Morten Valbjørn, Aarhus University, mortenv@ps.au.dk; Jeroen Gunning, King’s College London, jeroen.gunning@kcl.ac.uk This is part of the MENA Politics Newsletter, Volume 3, Issue 1, Spring 2020. Download the PDF of this piece here. Do identities matter for explaining the behavior of Islamist actors
Islamist Radicalization and Civil War
Elizabeth R. Nugent, Yale University, elizabeth.nugent@yale.edu This is part of the MENA Politics Newsletter, Volume 3, Issue 1, Spring 2020. Download the PDF of this piece here. Do war conditions radicalize Islamist political actors? If so, how? And are Islamist actors radicalized
Islamism in Civil War
Nicholas J. Lotito, Yale University, nicholas.lotito@yale.edu This is part of the MENA Politics Newsletter, Volume 3, Issue 1, Spring 2020. Download the PDF of this piece here. Political violence perpetrated by Islamists is most often considered in the context of terrorism, rather
War, Displacement, and the Islamist Advantage
Steven Brooke, University of Wisconsin – Madison, sbrooke@wisc.edu This is part of the MENA Politics Newsletter, Volume 3, Issue 1, Spring 2020. Download the PDF of this piece here. Two interrelated features of the contemporary Middle East are ongoing insurgencies and the
Prisons, Emotions and Ideology: Reflections on Egypt’s Cruel and Overcrowded Prisons
Khalil al-Anani, Ph.D., Doha Institute for Graduate Studies, kalanani@gmail.com This is part of the MENA Politics Newsletter, Volume 3, Issue 1, Spring 2020. Download the PDF of this piece here. Does prison affect ideology? And if so, how does it shape individuals’