The Middle East Insitute - SIPA - Columbia University

 

















The Middle East Institute of Columbia University, founded in 1954, has helped to set the national pace in developing an interdisciplinary approach to the study of the Middle East from the rise of Islam to the present, with a primary focus on the 19th and 20th centuries. Fostering an inter-regional and multi-disciplinary approach to the region, the Institute focuses on the Arab countries, Armenia, Iran, Israel, Turkey, Central Asia, and Muslim Diaspora communities.

Staff

Peter Awn - Director, Middle East Institute
pja3@columbia.edu

Astrid Benedek - Assistant Director
amb49@columbia.edu

Mirlyne Pauljajoute - Administrative Assistant
mp2584@columbia.edu

Megan Hazle - Program Assistant/Events Coordinator
mh2694@columbia.edu

Ryan White - Program Assistant
rw2283@columbia.edu


Course Offerings

For information on Middle Eastern languages contact the Department of Middle Eastern and Asian Languages and Cultures (MEALAC) at http://www.columbia.edu/cu/mealac/languages.


Middle East Concentration/Certificate

Regional Concentration in Middle East Studies

    MIA degree candidates who wish to concentrate in the Middle East without seeking an Institute certificate will draw up a program with the help of the Institute's director. For such a concentration, six courses (18 points) will be required, of which three points must be earned through a colloquium or a seminar.
Certificate in Middle East Studies
    To satisfy the requirements for the certificate, the candidate must select a program of study that provides a broad knowledge of the Middle East, together with a specialized knowledge of a subcultural area (the Arab states, Armenia, Central Asia, Iran, Israel, or Turkey) and its principal language. In addition, students admitted to degree candidacy in a department or professional school of the University must fulfill the requirements for an advanced degree in that department or school.

    Students in the School of International and Public Affairs who have been admitted to candidacy for the Middle East Institute certificate receive the certificate upon completion of the requirements of the Institute. The certificate candidate draws up a program with the help of an assigned adviser and the approval of the Institute director. Programs vary, depending on the degree of the candidate's previous preparation, and the department or school in which the candidate chooses to earn an advanced degree.

    Courses: Each candidate must complete 40 points of course work as follows:

    Two region-wide courses (lecture or colloquium) one in history and one in political science (6 points);

    Four other lecture courses or colloquia selected from three different disciplines (12 points);

    Two seminars or colloquia (6 points);

    Language courses see below (16 points).

    In addition to seminars and colloquia specifically listed for Institute credit, candidates, with the approval of the director, may count one seminar or colloquium not primarily on the Middle East only if the candidate's work in the course was concentrated on the Middle East.

    Language Requirement: The language requirement is satisfied in full once the certificate candidate has demonstrated proficiency in at least one of the major area languages equivalent to three years of university instruction. A certificate candidate who comes equipped with such proficiency in one of the major languages is encouraged to study a second. Native speakers of one Middle Eastern language must take at least one year of a second area language or demonstrate equivalent proficiency.

    Students who wish to attend language courses beyond the elementary level and who have not fulfilled the prerequisites but have received equivalent preparation elsewhere may be permitted to register. This permission must be obtained in writing, at the time of registration, from the departmental representative. No credit is given for the first term of any elementary language course until the second term has been completed.


Programs

The Institute sponsors approximately 30 lunch-time talks per year on topics ranging from art and literature to current events, hosts conferences, and provides a neutral atmosphere for scholarly and student exchanges of views on issues concerning the Middle East, North Africa, and Central Asia. It offers courses and outreach seminars to teachers and adult education groups, briefs journalists, and generally acts as a clearing-house for requests for information on the region and its peoples by the media, educational professionals, and the interested public, drawing upon the expertise of its own staff and the multi-disciplinary and multi-cultural faculty of the School of International and Public Affairs and Columbia University.

+ Events - SPRING 2008

  1. Three Decades of the Islamic Republic of Iran

  2. Thursday, January 24
    "Iran And Its Place Among Nations"
    With Aria Mehrabi & Alidad Mafinezam
    Time: 12:00 pm-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118

  3. Thursday, January 31
    "Barriers to Democracy: the Other side of Social Capital in Palestine and the Arab World"
    With, Amaney Jamal, Assistant Professor, Department of Politics Princeton University
    Time: 12:30 pm-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118

  4. Tuesday, February 5
    "Special Topics in Israeli Society: From Colonization to Separation: Exploring the Structure of Israel's Occupation"
    With, Neve Gordon, Professor, Department of Politics and Government, Ben Gurion University, Israel
    Time: 4:10-5:40 PM
    Location: 411 Fayerweather Hall
    Co-sponsor: The Institute for Israel and Jewish Studies

  5. Tuesday, February 12
    "Japan-Middle East relations"
    With, Saito Mitsugu, former Minister for the Embassy of Japan in the United Arab Emirates
    Time: 12 pm- 1:30 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 918
    Co-sponsors: East Asia Weatherhead Institute, Center on Japanese Economy and Business

  6. Thursday, February 14
    "Lords of The Land"
    With, Idith Zertal, Institute of Jewish Studies at the University of Basel (Switzerland)
    Time: 12:30 pm-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118

  7. Wednesday, February 20
    Middle East Institute and SIPA present the first lecture in the Spring 2008 series Three decades of the Islamic Republic of Iran:
    "Regime Change and the U.S. Agenda for Iran"
    With, Patrick Clawson, Deputy Director for Research, The Washington Institute for Near East Policy
    Time: 6:30pm-8:30pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1501
    Co-sponsor: SIPA

  8. Thursday, February 21
    "On the Questions of Progress, Authenticity and Enlightenment in Modern Arab Thought"
    With, Elizabeth Kassab, Associate Professor, Philosophy and Cultural Studies, University of Balamand, Lebanon
    Time: 12.30pm-2pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118

  9. Thursday, February 28
    "The demographic Success of Zionism"
    With, Yinon Cohen, Yosef Haim Yerushalmi Professor of Israel and Jewish Studies, Columbia University
    Time: 12:30 pm-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118

  10. Thursday, February 28
    "The Folly of Attacking Iran"
    With, Steven Kinzer, Professor of Political science an Journalism, Northwestern University; Christopher Hedges, Journalist and author specializing in American and Middle Eastern politics; Bill Berkeley, Professor of human rights, Columbia's Graduate School of Journalism; Ervand Abrahamian, Professor of Middle East history at Baruch College of the City University of New York
    Time: 7 pm-9 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1501
    Co-sponsors: Just Foreign Policy, The Peace Action Fund of New York State, Fellowship of Reconciliation, Common Cause, World Policy Institute, and New York Physicians for Social Responsibility

  11. Monday, March 3
    "The Crisis of the Nation-State: Lebanon, Israel and Palestine"
    With, Nubar Hovsepian, Associate Professor of Political Science and International Studies, Chapman University
    Time: 12:30pm- 2pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118

  12. Wednesday, March 5
    "Explaining the Revolutionary Zeal in Iran's Foreign Policy"
    With, Maximilian Terhalle, Visiting Scholar, Cornell University
    Time: 12:30pm-2pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118

  13. Wednesday, March 5
    Middle East Institute and SIPA present the second lecture in the Spring 2008 series Three decades of the Islamic Republic of Iran:
    "Are there homosexuals in Iran?"
    With, Janet Afary, Professor of Modern Middle East History, University of Michigan
    Time: 6:30pm-8:30pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1501
    Co-sponsor: SIPA

  14. Thursday, March 6
    "The Paradox of Perceptions: Interpeting the Ottoman Past through the National Present"
    With, Christine Philliou, Assistant Professor of Ottoman History, History Department, Columbia University
    Time: 12:30 pm-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118

  15. Thursday, March 13
    "ISRAEL'S IMPROBABLE ALLIES: Christian Zionism and its Strategic Consequences for the United States, Israel and the Palestinians"
    With, Ms. Célia Belin, research scholar at the Middle East Institute of the School of International and Public Affairs, at Columbia University
    Time: 12:30 pm-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118

  16. Friday, March 28
    Middle East Institute and SIPA present the Iran Conference in the Spring 2008 series Three decades of the Islamic Republic of Iran:
    "US-Iranian Relations since 1953 and Prospects for the Post Bush Era"
    Time: 10:am-4:30pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Altschul Auditorium
    Co-sponsor: SIPA

  17. Tuesday, April 1
    "The Much Too Promised Land: America's Elusive Search for Arab-Israeli Peace"
    With, Aaron David Miller, Public Policy Scholar Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars
    Time: 12:30 pm-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118

  18. Wednesday, April 2
    "pring Festival of Turkic Nations: A concert featuring folk and traditional music performances from Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkey, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan"
    *Dinner reception to follow, featuring the cuisines of all Turkic nations*
    Time: 6pm- 9pm
    Location: Earl Hall
    Co-Sponsors: Columbia University's Eurasia Initiative, Turkish Initiative, Turkish student Association, Kyrgyz Club, Uzbek Initiative, Harriman Institute, MEALAC, and the Center for Energy, Marine Transportation and Public Policy

  19. Thursday, April 3
    "HIV/AIDS in Iran: An Islamic Solution for a Global Problem"
    With, Reza Arjmand, Visiting Assistant Professor, Dept. of International & Transcultural Studies, Teachers College, Columbia University
    Time: 12:30pm-2pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118

  20. Monday, April 7
    Middle East Institute and SIPA present the third lecture in the Spring 2008 series Three decades of the Islamic Republic of Iran:
    "Thirty Years of Islamic Revolution"
    With, Asif Bayat , International Institute for the Study of Islam in the Modern World
    Time: 6:30pm-8:30pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1501
    Co-sponsor: SIPA

  21. Tuesday, April 15
    Movie Screening: "The Breadwinner"
    Followed by a Panel Discussion with Director and Producer, Sonia Nassery Cole And Marco Vicenzino, Director, Global Strategy Project
    Time: 7:30pm-9pm
    Location: Schermerhorn Building, Room 501
    Co-sponsor: SIPASA

  22. Thursday, April 17
    "Reality on the Ground in the Occupied Palestinian Territories and the Road to Peace"
    With, Dr. Ryiad Mansour, Ambassador, Mission of Palestine to the United Nations
    Time: 12:30 pm-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118

  23. Monday, April 21
    Middle East Institute and SIPA present the fourth lecture in the Spring 2008 series Three decades of the Islamic Republic of Iran:
    "Three decades of the Islamic Republic of Iran"
    With, Richard Bulliet, Professor of History, Columbia University
    Time: 6:30pm-8:30pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1501
    Co-sponsor: SIPA

  24. Tuesday, April 22
    "Invisible Nation. How the Kurds' Quest for Statehood is Shaping Iraq and the Middle East"
    With, Quil Lawrence, Middle East correspondent for BBC/ PRI's The World
    Time: 2:30 pm-4 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1512

  25. Tuesday, April 22
    Film Screening: "Knowledge is the Beginning"
    Followed by a Panel Discussion and Q&A with Mariam Said, Vice-President of the Barenboim-Said Foundation; Nicole Foster, Project Manager; and musicians from the orchestra.
    Time: 7:45pm-10:45pm
    Location: Schermerhorn Building, Room 501

  26. Thursday, April 24
    "The Enigma of Islamist Violence"
    With, Laetitia Bucaille, Assistant Professor, Victor Segalen University, Bordeaux 2
    Time: 12:30pm-2pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118
    Co-sponsor: Alliance

  27. Thursday, April 24
    Film Screening: "Slingshot Hip Hop"
    Followed by Q & A with award winning and critically acclaimed director Jackie Salloum
    Time: 8 pm-10 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building Altschul 417
    Co-sponsor: Middle East and Asian Languages and Cultures Department

  28. Friday, April 25
    Film screening: "About Baghdad"
    Followed by Q&A with filmmakers: Sinan Antoon, Bassam Haddad, Maya Mikdashi and Suzy Salamy
    Time: 6:00pm - 8:00pm
    Location: Schermerhorn Hall, Room 614

