the crises in the Middle East, Western Europe, and North America. For more than a year, Century International hosted discussions among experts who usually focus on their own regions—the Middle East or Western Europe and North America—and asked them to compare their regions and policy areas. As a result of this exercise, the project's teams of researchers, activists, and academics revealed commonalities and connections in their study of militias, gender and sexuality, police accountability, and protest. They also demonstrated how bringing experts on different regions together can test assumptions, create new knowledge, and inspire powerful new insights into old but persistent policy problems. This podcast is part of “Transnational Trends in Citizenship: Authoritarianism and the Emerging Global Culture of Resistance,” a TCF project supported by the Carnegie Corporation of New York and the Open Society Foundations.  Participants include: Naira Antoun, director, Transnational Trends in Citizenship, Century International Thanassis Cambanis, director, Century International

TCF World Podcast
War in Ukraine, Pain in Syria

TCF World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2022 41:14


Even while Ukraine is experiencing tremendous suffering and dislocation since the Russian invasion, spillover effects are being felt all over the world. Syria is especially vulnerable, after ten years of war, with Russia as a major player in the Syrian conflict. On this episode of Order from Ashes, Century International fellows Sam Heller and Aron Lund assess some of the most immediate humanitarian, diplomatic, and military consequences of the Ukraine war for Syria.  Heller's recent Century International report argues in some detail how humanitarian pressures and increased diplomatic tension are likely to exacerbate hunger and precarity for Syrians. In this podcast, he and Lund make the case that Syria is vulnerable in other ways to harmful spinoff effects of the war in Ukraine. Participants include: Sam Heller, fellow, Century International Aron Lund, fellow, Century International  Thanassis Cambanis, director, Century International

TCF World Podcast
Making Lemonade from the Abraham Accords

TCF World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2022 34:15


A year and a half ago, the historic Abraham Accords normalized relations between Israel and four Arab countries—but did little for stability or democracy in the region, much less for Israeli–Palestinian peace. On this episode of Order from Ashes, Century International fellow Dahlia Scheindlin assesses the possibility of salvaging progressive foreign policy goals from the problematic agreements.  A progressive U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East should encourage Israeli–Palestinian peace, reduce militarization, support democracy, and strengthen the rules-based international order. So far, the Abraham Accords have mostly undermined these goals. In a new report for Century International, Scheindlin argues that diplomatic relations between Israel and Arab states can promote the core aims of progressive foreign policy in the Middle East—but it will take focused American leadership to turn the Abraham Accords around. This podcast is part of “Transnational Trends in Citizenship: Authoritarianism and the Emerging Global Culture of Resistance,” a TCF project supported by the Carnegie Corporation of New York and the Open Society Foundations.  Participants include: Dahlia Scheindlin, fellow, Century International Thanassis Cambanis, director, Century International

World Business Report
EU outlines Global Gateway plans

World Business Report

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2021 26:29


The European Union has launched a global investment scheme to rival China's Belt and Road. We find out more about the Global Gateway project from Jonathan Holslag, professor in international politics at the Free University of Brussels. Also in the programme, the International Energy Agency has observed a record level of renewable power added to electricity grids around the world this year. Heymi Bahar is senior analyst at the IEA in Paris, and tells us which countries are outperforming the rest. The BBC's Adrienne Murray reports on Denmark's hopes for so-called green hydrogen as a means of meeting its climate goals. Plus, the Economist Intelligence Unit has published its latest global cost of living survey, and found Tel Aviv in Israel to be the world's most expensive city. We find out more from Dahlia Scheindlin, who lives in Tel Aviv, where she's an analyst at the independent think tank, Century International. Today's edition is presented by Rob Young, and produced by Joshua Thorpe and Faarea Masud.

