Kapitalis / De la démocratie électorale à l'économie de la protestation
Traduction française de mon analyse dans le Washington Post.
Traduction française de mon analyse dans le Washington Post.
In light of last week's protest wave in Tunisia, here are some insights from my protest data, sourced from local papers, about who protests in Tunisia - and to what ends.
Once the American public started paying attention, U.S. resettlement of Iraqi refugees increased tenfold. Trends in U.S. resettlement of refugees from the Iraq war and other overseas conflicts sheds light on prospects and strategies for aiding displaced Syrians.
Writing for the Brookings Markaz Blog.
A snapshot of public opinion four years in to the Arab Spring’s lone success story demonstrates that while Tunisians care about increased security, they are equally concerned about securing personal freedoms. A post for the Monkey Cage at Washington Post with Elizabeth Nugent and Radhouane Addala.
A woman holds a placard reading: “No to Terrorism” as she demonstrates in front of the National Bardo Museum a day after gunmen attacked the museum and killed scores of people in Tunis, Tunisia, Thursday, March 19, 2015.
A riff on William Sewell, on Tunisia. The first published article from the Tunisia legislative election survey that Elizabeth Nugent and I collected with the NGO Sawty in October. Writing for Guernica Magazine.
Who protests after a revolution? Protest surveys from simultaneous pro- and anti-government demonstrations during Tunisia's 2013 political crisis give us a sense of who brought down the country's first elected government -- and why.
Writing for Foreign Policy.
A serious sit-in in Tunis to protest the assassination of Mohamed Brahmi.
Video for Democracy Now, August 2013.
A short documentary about how SCAF and the Egyptian courts dealt with revolutionaries. Video for Egypt Independent, 2012.
A budget dispute makes it harder than ever for the homeless to transition out of shelter, and those who have left shelters may have to return.
Video for Democracy Now, June 2012.
An overwhelming majority of Iraqi refugees still reside in the Middle East, and we see tremendous variation in the treatment and care of Iraqis in Arab states. Writing for the Costs of War project, 2011.
Still from Omar Amiralay's A Flood in Baath Country
Syrian documentary and the end of an era.
Writing for Jadaliyya, 2011.