+ Events - FALL 2007

  1. Thursday, September 13
    "The Social and Economic Status of Women in Ancient Iran"
    Speaker: Saloumeh Gholami, PhD. Candidate at George August University in Göttingen, Germany
    Time: 12:30-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118

  2. Thursday, September 20
    "Bazaar and State in Iran: the Politics of the Tehran Marketplace"
    Speaker: Arang Keshavarzian, Assistant Professor of Government, Connecticut College
    Department of Government Connecticut College
    Time: 12:30-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118

  3. Thursday, September 27
    "To Be an Arab in Israel"
    Speaker: Laurence Louer, doctor in Political Science of the Institute of Political Studies of Paris
    Time: 12:30-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1219
    Co-sponsor: Alliance

  4. Thursday, October 4
    "The Situation in Iraq: Perspectives from the Red Zone as a Special Envoy for Peace"
    Speaker: Mokhtar Lamaniid, Senior Fellow at the Center for International Governance Innovation and former Ambassador in Baghdad and Arab League Envoy for Peace
    Time: 12-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1512
    Co-sponsor: Center for International Conflict Resolution

  5. Wednesday, October 10
    "The Iran Agenda: The Real Story of U.S. policy and the Middle East Crisis"
    Speaker: Reese Erlich, Journalist, Reporter and Media Critic
    Time: 12:30-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1219

  6. Thursday, October 11
    "Developments in the Kurdistan Regional Government of Iraq"
    Speaker: Minister Falah Mustafa Bakir of the Kurdistan Regional Government
    Time: 12.30-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118

  7. Wednesday, October 17
    "Homosexuality, Gender Roles, and Women in the Middle East"
    Speaker: Faisal Alam, Founder and Director of Al-Fatiha
    Location: Roone Arledge Auditorium
    Co-sponsor: MEALAC, Asian American Alliance, Queer Awareness Month, Organization of Pakistani Students

  8. Thursday, October 18
    "Investment climate in Egypt"
    Speaker: Laura Osman, Partner and Managing Director of Concord International Investments Group, Manager of the Concord Group's International Egyptian Public Equity funds and Member of its Investment Committee
    Time: 12:30 -2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118
    Co-sponsor: Business School

  9. Wednesday, October 24
    "Oil and Glory: The Pursuit of Empire and Fortune on the Caspian Sea"
    Speaker: Steve LeVine, Journalist and Reporter, Wall Street Journal and the New York Times
    Time: 12-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1512
    Co-sponsor: Center for Energy; and Harriman Institute

  10. Thursday, October 25
    "Victory for Us Is To See You Suffer: In the West Bank with the Palestinians and the Israelis"
    Speaker: Philip Winslow, UNRWA, West Bank
    Time: 12:30-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118

  11. Wednesday, October 31
    "Lost Worlds of Imperial Cities: From Sarajevo to Jaffa"
    Speaker: Robert Donia, Research Associate, Center for Russian and East European Studies; Adam LeBor, correspondent for The Times of London and the Economist University of Michigan; Robert Geraci, Associate Professor of History, University of Virginia
    Time: 11am-1pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1501
    Co-sponsors: Harriman Institute, East Central European Center

  12. Wednesday, October 31
    "Torture, Rape and the French Military: An Algerian Woman's Ordeal"
    Speaker: Louisa Ighilariz, Activist
    Time: 12.30-2pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1512
    Co-sponsors: ISERP/IRWAG Workshop - Gender and the Global Locations of Liberalism; Department of French and Romance Philology

  13. Islam in Turkey Today
    On November 2 and 3, Columbia University's Middle East Institute and Center for Democracy, Toleration and Religion, along with the Turkish Cultural Center (New York) and the Institute of Turkish Studies (Washington, DC), sponsored a symposium dedicated to examining Islam's role in contemporary Turkey. Entitled "Islam in Turkey Today," the symposium showcased the work of a global array of scholars working on the interaction between Islam and state in Turkey. Presenters will include several members of the Turkish parliament as well. Sessions on Friday, November 2 focused broadly on the role of Islam in the Ottoman empire, along with Islamic movements that sprung up in the aftermath of its collapse, from the more traditionally based to the well-known Gulen movement. Saturday's sessions spotlighted the current relationship between Islam and politics, examining both the 2007 elections and the interplay between culture and religion in Turkish politics.

  14. Wednesday, November 7
    Film: "Since you left", directed by Muhammed Bakri
    Time: 7:45 -9:15 PM
    Location: Schermerhorn Building, Room 501
    Co-sponsor: MEALAC

  15. Wednesday, November 7
    "Engaging Iran: The Rise of a Middle East Powerhouse and America's Strategic Choice"
    Speaker: Nathan Gonzalez, Founder of NationandState.org, an open-source foreign policy think tank. Author of several academic papers on U.S.-Iranian relations
    Time: 12:30-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118

  16. Thursday, November 8
    "Eastward Bound: The Political Economy of Iran's Energy Deals with India, China and Pakistan"
    Speaker: Ali Mostashari, research affiliate at the M.I.T. and a strategic advisor at the UNDP
    Time: 12:30-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118
    Co-sponsors: Center for Energy, Marine Transportation and Public Policy; Southern Asian Institute

  17. Friday, November 9
    "The Israeli Settlements - the Greatest Threat to Zionism"
    Speaker: Akiva Eldar, Chief Political Columnist and an editorial writer at Ha'aretz
    Time: 12:30-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118

  18. Tuesday, November 13
    "Turkey in Crisis: Strategies for Disarming, Demobilizing, and Reintegrating the Kurdistan Worker's Party"
    Speaker: David L. Phillips, Visiting Scholar, Center for the Study of Human Rights, and Project Director, National Committee on American Foreign Policy
    Time: 12:30-1:45 PM
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1134
    Co-sponsors: Center for the Study of Human Rights; Arnold A. Saltzman, Institute for War and Peace Studies

  19. Tuesday, November 13
    Film: "Salata Baladi" (Country Salad)
    Time: 7 pm
    Location: Schermerhorn Building, Room 612
    Co-sponsor: The Institute for Research on Women and Gender; Cinemaeast

  20. Wednesday, November 14
    "A Poisonous Affair. America, Iraq, and the Gassing of Halabja"
    Speaker: Joost R. Hiltermann, Deputy Director International Crisis
    Group, Middle East and North Africa Program
    Time: 4-5:45pm
    Location: International Affairs Building Room 1134

  21. Thursday, November 15
    "Civil Liberties and Civil Rights in the Middle East"
    Speaker: Yael Dayan, Deputy Mayor of Tel Aviv-Yafo
    Time: 12:30-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 111
    Co-sponsor: Institute of Israel and Jewish Studies

  22. Thursday, November 15
    Middle East Institute Internship Panel
    Student Panelists: Josh Mathew, Publications Intern, The Middle East Institute (Washington, DC); Linda Haddad, Intern, UNDP Syria; Eliza Margarita Bates, Advocacy Project Peace Fellow, Democracy and Worker's Rights Center (DWRC); Gustavo Chacra , International News reporter, O Estado de Sao Paulo
    Representatives from Organizations hiring Interns: Laurel Rapp, International Education Program Manager, OneVoice Movement (Middle East conflict resolution organization): International Education Program internship positions available; Judith Z. Miller, co-director, Art project "Brooklyn & Baghdad: Common Roots": Internship positions available Time: 6-8pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118
    Co-sponsors: Office of Career Services (OCS)

  23. Friday, November 16
    "A Cultural Passage Illuminated: An Egyptian Past, Present and Future Through the Eyes of Gamal Al-Ghitani"
    Speaker: Gamal Al-Ghitani, Egyptian Novelist and translation by Hossam Fakhr, head of the United Nations Department of Arabic Translation
    Time: 7:30 - 9:30pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, 15th Floor, Kellogg Auditorium
    Co-sponsor: Turath, the Undergraduate Arab Students Association at Columbia University

+ Events - SPRING 2007

  1. Thursday, January 25
    "Syria and a Changing Middle East"
    Speaker: Imad Moustapha, Syrian Ambassador to the United States
    Time: 12:30-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1501

  2. Wednesday, January 31
    "Persian Sufi Allegories: from Philosophy to Mysticism"
    Speaker: Dr. Nasrollah Pourjavady, Tehran University
    Time: 6-8 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1501

  3. Thursday, February 1
    "Empowering Arab Women?: Assessing the Arab Human Development Report"
    Panelists: Azza Karam, Senior Policy Research Advisor at the United Nations Development Program, Regional Bureau of Arab States Fida Adely, Visiting Assistant Professor, Department of International and Transcultural Studies, Teachers College Frances Hasso, Associate Professor of Gender & Women's Studies and Sociology and Acting Director of the Gender and Women's Studies Program, Oberlin College
    Moderator: Lila Abu Lughod, Professsor of Anthropology, Director, Institute for Research on Women and Gender, Columbia University
    Time: 12:30-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1501
    Click here for photos.

  4. Tuesday, February 6
    "Impressions from Northern Iraq and the Critical Role of Turkmens in a Democratic and United Iraq"
    Speakers: Dr. Turhan Çömez and Dr. Orhan Z. Diren
    Time: 12:30- 2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118
    Co-sponsors: Turkmen Institute and the Institute of Turkish Studies

  5. Thursday, February 8
    "British Politicians and the Iraq War"
    Speaker: Stephen Graubard, Professor Emeritus of History at Brown University
    Time: 12:10-1:30 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118
    Photo: Click Here

  6. Thursday, February 8
    "Media, Violence, and the Iraq War"
    Speaker: Eason Jordan, Former CNN Executive and Founder of IraqSlogger (online news-site)
    Time: 12:30-1:30
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 410
    Cosponsors: International Media and Communications, Media and Communications in War and Peace

  7. Thursday, February 8
    "Revisiting the Sagan/Waltz Nuclear Proliferation v. Non-Proliferation Debate: The Context of Iran"
    Speakers: Scott Sagan, Professor of Political Science and Director of the Center for International Security and Cooperation, Stanford University Kenneth Waltz , Senior Research Scholar, Saltzman Institute of War and Peace Studies, Columbia University
    Moderator: Richard Betts, Arnold A. Saltzman Professor of War and Peace Studies Director, Saltzman Institute of War and Peace Studies, Columbia University
    Time: 6:30-8:30 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1501
    Co-sponsors: Journal of International Affairs, Conflict Resolution Working Group

  8. Thursday, February 8
    "Creating a Meeting Place: Arabic Literature into English"
    Speakers: Peter Theroux, Author of "Syria: Behind the Mask" and translator of eight novels from Arabic to English Jeffrey Sacks, Arabic Lecturer, Columbia University Elias Khoury, Professor of Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies, New York University
    Time: 7-9 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Lindsay Rogers Room (707)
    Co-sponsor: Center for Literary Translation

  9. Monday, Februay 12
    "Israeli-Turkish Relations: The Dominance of the Realist Paradigm"
    Speaker: Efraim Inbar, Director, Begin-Sadat (BESA) Center for Strategic Studies, Israel
    TimeL 12:10-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, SIWPS Room, 1302
    Co-sponsor: Saltzman Institute of War & Peace Studies, Comp. Defense Studies Program

  10. Thursday, February 15
    Book Reading: "My Name is Iran"
    Speaker: Davar Ardalan, Author
    Time: 12:30- 2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118
    * Books will be available to be signed by author

  11. Thursday, February 22
    "Art, Politics, and Humor in Turkey"
    Speaker: Salih Memecan
    Time: 12:30- 2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118

  12. Monday, February 26
    Book Reading and Performance: Ava-ye Nam-ha az Iranzamin, (The Music of Names From Iran)
    Speaker/ Singer: Pari Zanganeh
    Time: 6-8 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1501
    Co-sponsors: Center for Iranian Studies, Iranians at SIPA