John Quincy Adams Society Events
Debate: What's Driving the Middle East's New Wave of Diplomacy? (Parsi vs. Cambanis)

John Quincy Adams Society Events

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2021 61:18


Diplomacy is breaking out in the Middle East. Traditional rivals like Saudi Arabia and Iran have been sitting down to talk through their differences. Why is this happening? Trita Parsi of the Quincy Institute and several other influential commentators have argued that the United States' drawdown in the region has forced its partners to dial back more confrontational elements in their foreign policies, as they no longer have Uncle Sam backing them up. What's more, Parsi and others argue, there's reason for optimism that this diplomacy can improve things in the region. Not so, argues Thanassis Cambanis of Century International. These states have their own reasons for diplomacy, and to argue otherwise is to overstate American influence. Moreover, he argues, much of this diplomacy is not likely to succeed and may even be jostling for position ahead of new conflicts. Implicitly, this debate has implications for U.S. grand strategy. U.S. global military presence is intended in part to suppress conflict. If Parsi is right, that presence may be sustaining conflict and enabling partners' intransigence. This debate was held in partnership with our University of Florida chapter. Parsi article Cambanis article

Folk och Försvar-podden
Demokrati med fördröjning – tio år sedan arabiska våren

Folk och Försvar-podden

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2021 70:08


Den 17 december 2010 tände den tunisiske gatuförsäljaren Mohammed Bouazizi eld på sig själv i protest mot att myndigheter konfiskerade hans försäljningsvagn och varor. Detta blev startskottet för den arabiska våren. Protesterna spred sig snabbt i Tunisien och svepte som en storm över flera länder i Mellanöstern och Nordafrika under våren 2011. Demonstranterna krävde regeringsavgångar och demokratiska reformer – med varierande resultat. I Tunisien, Libyen och Egypten föll regimerna och demokratiska val genomfördes. Trots ländernas stora utmaningar så tändes mångas hopp om en ljusare framtid. Idag, tio år efter den arabiska våren, har vi sett en demokratisk utveckling i Tunisien. Utöver detta blev dock drömmen om ekonomisk utveckling, stabilitet och demokrati kortvarig. I Libyen och Syrien utbröt inbördeskrig med katastrofala följder och i Egypten ser vi idag ett mer repressivt politiskt styre än innan revolutionen. I det här avsnittet av Folk och Försvar-podden riktar vi blicken mot Mellanöstern- och Nordafrika, med ett särskilt fokus på utvecklingen i länderna Libyen och Egypten. Vad hände egentligen under den så kallade arabiska våren? Vilken utveckling har vi sett i de länder där regimerna avsattes eller störtades? Vilken roll har Sverige och andra EU-länder spelat, däribland i samband med NATOs internationella insats i Libyen, och vilka utsikter kan vi se för fred, säkerhet och demokrati i regionen i framtiden? I avsnittet medverkar Mellanösternanalytikerna och författarna Bitte Hammargren och Aron Lund. Bitte Hammargren är journalist och har i många år varit Mellanösternkorrespondent till Svenska Dagbladet, hon är författare till flera böcker, däribland boken ”Gulfen – en framtida krutdurk”, och är idag oberoende analytiker, knuten till Utrikespolitiska institutet, som senior associerad medarbetare. Aron Lund är fellow vid Century International och analytiker vid FOI (Totalförsvarets forskningsinstitut). Aron Lund är också författare till två böcker om syrisk politik, Drömmen om Damaskus (2010) och Syrien brinner (2014). Avsnittet är producerat av Hanna Waerland-Fager. Klippning och ljudbearbetning: Blue3. Jingeln är producerad av Die Hard Productions.

Warriors, Weapons and Challenging Authority
Century International Arms Red Army RAS47

Warriors, Weapons and Challenging Authority

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2020 11:26


The Century Arms Red Army Standard (RAS47) is 100% American-made featuring a 16" Chrome-moly 4150 nitrade treated barrel and is the first AK side scope rail mount to offer a return to zero capability. Offers four times clamping improvement over traditional side scope rail mounts and improves sight acquisition for follow-up shots. Features: 1:10 twist Concentric LH 14x1 metric thread and ready for a variety of muzzle attachments Chrome moly 4150 nitride treated barrel 1/16" stamped 4140 steel nitride treated receiver RAK-1 Enhanced Trigger Group Larger T-shaped magazine catch Compatibility with AKM furniture Standard AKM sights AK Side Scope Rail Mount Retaining Plate Bolt hold-open notch on safety selector Slant Brake Accepts all standard AK mags Includes (1) 30 rd. magazine MORE INFORMATION More Information 207630042 787450381438 Century International Arms RAS47 RI2403N 7.62x39mm 30 16.5" 37.25" 7.55 lbs. Standard AKM sights Wood Standard Standard - Black Nitride New in Box 740.00 --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/john-kaires/support