  13. Thursday, March 1
    Book Reading: "America's Kingdom: Mythmaking on the Saudi Oil Frontier"
    Speaker: Robert Vitalis, Author and Associate Professor of Political Science, University of Pennsylvania
    Time: 12:30- 2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118
    * Books will be available to be signed by author

  14. Monday, March 5
    Book Reading: "A Different Kind of War: The UN Sanctions Regime in Iraq"
    Speaker: Hans C. von Sponeck, former UN Humanitarian Coordinator for Iraq and former UN Assistant Secretary General
    Time: 12:30- 2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118
    * Books will be available to be signed by author

  15. Wednesday, March 7
    "Civil Liberties, Islam and the Nexus between the Struggle for Democracy and Iran's Nuclear Ambitions"
    Speaker: Akbar Ganji
    Time: 4-6 pm, Reception to follow
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1501

  16. Thursday, March 8
    "The Changing Dynamics in the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) of Iraq"
    Speaker: Michael Gunter, Professor of Political Science, Tennessee Tech University
    Time: 12:30- 2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118

  17. Sunday, March 18
    Musical Concert: "Nour"
    Tickets On Sale At The Middle East Institute
    Time: 5 pm
    General Admission $20, Students with ID $10
    Location: Miller Theatre, Columbia University (2690 Broadway)

  18. Thursday, March 22
    "Trade for Peace with Israel: A Retrospective of Jordan and Egypt's Qualifying Free Trade Zones"
    Speaker: Desiree Baron, Davis Fellow and Adjunct Associate Research Scholar
    Time: 12:30-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118

  19. Thursday, March 29
    "A Region in the Crossfire: US-Relations in the Caspian"
    Speaker: Elizabeth Tefler, Visiting Scholar at the Middle East Institute, Columbia University
    Time: 12:30-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118

  20. Friday, March 30
    "A Shameful Act: The Armenian Genocide and the Question of Turkish Responsibility"
    Speaker: Taner Akcam
    Time: 12-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1512

  21. Monday, April 2
    Prospects for the Palestinian Unity Government
    Speaker: Ali Jarbawi, Dean of the Faculty of Law and Public Administration, Birzeit University
    Time: 12:30-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118

  22. Thursday, April 5
    "The Iraqi Legal System"
    Speaker: Haider Hamoudi, Associate in Law at Columbia Law School
    Time: 12:30-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118

  23. Thursday, April 5
    "Art and Identity in Palestine: A Case Study of the International Academy of Art in Palestine"
    Speaker: Henrik Placht, Founder of the International Academy of Palestine
    Time: 4-6 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118
    Co-sponsor: Arab Student Association at SIPA

  24. Monday, April 9
    "Massive Industrialization in the GCC: Will it Change the Gulf Societies?"
    Speaker: Jean-Francois Seznec, Visiting Associate Professor at Georgetown University's Center for Contemporary Arab Studies
    Time: 12:30-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118

  25. Monday, April 9
    "A History of Modern Lebanon"
    Speaker: Fawwaz Traboulsi, Arcapita Visiting Professor in Modern Arab Studies
    Time: 7:30- 9 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 707

  26. Tuesday, April 10
    "Iraq's Draft Oil & Gas Law: A Recipe for More Conflict"
    Speaker: Dr. Kamil Mahdi, Senior Lecturer in the Economics of the Middle East at the Institute of Arab and Islamic Studies, University of Exeter
    Time: 4-6 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1512

  27. Tuesday, April 10
    "The PKK and Turkish Foreign Policy in the Middle East: A Bigger Picture"
    Speaker: Dr. Soner Çagaptay, Director, Turkish Research Program, Washington Institute for Near East Policy
    Time: 6-8 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1510
    Co-sponsor: Turkish Initiative at SIPA

  28. April 17, 2007
    "Camelia: Save Yourself by Telling the Truth, A Memoir of Iran"
    Speaker: Camelia Entekhabifard
    Time: 12:30-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1501

  29. Thursday, April 19
    "Book Reading: Iran: A People Interrupted"
    Speaker: Hamid Dabashi, Hagop Kevorkian Professor of Iranian Studies and Comparative Literature
    Time: 12:30-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1501

  30. Thursday, April 19
    "End of Semester Party
    Time: 5-7 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118

  31. Tuesday, April 24
    "China and Iran: Ancient Powers in a Post-Imperial World"
    Speaker: John Garver, Professor of International Affairs, Georgia Institute of Technology
    Time: 12-1:30 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118

  32. Friday, April 27
    "From Istanbul to Baghdad: Recollection of Times Past"
    Speaker: Shirin Devrim
    Time: 12-2 pm
    Location: International Affairs Building, Room 1118

+ Events - FALL 2006

    Thursday, September 14

  1. "Cotton and Climate in Iranian History"
    Richard Bulliet, 12:30-2, IAB Room 1118

    Thursday, September 21

  2. "The United States and Iran"
    Gary Sick, 12:30-2, IAB Room 1118

    Thursday, September 21

  3. "Colonization and Prostitution in Algeria, Morocco, and Tunisia" Christelle Taraud, 4:30-6, IAB Room 1118

    Thursday, September 21
    "Colonization and Prostitution in Algeria, Morocco, and Tunisia"
    Christelle Taraud, 4:30-6, IAB Room 1118

    Thursday, September 28

  4. "Creating Legibility: Ottoman Administration of Diversity in the Early Centuries"
    Karen Barkey, 12:30-2, IAB Room 1118

    Friday, September 29

  5. "French Foreign Policy in the Lebanon Crisis"
    11-12 pm. IAB Room 1512

    Thursday, October 5

  6. "Missing Soldiers & the Politics of Friendship in Israel"
    Danny Kaplan, 12:30-2, IAB Room 1118

    Sunday, October 8

  7. "Documenting the Future: An Avi Mograbi Retrospective"
    12-8 pm, Schemerhorn 501

    Tuesday, October 10

  8. Galia Golan (title tba)
    12:30-2, IAB Room 1118

    Thursday, October 12

  9. "Gender, Religion, and Human Rights: Questions from a Middle East Anthropologist"
    Lila Abu-Lughod, 12:30-2, IAB Room 1118

    Monday, October 16
    "Palestinian Security"
    Naomi Weinberger, 12:30-2, IAB Room 1118

    Wednesday, October 18

  10. "The Middle East After the War: Is Peace Still Possible?"
    Ami Ayalon, Member of the Israeli Knesset, 12:30, IAB Room 1501

    Thursday, October 19

  11. "Fictive Histories: American-Egyptian Relationships in Three Novels"
    Noha Radwan, 12:30-2, IAB Room 1118

    Thursday, November 2

  12. "Evangelical Islamists: Ahmed Deedat and Muslim-Christian Encounters in Africa"
    Brian Larkin, 12:30-2, IAB Room 1118

    Thursday, November 9

  13. "New Perspectives on Education in the Middle East"
    Safwan Masri, 12:30-2, IAB Room 1118

    Tuesday, November 14

  14. "Ataturk and Turkey Today"
    Andrew Mango, 12:30-2 pm, Faculty House, Harrison Room

    * The talk will be followed by a reception (2-4 pm)

    Andrew Mango will discuss Mustafa Kemal Atatürk and his legacy on Turkey today. Mango's talk is particularly timely as we approach the 125th anniversary of Ataturk's birth and the 83rd anniversary of the proclamation of the republic.

    Tuesday, November 14

  15. MEI Summer Internship Panel
    6-8 pm, IAB 1118

    Thursday, November 16

  16. MEI Language Study Panel
    6-8 pm, IAB 1118

    Thursday, November 16

  17. "Archaeology and the Strategies of War"
    Zainab Bahrani, 12:30-2, IAB Room 1118

    Thursday, November 30

  18. "Reading Iraq: Whose Facts on the Ground?
    Muhsin al-Musawi, 12:30-2, IAB Room 1118

    Thursday, December 7

  19. "The Persian Gulf in History"
    Lawrence Potter, 12:30-2, IAB Room 1118

+ Events - SPRING 2006

    Thursday, January 26
  1. "Islam and Modernity in China: Between Imperialism and Nationalism"
    Zvi Ben-Dor

    Focusing on the history of Islam and China in the twentieth century, Zvi Ben-Dor will discuss the complicated relationship between Chinese Muslims and the emerging Chinese nation, the Japanese empire, and the Islamic world. He will also address the question of what it means to be a Muslim minority in a non-Islamic Asian country in the modern period.

    Zvi Ben-Dor is Assistant Professor of History and Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies at New York University, and is currently a Remarque Institute Fellow. He received his Ph.D from UCLA and has taught at Boston University, Rutgers University, and Ben-Gurion University in Israel. The author of numerous articles on Muslims in China, his most recent publication is The Dao of Muhammad: A Cultural History of Muslims in Late Imperial China.


    Thursday, February 2

  2. "Jews and Arabs: The Shifting Boundaries of Kinship and Difference"
    Nadia Abu El-Haj

    Different understandings and configurations of Jewish history, biology, and identity are at work in late-19th and early 20th century Jewish racial science, Israeli population genetics in the 1950s and 60s, and genetic anthropology today. Nadia Abu El-Haj will address an aspect of that work: who is a Jew at any moment in time, and what is the nature of kinship both within the (known) Jewish world and between Jews and non-Jewish populations, Arabs in particular, in these different scientific practices and social epochs.

    Nadia Abu El-Haj is assistant professor of anthropology at Barnard College, with research interests in Israel/Palestine, the Jewish Diaspora, science, colonialism, nationalism, and contemporary practices of identity. She received her Ph.D from Duke University and taught at the University of Chicago before moving to Columbia. Among her many publications is Facts on the Ground: Archaeological Practice and Territorial Self-Fashioning in Israeli Society (2001).


    Tuesday, February 7, 4:00 pm

  3. "Turkey’s EU Path: How Long is the Journey?"
    Presented in cooperation with the SIPA Turkish Initiative

    Featuring Dr. Soner Cagaptay
    Director, Turkish Research Program
    Washington Institute for Near East Policy

    Room 1512, International Affairs Building

    After intense negotiations and missed deadlines, Turkey has begun accession talks with the European Union--a milestone in its two-century quest to become a full-fledged member of the Western world. Dr. Cagaptay will analyze the dramatic transformation of Turkey under the ruling Justice and Development Party and comment on the unprecedented impediments on the path toward Turkey’s EU membership.

    Soner Cagaptay is a senior fellow and director of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy’s Turkish Research Program. He has written extensively on U.S.-Turkish relations and Turkish politics and nationalism, publishing in Middle East Quarterly, Middle Eastern Studies, and Nations and Nationalism. His commentaries have appeared in the Los Angeles Times, Washington Post, The Guardian, Der Spiegel, and La Stampa, and he appears regularly on CNN, Fox News, NPR, Voice of America, Al Jazeera, and al-Hurra. He also serves as chair of the Turkey Advanced Area Studies Program at the State Department’s Foreign Service Institute.


    Thursday, February 9

  4. "Why Does Europe Need Turkey in the EU?"
    David Cuthell

    Formal accession talks for Turkey to join the European Union began in 2005, even as vocal segments of European society oppose Turkey's membership on cultural and political grounds. David Cuthell examines Turkey's bid to join the EU from a new perspective, focusing on key aspects of EU-Turkey relations often neglected in mainstream commentary, such as labor demographics, regional security, and European economic and trade policy.

    David Cuthell is the Executive Director of the Institute of Turkish Studies in Washington, D.C., and an adjunct professor of history at Columbia's School of International and Public Affairs. He lived in Turkey during the 1950s and 1960s, attended Yale University, and received an MBA from Columbia. He worked on Wall Street for 20 years before returning to Columbia, where he completed his Ph.D in 2004.


    Thursday, February 16

  5. "The Arab Literature of the Jews"
    Gil Anidjar

    Between Arab and Jew, what is literature? The premises of literary history make it difficult to analyze literary traditions that transcend national, linguistic, religious, and generic boundaries. Although comparisons and relations between Hebrew and Arabic, between poetry and philosophy, have been examined by many scholars, attempts to map the larger boundaries that link, separate, and make sense of the rhetorical difficulties involved remain rare. Gil Anidjar will offer a sketch of what such a map might look like and provide elements of a solution, if not resolution.

    Gil Anidjar is assistant professor of Middle East and Asian Languages and Cultures at Columbia, specializing in comparative literature, Arab-Jewish relations, Hebrew and Jewish culture, and post-colonialism. He is the author of Our Place in Al-Andalus: Kabbalah, Philosophy, Literature in Arab Jewish Letters (2002) and, most recently, The Jew, the Arab: A History of the Enemy (2003)


    Wednesday, February 22, 6:00 pm

  6. "Istanbul Tales"
    The acclaimed 2005 Turkish film written by Umit Unal

    Presented in cooperation with the SIPA Turkish Initiative

    Room 403, International Affairs Building

    Istanbul is a metropolis spanning two continents, situated at the westernmost point of the East and the easternmost point of the West. It is here that the best-known fairytales of the West are enacted in the captivating film "Istanbul Tales," a movie consisting of five stories that bring to life fairytale characters in Istanbul. Everyday people happen to meet Little Red Riding Hood, the Pied Piper, Snow White, Sleeping Beauty, and Cinderella, and all tales are interconnected--a single murder, for example, can change the lives of not only the murderer and the victim, but those of many other people. The most insignificant and unconscious act can have awesome consequences.

    Directed by five different Turkish directors, "Istanbul Tales" celebrates the allure of the city of Istanbul while reminding us that true fairytales are the same the world over.


    Thursday, February 23, 12:30 pm

  7. "Middle East Summer Language Study Programs"
    A Middle East Institute brown bag student panel discussion

    Room 1118, International Affairs Building

    Are you interested in studying a Middle Eastern language over the summer? If so, bring your questions and come hear your fellow students share their experiences studying Middle East languages at programs in Morocco, Tunisia, Egypt, Jordan, Israel, Yemen, the United States, and more!


    Thursday, March 2

  8. "Hasaruf: The Burned Hoax and the State of Israeli Culture"
    Uri Cohen

    Hasaruf (literally, "the burned") was a hoax that shook Israeli culture in 2000 when a neglected Ashkenazi singer garnered attention and fame by posing to be a Mizrahi cripple injured in a fire as a child. His painful "oriental" music was an immediate hit and he was featured on the cover of the widest-read Israeli weekly supplement. In analyzing the hoax, Uri Cohen examines some of the cultural complexities shaping the colonial question in Israel.

    Uri Cohen is assistant professor of Middle East and Asian Languages and Cultures at Columbia. He received his Ph.D from Hebrew University and specializes in modern Hebrew and Italian literature.


    Tuesday, March 7

  9. "The 2006 Palestinian Elections: What Do the Results Mean?"

    A special brown bag talk and discussion with Rashid Khalidi

    Director of the Middle East Institute and Edward Said Professor of Arab Studies, Columbia University

    and

    Sara Roy

    Senior Research Scholar, Center for Middle Eastern Studies, Harvard University

    Room 1501

    The recent Palestinian elections resulted in a decisive victory for Hamas, the political party that has been branded a terrorist organization by the United States, Europe, and Israel. In light of its electoral victory, will Hamas change its position on peace talks with Israel? Will Hamas be able to form a working government? What do the election results mean for Israeli-Palestinian relations, and for relations between the Palestinian Authority, the U.S., and Europe? Addressing these and other questions, Rashid Khalidi, Director of Columbia's Middle East Institute, and Sara Roy, Scholar in Residence at Harvard's Center for Middle East Studies, will probe the complexities underlying Palestinian politics and the implication of the 2006 elections for peacemaking, politics, and security in the Middle East.


    "Does Islam Need a Reformulation to be Compatible with the West?"

  10. A conference organized by the Alliance Program and the Middle East Institute of Columbia University

    Wednesday, March 29
    1:00 - 5:30 PM
    Room 1501, International Affairs Building, Columbia University


    The SIPA Economic and Political Development (EPD) Concentration and the Middle East Institute of Columbia University present:

  11. "The Arab Human Development Report: How the Arab World is Rethinking its Own Development"

    A presentation by Ms. Nada Al-Nashif Chief of the Regional Programme Division at the
    UNDP/Regional Bureau for Arab States

    Wednesday, March 29
    6:00 - 8:00 PM
    Room 1501, International Affairs Building, Columbia University

    Nada Al-Nashif was appointed Chief of the Regional Programme Division, Regional Bureau for Arab States, UNDP, in January 2005. She is responsible for six UNDP programmes in the Arab region, focusing on governance, trade and human development, quality assurance in education, information and communications technologies for development, HIV/AIDS, and the Arab Human Development Report series. Nada joined the Bureau Headquarters from the Lebanon Country Office where she held the position of Deputy Resident Representative since June 2000. Nada joined UNDP through the Management Training Programme in 1991 after she completed her Masters in Public Policy at the Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University. She had earlier completed a BA in Philosophy, Politics and Economics (PPE) from Balliol College, Oxford University, and worked in the private sector as an economic analyst.


    Thursday, March 30

  12. "Rediscovering Islamic Art: Calligraphy and the Miniature Tradition in Contemporary Pakistan"
    Kishwar Rizvi

    Calligraphy and miniature painting have emerged in the past two decades in Pakistan as two sides of a polarized debate on authenticity. Kishwar Rizvi will explore the way in which young artists in Pakistan, and likewise in the Middle East, ‘construct' a history of Islamic art on their own terms by owning and critiquing their cultural heritage through calligraphy and the miniature.

    Kishwar Rizvi is assistant professor of art history at Barnard College. She received her Ph.D in architecture from MIT, has taught at the College of the Holy Cross and Yale University, and focuses her research interests on architectural history, Islamic art, and Iranian studies.


    Wednesday, April 5, 7:00 pm

  13. "An Evening with Farnoosh Moshiri"
    Presented in cooperation with the Department of Middle East and Asian Languages and Cultures

    Room 628, Kent Hall

    Farnoosh Moshiri is an Iranian-born author. Her poems and short stories were published in several Iranian periodicals prior to her escape from Iran in 1983. Her novels include At the Wall of the Almighty, The Bathhouse, and Against Gravity. Among the many literary awards she has received are the Barthelme Memorial Fellowship, the Barbara Deming Fiction for Peace and Social Justice, two Black Heron Press Awards for Social Fiction, and the Valiente Award of Voices Breaking Boundaries.

    Moshiri will be reading from her recently released novel Against Gravity (Penguin, 2005).


    Thursday, April 6

  14. "Palestinian Anti-colonial Cultural Nationalism"
    Bashir Abu-Manneh

    Advancing the idea that Palestinian writers responded to the experiences of exile and dispossession by constructing an anticolonial humanism premised on notions of agency and struggle, equality and mutuality, and a conception of a just future, Bashir Abu-Manneh explores Palestinian culture in search of this humanist vision.

    Bashir Abu-Manneh is assistant professor of English at Columbia. He received his doctorate from Oxford University and specializes in post-colonial theory. He is the author of the forthcoming article Towards Liberation: Michel Khleifi's Ma'loul and Canticle in Palestinian Cinema.


    Monday, April 10

  15. "Iran, the U.S., and Israel: What Moves Ahmadinejad?"

    12:30 - 2:00 pm
    Room 1512, International Affairs Building

    A brown bag talk and discussion with David Menashiri

    The Islamic regime in Iran since the Revolution has seen western influence as a major threat, viewing the U.S. as the "Great Satan" and calling for Israel to be wiped off the map. Although some lessening of hostility could be discerned under Khatami, moderate voices were frustrated with the election of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in June, 2005.

    What does the regime gain from Ahmedinejad’s radical statements? What is behind the Iran-U.S. talks over Iraq? What is Iran’s nuclear policy? Addressing these and other questions, David Menashiri will explore the ideologies and politics behind Iran’s attitudes toward the U.S. and Israel.

    David Menashri is Director of the Center of Iranian Studies and the Parviz and Pouran Nazarian Chair for Modern Iranian Studies at Tel Aviv University. He has been a Fulbright scholar at Princeton and Cornell, and visiting scholar at the Universities of Chicago, Melbourne, Munich, and Waseda (Tokyo). In the late 1970s he spent two years conducting research in Iranian universities on the eve of the Islamic Revolution.


    Tuesday, April 11, 2006, 6:30 pm

  16. "On Time, Culture, and Cities"
    A special screening of six short Turkish documentaries Presented in cooperation with the SIPA Turkish Initiative, Turkish Students Association, and the Light Millennium

    Room 403, International Affairs Building

    This special screening will be an opportunity to all students and scholars as well as all interested people to see these short documentaries, representing diverse approaches in terms of concept and style, as well as to meet with the six Turkish guest producers and directors. They include Mustafa Ünlü (“The Old Town’s Newsmen”), Nurdan Arca (“Time Capsules”), Sehbal Senyurt (“The Adyghe: The Exodus of the Circassian People”), Murad Özdemir (“Tinkos Fish Tinkos”), Ersan Ocak (“Ankara – an experimental documtary”), and Ozgur E. Arik (“Ribat”). Entry is free of charge, and open to general public.


    Tuesday, April 11, 12:30 pm

  17. "Covering Iraq: How the News is Made"
    A brown bag talk with Jane Arraf, Senior Baghdad Correspondent for CNN

    Presented in cooperation with the SIPA International Media and Communication Concentration

    Room 1118, International Affairs Building

    Jane Arraf has seen Iraq through sanctions, crises, and the ongoing war. Her experience in the frontlines and interactions with soldiers and civilians from both sides provide her a valuable on-the-ground perspective.

    Arraf will discuss the constraints of reporting from Iraq and how the gathering of information has changed since the war. She will comment on the implications of these media constraints on U.S. foreign policy and on public perception of the war, and will also touch on the ever-important and sometimes controversial relationship between the military and the media, as well as on the impact of the growing local media.

    Jane Arraf is the Edward R. Murrow Press Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations. She is currently on leave from CNN where she has been Baghdad Bureau Chief and Senior Baghdad Correspondent. Arraf joined CNN in 1998 as its first permanent Baghdad Baghdad Bureau Chief and was for several years the only Western correspondent based in Iraq. She has covered Iraq through crisis, sanctions, and the continuing war. She moved to Istanbul, Turkey as CNN Bureau Chief in 2001, returning to Baghdad as Bureau Chief in 2002.

    Before joining CNN, Arraf worked as a reporter for Reuters Financial Television in Washington, D.C. where her assignments included covering the White House, Capitol Hill and the Treasury Department. She also served as Reuters Bureau Chief in Jordan from 1990 to 1993, and has worked as a Reuters correspondent in Montreal and Reuters correspondent/desk editor in New York and Washington D.C. Arraf reported extensively from Iraq for Reuters after the 1991 Gulf War. Other reporting assignments included India, Haiti and Bosnia. She studied journalism at Carleton University in Ottawa.


    Wednesday, April 12, 7:30 pm

  18. "Persepolis Recreated"
    A special film screening
    Presented in cooperation with the Columbia student group SAFAA

    Room 501, Schermerhorn Hall

    Please join us for a screening of "Persepolis Recreated," a documentary by Iranian filmmaker Farzin Rezaeian, which features extraordinary reconstructions of Persepolis, the most spectacular palace of ancient Achaemenid Iran, before it was destroyed by Alexander the Great’s conquering army more than two thousand years ago. The film includes commentary from renowned scholars from France, the United States and Iran, and has received wide acclaim throughout the United States and Europe.


    Thursday, April 13

  19. "Egyptian Judges and the 2005 Elections"
    Mona El-Ghobashy

    Although Egyptian judges have been tasked with supervising elections since 1956, it was only in 2005 that they launched a concerted and high-profile mobilization for full and meaningful supervision. Why was 2005 different? And will all future Egyptian elections feature judicial collective action on the same scale as 2005? Mona El-Ghobashy will discuss the 2005 Egyptian elections, exploring the dynamic relationship between the judiciary, the executive, and the public at a time of political ferment in Egypt.

    Mona El-Ghobashy is an instructor in the political science department at Columbia. Her work on Egyptian politics has been published in the International Journal of Middle East Studies, and Transparency International's Global Corruption Report 2004. Her article "Egypt's Paradoxical Elections" appears in the spring 2006 issue of Middle East Report.


    Monday, April 17, 6:10 pm

  20. "Cobra II: The Inside Story of the Invasion and Occupation of Iraq"
    An evening with Columbia University alumnus and New York Times Chief Military Correspondent Michael Gordon

    Presented in cooperation with the SIPA International Security Policy Concentration and the student organizations Media and Communications in War and Peace and U.S. Military Veterans of Columbia University.

    Room 417, Altschul Auditorium, International Affairs Building

    Mr. Gordon will be speaking on the planning, buildup, and initial execution of Operation Iraqi Freedom. His new book, written with retired Marine Lt General Bernard Trainor, is well on its way to becoming the authoritative history of the lead-up to U.S. operations in Iraq. Who were the players and what were their views and decisions? How did plans translate into actions in the Area of Operations, and what were the results on the ground? Please join us for a very well informed analysis.

    This event will be moderated by Robert George, Associate Editorial Page Editor at the New York Post and blogger (www.raggedthots.blogspot.com).

    "Cobra II" will be available for purchase and Mr. Gordon will sign copies of his book.


    Monday, April 17, 6:00 pm

  21. "Some Key Development Policy Issues: A 2006 Perspective"
    A special event featuring Kemal Dervis, UNDP Administrator and former Turkish Minister of Finance

    Presented in cooperation with the SIPA Turkish Initiative and the International Economic Policy Concentration

    Commentary by Lisa Anderson, Dean of the School of International and Public Affairs, and Akbar Noman, Adjunct Associate Professor, School of International and Public Affairs

    Room 1501, International Affairs Building

    Kemal Dervis started as the new head of the United Nations Development Program on August 15, 2005. He is also the Chair of the United Nations Development Group, a committee consisting of the heads of all UN funds, program and departments working on development issues.

    Prior to his appointment with UNDP, Mr. Dervis was a member of the Turkish Parliament representing Istanbul (Nov 2002-June 2005) and was Minister for Economic Affairs and the Treasury (Mar 2001-Aug 2002) responsible for Turkey's recovery program after the devastating financial crisis that hit the country in February 2001.

    He earned Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees in economics from the London School of Economics and his Ph.D from Princeton University. From 1973 to 1977 he was a member of the economics faculties of the Middle East Technical University and then Princeton University. In 1977 he joined the World Bank, where he worked until he returned to Turkey in 2001.

    The UNDP Administrator is the third highest ranking official in the United Nations System after the Secretary-General and the Deputy Secretary-General. He is appointed by the Secretary-General and confirmed by the General Assembly for a term of four years.


    Thursday, April 20

  22. "Is Islamism a New Phenomenon? Religion and Politics in the Muslim World"
    Ousmane Kane

    In recent decades, terms such as "Islamic fundamentalism," "Islamic activism," and "Islamic radicalism" have been used to describe the phenomenon of contemporary political Islam. Some observers have re-invented the term "Islamism," which has been used to mean Islam. Ousmane Kane will discuss several notions: that Islamism is a new phenomenon, that "Islamists" are primarily Salafi, and that Islamist movements are irrational and violent.

    Ousmane Kane is an associate professor of international and public affairs at Columbia. He received his master's in Islamic studies at the Sorbonne nouvelle in 1985 and his Ph.D from Sciences Po, Paris, in 1993. He received fellowships from Yale, the University of London, Northwestern University, and the Institute for Advanced Study, Berlin. He is the author of Muslim Modernity in Postcolonial Nigeria (2003), Intellectuels non europhones (2003), and Islam et islamisme au Sud du Sahara (with Jean-Louis Triaud, 1998).

+ Events - FALL 2005

  1. "Syria Today: Challenges and Prospects for Reform"
    A brown bag talk and discussion with Ayman Abdel Nour

    Date: Monday, September 12
    Time: 12:30 pm
    Location: Room 1118 IAB

    Ayman Abdel Nour, respected Syrian economist, politician, and ruling Baath party member, will discuss the economic and political dynamics at work in Syria today and the status of the reform measures which accompanied President Bashar al-Assad's coming to power five years ago. Abdel Nour is the founder of all4syria.org, a website banned within Syria, which publishes a daily newsletter and provides a unique forum for political dialogue and debate.

    Sponsored by the Center for International Conflict Resolution, the Middle East Institute and the Media in War and Peace student group.


  2. "Reform, Youth, and Technology: Observations on the Recent Elections in Iran"
    A brown bag talk and discussion with Hossein Derakshan

    Date: Thursday, September 22
    Time: 12:30 pm
    Location: Room 1118 IAB

    A prominent Iranian blogger (http://hoder.com), Hossein Derakhshan went to Tehran last June to observe the presidential elections. Aside from the process of the elections and its surprising result, he saw that a new wave of young but realistic reformists is subtly changing the political dynamics both inside and outside the reformist camp in Iran.

    Showing pictures and videos he took during the trip, Derakhshan will discuss the signs of this change and suggest how the world can best help the new movement.


  3. "Jerusalem Becoming Muslim: 638-785 AD"
    A brown bag talk and discussion with Dan Bahat

    Date: Thursday, September 29
    Time: 12:30 pm
    Location: Room 1118 IAB

    Dan Bahat, for many years the Official Archeologist of Jerusalem, will discuss the Muslim conquest of Jerusalem in 638. He will explore relations with Christians in the city, the arrival of Jews into Jerusalem and their settlement patterns, subsequent events on the Temple Mount, and Christian spiritual references to the Muslim conquest.

    Dr. Bahat is currently the archaeologist of the Western Wall of the Temple Mount and its tunnels and has excavated many sites in Jerusalem, including Herod's palace. Widely published, he has received many awards for his work in Jerusalem. He teaches archaeology at the University of Toronto and Bar-Ilan University in Israel.


  4. "Back to 1975 and All That: Iran, Iraq, and the Shatt al-Arab"
    A brown bag discussion with Richard Schofield
    Department of Geography, King’s College, University of London

    Date: Wednesday, October 5
    Time: 12:30 pm
    Location: Room 1118 IAB

    The Shatt al-Arab river – which forms the southernmost part of the boundary between Iran and Iraq – has proved one of the most troublesome territorial divides in the Middle East. A boundary definition before 1975 caused many disputes between the two states, while an agreement reached in 1975 was called into question by Iraq as a prelude to its invasion of Iran in 1980. Doubts about the exact status of the river boundary persist today.

    Richard Schofield, prominent geographer and expert on the Shatt al-Arab, will discuss this delicate border dispute and explore the degree to which Iraq recommitted itself to the 1975 agreement in the aftermath of its invasion of Kuwait. He will also discuss how resolution of the issue could best serve prospects for economic rejuvenation and reconstruction in the area, and boost regional cooperation between Iran and Iraq.


  5. "War, Occupation, and Democracy: American Strategy in the Middle East"
    A talk by Azmi Bishara

    Monday, September 26
    8:00 pm
    304 Barnard Hall, Julius S. Held Lecture Hall,
    Barnard College, 3009 Broadway (117th.)

    Palestinian Member of the Israeli Knesset since 1996, Leader of National Democratic Assembly, and Celebrated Writer and Intellectual

    introduced by Rashid Khalidi
    Edward Said Professor of Modern Arab Studies and Director of the Middle East Institute, Columbia University


  6. "The Saudi Strategy for Dominance of the Petrochemical Markets"
    A brown bag discussion with Jean-Francois Seznec

    Date: Thursday, October 27
    Time: 12:30 pm
    Location: Room 1118 IAB

    Dr. Seznec, prominent expert on the Persian Gulf, will discuss the strategy that Saudi Arabia has adopted to become as dominant in the petrochemicals market as they are in the oil market. He contends that the Saudis are likely to become the largest producers in the world, displacing German producers and other large Western firms. This economic battle is taking place mainly in China, which in itself has important political and strategic ramifications.

    Dr. Seznec has been an Adjunct Professor at Columbia University’s Middle East Institute for 19 years. His research centers on the influence of Arab-Persian Gulf political and social variables on the financial and oil markets in the region. He is Senior Advisor to PFC Energy in Washington, DC, has published and lectured extensively, and is interviewed regularly by the national and foreign press.


  7. "Islamic Movements in Saudi Arabia"
    By Pascal Ménoret

    Date: Thursday, November 3
    Time: 12:30 pm
    Location: Room 1118 IAB

    Presented in cooperation with the Alliance Program

    The author of the recent book The Saudi Enigma,Pascal Ménoret will discuss the recent history of Saudi Islamic movements, from the emergence of Muslim Brother activism in the 1960s, the religious and cultural developments of the 80s, the politicization and repression of the 90s, and the recent reformulations of Islamic “activist capital,” from violent militancy to electoral participation. Ménoret explores the multiple purposes of Saudi Islamic movements, analyzing the various strategies they use to get around the authoritarian closure of the public space and the “top-down modernization” schemes imposed by the Saudi state.

    Pascal Menoret is a Research Associate at the French Center for Archaeology and Social Sciences in Sana‘a, Yemen. He has worked at the French Embassy in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, and served as an advisor to the Minister’s Board at the French Ministry of Communication and Culture.


  8. "An Evening of Egyptian Films with Director Hala Galal"

    Wednesday, November 9
    7-9 pm
    612 Schermerhorn Hall, Columbia University

    Reception to follow at the Institute for Research on Women and Gender (754 Schermerhorn Extension)

    Free and open to the public

    Please join Egyptian director Hala Galal for a screening of her documentary “Women's Chit Chat,” about generations of feminist women in Egypt. Galal is one of the key figures in the founding of the independent production company SEMAT, which has been responsible for making some of the most interesting short and documentary films coming out of Egypt in recent years, as well as training young filmmakers and producing a film magazine. She is also currently working together with Syrian director Omar Amiralay on starting a new film school that will be traveling throughout the region.

    Along with "Women's Chit Chat," two other films, both by woman directors and produced through SEMAT, will be shown at this special evening of Egyptian films. These are a short film called “The Elevator” and a short documentary called “Do You Know Why” about a teenager trying to break into the world of film acting.

    This special event takes place in the context of ArteEast's first CinemaEast film festival, which will take place at the Quad Cinema from November 4 to 10. In addition to a screening a selection of films from throughout the region, ArteEast will offer a number of workshops with visiting filmmakers and critics from the region, dealing with a range of issues such as cinema of trauma and the independent documentary.

    Sponsored by ArteEast, the Middle East Institute of Columbia University, the Columbia Institute for Research on Women and Gender, the Columbia Department of Middle Eastern and Asian Languages and Cultures, and Turath.


  9. "The Importance of the Kurds in Turkey and Iraq"
    A brown bag discussion with Michael Gunter

    CANCELLED
    Date: Thursday, November 10
    Time: 12:30 pm
    Location: Room 1118 IAB

    The approximately 25-28 million Kurds constitute the largest nation in the world without a state. The desire of many Kurds for statehood, or at least autonomy, has been refused for fear that it would lead to the breakup of the states they inhabit. The de facto state of Kurdistan in Iraq has great importance for Turkey and Iraq in particular, while also impacting the policies of the United States, Iran, Syria, and Israel, among others. Professor Gunter will discuss Turkey’s EU candidacy in light of the Kurdish issue in Turkey, how the Iraqi Kurds are influencing the current political situation in Iraq, and Turkey’s concern over the current Kurdish situation in Iraq.

    Michael M. Gunter is a professor of political science at Tennessee Technological University. He is the author of five critically praised scholarly books on the Kurdish question, the most recent being Kurdish Historical Dictionary and The Kurdish Predicament in Iraq: A Political Analysis. He is frequently interviewed about the Kurdish question by the national and international press.


  10. "Conversations with Middle Eastern/North African Poets"

    Presented in cooperation with the Department of Middle East and Asian Languages and Cultures

    Date: Friday, November 11
    Time: 12:00 pm
    Location: Room 303, Hamilton Hall

    Join Palestinian poet and writer Nathalie Handal, Egyptian poet, educator, and activist Matthew Shenoda, and Iranian poet and translator Sholeh Wolpe in a discussion on poetry, politics, history, and decolonization.

    Each poet will discuss the challenges and advantages of being a Middle Eastern-American/North African poet in today's climate, teaching Arab American/North African and Middle Eastern Literature, and what fuels their work. Discussion open to audience.


  11. "Sharon and My Mother-in-Law: Ramallah Diaries"
    A brown bag discusson and book talk by Suad Amiry

    Date: Monday, November 14
    Time: 12:30 pm
    Location: Room 1118 IAB

    Suad Amiry provides an original, ironic, and humorous look at the day-to-day absurdities and agonies of being a Palestinian living on the West Bank from the early 1980s to the present day. She recounts her frustrations with West Bank life, including having her one month visitor’s permit torn up on her wedding day, as well as the joys of meeting her husband and hanging out with friends. The book also describes the bombardment of Arafat’s headquarters in Ramallah, the curfews, and the destruction of the historic district of Nablus.

    "Extremely funny…[the book] provides unique insights into life under occupation. This powerful little volume should be required reading for American neocons and all those involved in prosecuting the war on terror. Amiry’s acute ear for gossip makes it almost a kind of Palestinian ‘Desperate Housewives’."
    – The Sunday Times

    Suad Amiry is an architect and the founder and director of RIWAQ, Centre for Architectural Conservation, in Ramallah. She studied architecture at the American University of Beirut and at the universities of Michigan and Edinburgh, participated in the 1991-93 Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations in Washington, DC, and from 1994-96 was assistant deputy minister and director general of the Ministry of Culture in Palestine. She was awarded Italy's Viareggio-Versilia Prize in 2004 for this book.


  12. "Coffins on Our Shoulders: The Experience of the Palestinian Citizens of Israel"
    A brown bag discussion and book talk with Dan Rabinowitz and Khawla Abu-Baker

    Date: Thursday, November 17
    Time: 12:30 pm
    Location: Room 1118 IAB

    "Coffins on Our Shoulders" provides an original analysis of the Arab-Israeli conflict, combining the unique perspectives of Israeli Jews and the Palestinian citizens of Israel. Written jointly by an Israeli anthropologist and a Palestinian family therapist, the book merges the personal and the political as it explores the various stages of the conflict, from the 1920s to the present. The authors weave family history into a sophisticated multidisciplinary analysis of the political drama that continues to unfold in the Middle East. Offering an authoritative inquiry into the traumatic events of October 2000, when thirteen Palestinian citizens of Israel were killed by Israeli police during political demonstrations, the book culminates with a radical blueprint for reform.

    "A fascinating work. Rabinowitz and Abu-Baker succeed not only in challenging many basic assumptions and stereotypes about the victims of the Arab-Israeli conflict, but also in undermining much of the public discourse on the Palestinian minority inside Israel"
    – Salim Tamari, Director, The Institute of Jerusalem Studies

    Dan Rabinowitz is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at Tel-Aviv University and Khawla Abu-Baker is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Behavioral Science at Emek Yizrael College.

+ Events - SPRING 2005

  1. NEW CINEMA FROM ISRAEL

    The Middle East Institute, MEALAC and the East Central European Center invite you to an evening with film director Roni Aboulafia

    Wednesday, February 2, 2005, 8PM
    Schermerhorn Hall, Room 501
    Columbia University

    We will screen two of her films, both of which premiered at the 2004 Jerusalem Film Festival. Discussion will follow.

    Ida Fink-Traces (Israel 2004, 50 minutes)

    A film by Roni Aboulafia and Uri Cohen (Hebrew/Polish with English subtitles)

    The writer Ida Fink was born in Zbaraz, (now in Ukraine), to a Jewish family. On the eve of World War II she began to study music at the Lvov Conservatory. In 1941, under the Nazi occupation, Ida Fink survived 4 selections and worked as a forced laborer. With the liquidation of the ghetto, she and her sister disguised themselves as Polish peasants and fled to Germany where they survived until the end of the war in constant danger of being identified. In 1957, she immigrated to Israel with her sister, father and husband Brunek, a survivor of four camps. She has written one novel Podroz (THE JOURNEY) (1990) and two collections of stories Skrawek Czasu (A SCRAP OF TIME) (1987), and Slady (TRACES) (1996) and was honored with the Anne Frank Prize in 1985.

    The film follows Ida on a vacation trip to the Galilee, accompanied by Uri, a young writer who wants to understand her past. The film moves between the hills of the Galilee, the kitchen and the porch and between Hebrew, Israeli, and Polish literature focusing on Ida and the history that she embodies in her life and writing. Above all this is an attempt to touch the coattails of a great artist.

    Followed by a short:

    Meet Michael Oppenheim
    Michael Shlomo Oppenheim is one year old. Through a series of family portraits we get a picture of the people, the exploits and the genes that brought Michael to the world and the world, as it is, to Michael. Faces that together tell the story of the Jews in the twentieth century and the story of the State of Israel. The face of us all: fighters, victims, human beings.

    Roni Aboulafia is a graduate of Sam Spiegel Film and Television School in Jerusalem, Israel. She regularly directs for TV magazine shows and entertainment programs in Israel.

    Uri Cohen is an Israeli writer and teaches Israeli literature and culture at Columbia


  2. Terrorism and the Bush-Saudi relationship
    By Craig Unger

    Date: Thursday February 3, 2005
    Time: 12:30-2:00pm
    Location: Room 1118, IAB

    Craig Unger is the author of the New York Times bestseller, "House of Bush, House of Saud: The Secret Relationship Between the World's Two Most Powerful Dynasties", which was featured in Michael Moore's Fahrenheit 9/11. He appears frequently as an analyst on terrorism and Saudi-American relations on CNN, the ABC Radio Network and many other broadcast outlets.

    Craig Unger will discuss the Bush-Saudi relationship and how the Bush administration turned a blind eye towards the Saudi role in terror. He will also discuss Big Oil, the neoconservative-evangelical alliance, and the roots of the Iraq war.


  3. "The Black Death in Egypt and Western Europe" A Comparative Socioeconomic Analysis
    by Stuart J. Borsch

    Date: Thursday, February 24, 2005
    Time: 12:30pm - 2:00pm
    Location: Room 1118, International Affairs Building

    Dr. Borsch will explore the socioeconomic impact of the Black Death on Egypt and Western Europe. Starting with an analysis of the disease and its transmission, the presentation will cover the "classic" Western European economic response to the Black Death.

    Dr. Borsch received his Ph.D. in History from Columbia University in 2002. He currently teaches World History and Middle Eastern History at Assumption College. He is the author of numerous articles.


  4. "Another Road Home"

    Date: Thursday, March 2, 2005
    Time: 8:00 – 10:00pm
    Location: Room 501, Schermerhorn Hall

    A documentary by Danae Elon

    Director Danae Elon, daughter of Israeli intellectual Amos Elon, grew up in Jerusalem and was taken care of by an Arab housekeeper, whom her parents hired after the 6 Day War. Years later Danae goes in search of Moussa Mahmoud Obeidallah, the man who cared for her from the time she was a baby until she went into the army. Danae’s journey takes her to Paterson, New Jersey, to visit with six of Moussa’s eight sons, now settled in America’s largest Palestinian community and tending to families and businesses of their own. Over the course of the documentary Danae allows distances to come into focus: the distance between the Obeidallah family and the left-leaning, well-intentioned Elons and the distance between herself and her own father.


  5. "Religious fundamentalism as a transversal phenomena in the West: where does Islam stand as a western religion?"
    by Olivier Roy

    Co-sponsored by the Alliance Program

    Date: March 3rd, 2005
    Time: 2:00pm-4:00pm
    Location: Lindsey Rogers Room, 7th floor, IAB

    Olivier Roy, PhD in political sciences from Sciences Po is a research director at the CNRS in the "Iranian World" research unit and Associate Scholar at the CERI. Olivier Roy will address the question of the efforts of westernized Muslims to assert their identity in a non-Muslim context and how the revival of Islam among Muslims populations is often wrongly seen as a backlash against westernization rather than as one of its consequences.


  6. "The new Muslims citizens in Europe"
    By Fahrad Khosrokhavr
    Co-sponsored by the Alliance Program

    Date: Thursday March 24, 2005
    Time: 12:30 - 2:00pm
    Location: Room 1118, International Affairs Building

    Dr. Fahrad Khosrokhavr is a professor at the EHESS in Paris. His research interests include sociology of religion, contemporary Islam and Iran.

    Dr. Fahrad Khosrokhavr will address the question of the subjectivity of the jihadist people within activist or terrorist organizations referring to Islam as their source of vindication. The brown bag will focus on the way radicalization occurs mainly in Europe, among the people, be they converts or second and third generation Europeans of North African or Asian origin.


  7. "Peace and Stability in Afghanistan: Who will win the Afghan people’s support? A Japanese perspective"
    By Nobutaka Miyahara

    Co-sponsored by the Weatherhead East Asian Institute and Harriman Institute

    Date: Wednesday March 30, 2005
    Time: 12:30 - 2:00pm
    Location: Room 1118, International Affairs Building

    Mr. Miyahara will describe present threats to the stability and peace and suggest what President Karzai and his government should do and how the international community could support them for winning Afghan people’s support, by quoting Japanese experiences.

    Mr. Miyahara has served as Minister-Counselor and Deputy Chief of Mission in the Embassy of Japan in Afghanistan since 2002. He is conducting research on Japan’s role in facilitating the Bonn Process and its contributions to consolidating peace and stability in Afghanistan.


  8. The Bandit (1996)
    Co-sponsored by The Turkish Initiative

    Date: Wednesday, March 30, 2005
    Time: 7:45pm - 10pm
    Location: Room 407, International Affairs Building

    The epic adventures of the legendary Baran the Bandit following his release from prison. After serving 35 years, it is no surprise that the world has changed dramatically. Still, Baran can't help but be shocked to discover that his home village is now underwater thanks to the construction of a new dam. He then heads for Istanbul to get revenge upon his former best friend, the man who snitched on him and stole his lover Keje. Along the way, Baran teams up with Cumali, a tough young punk who finds the thief's old-fashioned ways rather quaint. When Cumali gets into deep trouble with a crime boss, Baran adds another vengeful task to his roster.


  9. "Channels of Rage"

    Date: Thursday March 31, 2005
    Time: 8:00 – 10:00pm
    Location: Room 501, Schermerhorn Hall

    A film by Anat Halachmi

    Subliminal is described in the local rap scene as the "reinventor of Hebrew language". He presents himself as the first proud Zionist rapper. Similarly, Tamer (TN) an Arab rapper from Lod who became a cultural icon for Israeli Arab youth, is no less proud of his Palestinian identity. Just like Siamese twins, Subliminal and Tamer are the two inseparable parts of the same unsolved conflict, which defines our lives. A patriotic Zionist rapper and a nationalist Arab rapper use the power of words and music to state as loud as they can what politicians in Israel can’t seem to put into words. Channels of Rage won an award for 'Best Documentary' at the Jerusalem International Film Festival.


  10. "Saudi-China Relations"
    by Jean-François Seznec

    Co-sponsored by the Center for Energy, Marine Transportation and Public Policy

    Date: Thursday, March 31, 2005
    Time: 12:30pm - 2:00pm
    Location: Room 1118, International Affairs Building

    The talk will center on the meaning of the booming economic relations between Saudi Arabia and China. It will show that China is shortly going to overcome the US as the Saudi's main trading partner, and that Saudi Arabia has a key role in the Chinese's ability to dominate the trade deficit with the US.

    Dr. Seznec has been an Adjunct Professor at Columbia University's Middle East Institute for 18 years and at Georgetown University for three years. His research centers on the influence of the Arab-Persian Gulf political and social variables on the financial and oil markets in the region.


  11. "New directions in Turkish Politics"
    By Prof. Sabri Sayari

    Date: April 5, 2005
    Time: 12-2 pm.
    Location: Room 1118, IAB

    Co-sponsored by the Turkish Initiative

    Professor Sabri Sayari is the Executive Director of the Institute of Turkish Studies and a Research Professor in the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University. Prior to his current position, he was a Senior Staff Member at the National Academy of Sciences' National Research Council (1992-94), a Resident Consultant at the RAND Corporation (1985-93), and a Professor of Political Science at Bogazici University in Istanbul (1974-84). Dr. Sayari holds B.A and Ph.D. degrees from Columbia University. He has also taught at Rutgers University, and served as a Visiting Professor at Columbia, University of California, Irvine, and Aarhus University in Denmark. Dr. Sayari has published extensively on Turkey's domestic politics and foreign policy, and on issues concerning political development, democratization, and international political economy. His most recent publications include "Turkey and the Middle East in the 1990s" Journal of Palestine Studies (1997), "Between Allies and Neighbors: Turkey's Burden Sharing Policy in the Gulf Conflict" in Andrew Bennett et al (eds), Friends in Need: Burden Sharing in the Gulf War (St. Martin's Press, 1997), and "Parties, Party Systems, and Economic Reforms: The Turkish Case," Studies in Comparative International Development (1997).


  12. "The end of oil and geopolitics"
    Co-sponsored by the Columbia CIBER and the Center For Energy, Marine Transportation And Public Policy

    By Fareed Mohamedi

    Date: April 6, 2005
    Time: 5-7 pm.
    Location: Room 1512, IAB

    Fareed Mohamedi is Senior Director, Country Strategies and Analysis, PFC Energy, a Washington based energy consultancy. He will review the latest developments in the geopolitics of energy security and how the large producer and consuming countries are adapting to perceptions of future constraints in oil production worldwide.


  13. "Morroco's Daunting Road to Democracy" Progress and challenges under King Mohammed VI
    By Marvine Howe

    Date: Thursday April 7, 2005
    Time: 12:30pm - 2:00pm
    Location: Room 1118, International Affairs Building

    Marvine Howe takes us behind Morocco's exotic facade to discover the largely tolerant Muslim country, struggling to catch up with modern times and cope with the penetration of political Islam, sweeping the world. Marvine Howe, a former reporter for The New York Times, began her career as a free-lance journalist in North Africa. She will be talking about her latest book: "Morocco: The Islamist Awakening and Other Challenges".


  14. "Resisting Israel's Occupation: Means and Prospects"
    by Amira Hass

    Date: Monday, April 11, 2005
    Time: 12:30pm - 2:00pm
    Location: Room 1118, International Affairs Building

    Amira Hass was born in Jerusalem in 1957, the daughter of Yugoslavian-Jewish refugees. A journalist for the Hebrew daily Ha'aretz, she covers Gaza and the West Bank. She received the UPI's International Award and the Sokolow Prize, Israel's highest honor for journalists, and received UNESCO's Guillermo Camo World Press Freedom Prize in 2003. Hass is the only Jewish Israeli correspondent on Palestinian affairs to live among the people about whom she reports. She is the author of Drinking the Sea at Gaza: Days and Nights in a Land Under Siege (Metropolitan/Owl, 2000) and Reporting from Ramallah: An Israeli Journalist in an Occupied Land (Semiotext(e), 2003).


  15. "The Two Major Genocides of the Twentieth Century: A Comparative Perspective of the Armenian and the Jewish Cases"

    On the 90th Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide

    Date: Wednesday April 13, 2005
    Time: 7:30pm
    Location: 501 Schermerhorn Hall

    Speaker: Vahakn N. Dadrian
    Director of Genocide Research, Zoryan Institute

    Chair: Mark Mazower
    (Columbia University, History Department)


  16. From "minorities" to 'Israeli-Arabs': Educational reforms and the demarcation of the Arab minority in Israel
    by Gal Levy

    Date: Thursday April 14, 2005
    Time: 12:30-2:00pm
    Location: Room 1118, IAB

    Gal Levy is a lecturer in the MA program in Democracy Studies at the Open University in Israel. His research focuses on the relationship between education, ethnicity and citizenship, and most recently, on the education of labor-migrant children and Arab education.

    Seeking an explanation to the becoming of the Arab minority in Israel 'bearers of liberal citizenship rights', Gal Levy will explore the role of the state in delineating the boundaries of citizenship and ethnicity which allow and delimit their political and social incorporation.


  17. "Gertrude Bell: femme impériale"
    by Elizabeth Bishop

    Date: Thursday, April 21, 2005
    Time: 12:30pm - 2:00pm
    Location: Room 1118, International Affairs Building

    Elizabeth Bishop teaches nineteenth- and twentieth-century Arab history at the University of Texas at Austin. Her work emphasizes public and private spheres and the region's nation-states. She is currently completing a monograph on gendered modernities.

    Elizabeth Bishop will discuss women’s oppression of other women. Her observations might profitably be extended to imperialism so as to consider Gertrude Bell’s body and its mobile signification among flows of bodies, credit, and weapons.


  18. "Turkish-American Relations"
    Co-sponsored by the Turkish Initiative

    Date:April 25th, 2005
    Time:4pm-6pm
    Location: Room 1502, IAB

    Panel speakers:
    Ms. Zeyno Baran, the Nixon Center
    Mr. Robert Pollock, the Wall Street Journal
    Mr. Egemen Bagis, Turkish Parliamentary and consultant to Turkish PM on US Foreign Policy


  19. "Middle East Institute End of Year Party!!!

    Date: Wednesday April 27, 2005
    Time: 6-8pm
    Location: Room 1118, IAB

    The Middle East Institute invites you to its End of Year Party. Please join us for Middle Eastern food and wine.


  20. "Current Issues of Democratization in the Arab World"
    By Fawwaz Traboulsi

    Date: Thursday April 28, 2005
    Time: 12:30-2:00pm
    Location: Room 1118, IAB

    Fawwaz Traboulsi is a writer, translator and academic. He teaches History and Political Science at the Lebanese American University in Beirut. In addition to his fields of specialization, Traboulsi has written extensively on criticism, foklore, memory and culture. His most recent translations are Edward Said’s Out of Place and his posthumous Humanism and Democratic Critique. Traboulsi is presently working on a History of Modern Lebanon.


  21. ""Human Rights in Iran"
    A series of four lectures

    Date: April 28th, 2005
    Time: 2pm-3:30pm
    Location: Columbia University Law School, Room 103 (JGH 103)

    Co-sponsored by "The Baha'i Association of Columbia Law School"

    1) "U.S. Policy and its Implications for Human Rights in Iran"
    Gary Sick, Columbia University

    Gary Sick served on the National Security Council staff under Presidents Ford, Carter and Reagan. He was the principal White House aide for Iran during the Iranian Revolution and the hostage crisis and is the author of two books on U.S.-Iranian relations. He is a member (emeritus) of the board of Human Rights Watch in New York and chairman of its Middle East and North Africa advisory committee.

    2) "Women's Rights in Iran"
    Elahe Sharifpour-Hicks, Director Human Rights and Policy Group

    Elahe Sharifpour-Hicks is one of the leading commentators and advocates on human rights issues in Iran. She is the current Program Director of the "Human Rights and Policy Group" in New York. Prior to that, she worked at the "United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights" focusing on Iraq. She has also worked for "Human Rights Watch, Middle East and North Africa Division" where she conducted five unique human rights fact-finding missions to Iran.

    3) "The Patterns of Human Rights Violations in Iran: The Implications for a New Human Rights Strategy"
    Ramin Ahmadi, Yale University

    Ramin Ahmadi is a Professor at Yale University and is one of the founders of the "Iran Human Rights Documentation Center". He has also founded the "Griffin Center for Health and Human Rights" and has developed numerous curriculum on Health and Human Rights at Yale University.

    4) "Religious persecution as a crime against humanity"
    Payam Akhavan, Yale University

    Payam Akhavan is a Senior Fellow at Yale Law School and the Yale University Genocide Studies Program. He is President and Co-Founder of the Iran Human Rights Documentation Centre, and was previously Legal Advisor to the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunals for former Yugoslavia and Rwanda at the Hague. He has advised the UN and Governments on transitional justice and human rights in Cambodia, East Timor, Eritrea, Guatemala, Peru, and Uganda.

    For more info: Contact Nima Yousefian (Ny2120@columbia.edu)

+ Events - FALL 2004

  1. Ambassador Dennis Ross
    The Missing Peace: The Inside Story of the Fight for Middle East Peace
    Lecture and Book signing

    Date: September 14, 2004
    Location: Room 1501 International Affairs Building
    Time: 12:30PM-2:00PM

    Dennis Ross was U.S. Envoy to the Middle East 1988-2000 and is currently counselor and Ziegler distinguished fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. He will talk about his new book, the history of the Middle East peace process, the prospects for peace, and America's current and future role in the region.

    Click here for the Press Release.


  2. The War for Muslim Minds: Islam and the West
    By Gilles Kepel
    Lecture and Book signing

    Date: September 21, 2004
    Location: Room 1512 International Affairs Building
    Time: 5:45PM

    Gilles Kepel, the noted French historian of Islam and the Middle East will be speaking about his new book, The War for Muslim Minds:

    Islam and the West. Gilles Kepel is a researcher at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) and teaches at the Institut d'Etudes Politiques de Paris. Some of his other books include: Jihad, the Trail of Political Islam, Muslim Extremism in Egypt: The Prophet and Pharaoh, Bad Moon Rising, and Allah in the West: Islamic Movements in America and Europe.

    Click here for the Press Release.


  3. American Jews, Zionism, and Israel: The Road to and from Camp David
    By Professor Sam Freedman

    Date: Thursday, September 30, 2004
    Location: Room 1118 International Affairs Building
    Time: 12:30PM-2PM

    A look at the attitudes of American Jews toward Zionism, the Israeli state, the peace process, and the state of affairs since the Al-Aqsa Intifada.

    Sam Freedman is a Professor at Columbia University’s School of Journalism. He also works as the education columnist for The New York Times, and is the author of four books, including “Jew Vs. Jew: The Struggle for the Soul of American Jewry", published in 2001.


  4. Muslims in New York Project Conference, October 4&5


  5. The Faculty For Israeli-Palestinian Peace (FFIPP)
    By Safa Abu-Rabia and Hannah Safran

    Date: Thursday, October 7, 2004
    Location: Room 1118 International Affairs Building
    Time: 12:30PM-2PM

    Safa Abu-Rabia will be telling the special story of her community, Palestinian Bedouins from the Negev. She will also be talking about her work for women rights and for reconciliation between Israelis and Palestinians.

    Hannah Safran is a veteran feminist and peace activist. She will talk about the Israeli society, joint Israeli-Palestinian activism for reconciliation and peace, and her work to promote women rights for Israeli and Palestinian women.


  6. How to end the war of 1948?
    An analysis of the peace process and beyond through poetry and scholarship

    By Tanya Reinhart & Aharon Shabtai

    Date: Thursday, October 7, 2004
    Location: Dag Hammarskjold Lounge, 6th Floor International Affairs Building
    Time: 6:30PM-8PM

    Tanya Reinhart is a Professor of linguistics at Tel Aviv University and writes a bi-weekly political column for Israel's largest newspaper, Yediot Ahronot. Poet Aharon Shabtai will speak about his latest book, “J'accuse”, winner of the PEN Award for Poetry in Translation.


  7. Assyrians in Armenia
    By Lina Yakobova, Yerevan State University

    Date: Wednesday, October 13, 2004
    Location: Room 1118, International Affairs Building
    Time: 6:30PM - 8:00PM

    Screening of "Assyrians in Armenia", an English language documentary with Aramaic (Syriac) dialogue.


  8. "Six Months in Baghdad: Reflections on the Coalition Provisional Authority and the transition to a sovereign Iraq”
    By Zaid A. Zaid

    Date: Thursday, October 14, 2004
    Location: Room 1118 International Affairs Building
    Time: 12:30PM-2PM

    Zaid A. Zaid is a first year Richard Paul Richman Fellow at Columbia Law School and a Foreign Service Officer. He served most recently in Baghdad as the liaison between the Coalition Provisional Authority and the Iraqi Governing Council. He will talk about his experiences at the US Mission to the United Nations in the lead up the war in Iraq and about his experiences in Baghdad.


  9. Fall 2004 Middle East Internship Panel

    Date: Monday, October 18, 2004
    Location: Room 1118, International Affairs Building
    Time: 7:45PM - 9:00PM

    Are you looking for an internship in the Middle East or in a field related to the region? Come hear all about your fellow students’ experiences! You will have the opportunity to ask questions and meet with other students interested in the Middle East. Pizza and drinks will be served!!

    Please register on SIPATRAK for this event.


  10. "Saudi diversity in the face of Saudi repression: the Hijaz as case study"
    By Mai Yamani

    Date: Tuesday October 19, 2004
    Time: 12:30-2pm
    Location: Room 1118 IAB

    Dr Mai Yamani was born a Saudi national and became one of the leading British experts on Saudi politics and sociology.

    She is now a research fellow with the Middle East Programme at the Royal Institute of International Affairs, Chatham House and writes and broadcasts frequently on Saudi affairs.

    Mai Yamani's latest book, "Cradle of Islam - the Hijaz and the Quest for an Arabian Identity" (2004) will be available for purchase during the event.


  11. "Syria and the prospects of auto-debaathification"
    By Ammar Abdulhamid

    Date: Thursday October 28, 2004
    Time: 12:30 - 2:00pm
    Location: Room 1118, IAB

    Four years after his rise to power, all bets remain on the ability of the young Syrian President to deliver on the long overdue reform of his country's internal and foreign policies. Can he still deliver? Ammar Abdulhamid is a Syrian novelist and social analyst living in Damascus.


  12. Language Study in the Middle East

    Date: Thursday, November 4, 2004
    Location: Room 1118, International Affairs Building
    Time: 12:30PM - 2:00PM

    Are you interested in spending some time studying a local language in the Middle East? Come hear all about your fellow students’ experiences. They have studied Arabic, Persian, Turkish or Hebrew and they will be there to answer your questions about the programs they attended and about fellowship opportunities (FLAS…).


  13. "Islamic Feminism: Convergence or Contradiction?"
    By Qudsia Mirza and Kate Stoneman

    The Middle East Institute in collaboration with The Institute for Research on Women and Gender, and Qanun--the Middle Eastern Law Students Association.

    Date: Monday, November 8, 2004
    Time: 12:30-2:00 pm
    Location: 754 Schermerhorn Extension*, Columbia University

    Qudsia Mirza is a Senior Lecturer in Law at the University of East London. Kate Stoneman is a Visiting Professor of Law and Democracy, Albany Law School.

    Qudsia Mirza, editor of the forthcoming book, Islamic Feminism and the Law, and author of numerous publications on critical race theory, feminism and law, and women and Islamic law will discuss the new interpretive methodologies in contemporary Islamic feminism and the implications that these have for law and the creation of gendered legal rights.

    *Schermerhorn is just north of Fayerweather and Avery, themselves north of St. Paul Chapel on the main campus. After entering the building turn right then left; follow the green tile floor to the elevator. This is Schermerhorn Extension; seminar room is on the 7th floor.


  14. Between Iraq and a Hard Place: American Studies in the Middle East
    By Mounira Souliman and Patrick McGreevey

    From the American Studies Association

    Date: Tuesday November 16, 2004
    Time: 12:30-2pm
    Location: Room 1118, International Affairs Building

    With the U.S. wars in Afghanistan and Iraq continuing, what does American Studies in the Middle East look like? Two American Studies practitioners, Mounira Souliman from Cairo University and Patrick McGreevey of the American University of Beirut, will discuss these issues and their experiences.


  15. "Arab Secular Nationalism versus Islamism: What happened?"
    By George Corm

    Date: Tuesday November 16, 2004
    Time: 4:15-6pm
    Location: Room 1118, International Affairs Building

    Co-sponsored by the Alliance Program

    Georges Corm is by profession an economist, specialized in the Middle Eastern and Mediterranean region. He is a well-known consultant to International Organization and central banks as well as the former Finance Minister for Lebanon. In addition to his academic articles and books on economic and financial issues, he is also the author of articles and books pertaining to the contemporary history and sociology of the Arab East.


  16. "Globalized Islam" Lecture and Book Signing
    By Olivier Roy

    Date: Wednesday November 17, 2004
    Time: 12:30-2pm
    Location: Room 1118, International Affairs Building

    Co-sponsored by the Alliance Program.

    Olivier Roy is research director at the CNRS in the "Iranian World" research unit, a specialist of Afghanistan, Central Asia and of Islam.

    Olivier Roy will discuss his latest book, "Globalized Islam" (Columbia University Press, 2004). Globalization of Islam refers to the "passage to the West" entailed by the growing influence of Western consumption habits, cultural models and sociological behaviors inside Muslim societies.


  17. Middle East Institute End of Year Party!!!

    Date: Wednesday December 1st, 2004
    Time: 7-9pm
    Location: Room 1118, IAB

    The Middle East Institute invites you to its End of Year Party. Please join us for Middle Eastern food and wine.


  18. "Out for Love...Be Back Soon": a documentary by Dan Katzir
    Co-sponsored by MEALAC

    Date: Tuesday December 7, 2004
    Time: 8pm
    Location: Room 403, IAB

    "Out for Love...Be Back Soon", is a groundbreaking documentary picturing Dan Katzir in Israel torn by the Oslo agreements and the violent protest against them. The author’s quest for love runs along with the quest for peace, culminating with the murder of P.M Yitzchak Rabin.

    Dan Kazir's grandfather - Aharon Katzir, was killed by the notorious Japanese terrorist Kozo Akomoto at Ben Gurion Airport in 1972. Aharon's brother - Efraim became the fifth president of Israel 1973-1978.


  19. "Iranian Movie Night"

    Co-sponsored by The Columbia Iranian Students Association and the SIPA Iranian Transition

    Movie Screening of "Children of Heaven" - Bacheha-Ye Aseman

    Date: Wednesday, December 8, 2004
    Time: 7:45pm
    Location: Room 403, IAB

    Join us for our second movie screening of the year..."Children of Heaven" directed by Majid Majidi. "Children of Heaven" has recently become Iran's first-ever Oscar Nominee for Best Foreign Language Picture (1998).

    Set in modern-day Iran, the story tells of an eight-year-old boy Ali and his younger sister, Zahra, who are accustomed to shouldering much responsibility. When Ali loses Zahra's only-and recently mended-pair of shoes, the siblings are too scared to tell their father about the loss and can't afford to buy another pair. When the shoes are finally found on another girl, who probably needs them just as much, it's up to the boy to find a way to get his sister a new pair of shoes. A fascinating film about the lower rungs of society, where what you wear on your feet says much about your status.


  20. "The Next Administration -- How Will It Deal With The Middle East?"
    By Rita Hauser

    Date: Thursday December 9, 2004
    Time: 12:30-2:00pm
    Location: Room 1118, IAB

    Rita E. Hauser is President of The Hauser Foundation. She is an international lawyer and of counsel to the New York City law firm, Stroock & Stroock & Lavan where she was a senior partner for more than twenty years. Dr. Hauser was appointed by President George W. Bush to the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board and to the Intelligence Oversight Board.

+ Events - SPRING 2004

  1. Arab, Turkish and Iranian Films: Cinema East Spring Schedule


  2. The Middle East Institute Presents: "Iran: The Role of Women in the Reform Process" by Mehrangiz Kar

    Mehrangiz Kar, is a human rights lawyer, writer, essayist, and former editor of the now-banned Zan literary review. Her work as an activist for women's rights often put her in conflict with the Iranian authorities. Kar has published widely on women's issues in Iran. Her publications include Children of Addiction: Social and Legal Position of the Children of Addicted Parents in Iran (1990); Quest for Identity: the Image of Iranian Women in Prehistory and History (1992).

    Monday, May 3rd, 2004
    12:30pm - 2:00pm
    Room 1118, International Affairs Building


  3. The Student Council on Islamic World Affairs and the Middle East Institute of Columbia University Present: "The View From Inside: Iran's Nuclear Ambitions" by Prof. Nasser Hadian

    Prof. Hadian is a Visiting Adjunct Professor at Columbia’s Department of Middle Eastern and Asian Languages and Cultures. He is a member of the faculty of Law and Politics at the University of Tehran, and has contributed to various publications with regard to Iranian domestic politics.

    Thursday, April 29th, 2004
    12:30pm - 2:00pm
    Room 1118, International Affairs Building

  4. The Middle East Institute Presents: "The New Israeli Historians"
    by Ilan Greilsammer

    Prof. Greilsammer is a full Professor in Comparative Politics and Israeli Politics at the Department of Political Science of Bar- Ilan University (Ramat-Gan, Tel-Aviv) and Director of the Center for European Studies of Bar-Ilan University. He is the author of a dozen of books on French politics and Israeli politics. He holds a PhD in Political Science from the University of Paris I (Panthéon-Sorbonne).

    Monday, April 19th, 2004
    12:30pm - 2:00pm
    Room 1118 International Affairs Building

  5. The Middle East Institute Presents: "Civil Society And The Battle For The Arab Soul" by Saad Ibrahim

    Born in Egypt, Prof. Ibrahim received his education at Cairo University and U. of Washington. He is also the founder and first Secretary General of the Arab Organization for Human Rights (1983-87). Because of their advocacy of democracy and defense of human rights, he and 27 of his associates were arrested in 2000, tried and convicted twice and sentenced by an Egyptian State Security Court to 7 years at hard labor. Upon an appeal Egypt's highest Court of Cassation tried him a third time, acquitted him and his 27 associates of all charges. Saad Ibrahim is a visiting professor this Spring at Columbia University and New York University.

    Monday, April 12th, 2004
    12:30pm - 2:00pm
    Room 1118, International Affairs Building

  6. The International Media and Communications (IMC) program at SIPA and the Middle East Institute Presents: "The Iran Hostage Crisis - Roots of Reform?" by Bill Berkeley

    Bill Berkeley is a former reporter and editorial writer for The New York Times and the author of The Graves Are Not Yet Full -- Race, Tribe and Power in the Heart of Africa (2001).

    Prof. Berkeley has just returned from his second journey to Iran this year. He will give an update on his current book project, a reexamination of the Iran hostage crisis as seen from the vantage point of a generation later. He is focusing on the surviving Iranian hostage-takers, some of whom have emerged in middle age as leading figures in Iran's embattled reformist movement, in vehement opposition to the ruling mullahs in whose name they acted in their youth.

    The talk was videotaped and can be viewed at http://www.columbia.edu/cu/news/media