Status Audio Magazine

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Panels

Critical Online Knowledge on the Middle East
A Panel on Knowledge Production & Critical Media, hosted by Jadaliyya and Orient XXI
{{langos=='en'?('04/06/2019' | todate):('04/06/2019' | artodate)}} - issue 7.1
Hosted by Éric Verdeil

During the last ten years, online news websites, e-zines, and other internet outlets have gained strong visibility and played a significant role in diffusing critical knowledge on the Middle East and North Africa. Critical here refers to approaches informed by social sciences and fieldwork that challenge the mainstream media and governmental storytelling, by offering a multiplicity of angles and discourses, featuring neglected groups such as the youth, women, the poor, and migrants. The rise of these new actors lies at the crossroads of several transformations. The democratization of the Internet, the relative lowering of technological hurdles (for instance related to the use of several langauges), and the rise of social networks have coincided with and facilitated the rise of revolts in the region.

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Critical Online Knowledge on the Middle East: A Panel on Knowledge Production & Critical Media

Guests

Muriam Haleh Davis
Muriam Haleh Davis

Assistant Professor of History at UCSC

Muriam Haleh Davis is an assistant professor of History at the University of California, Santa Cruz. Her current book project studies how the postwar reinvention of a market economy influenced prevailing ideas of race and national identity in Algeria. She is the co-editor of a volume entitled North Africa and the Making of Europe: Institutions, Governance and Culture, and has published articles in the Journal of Contemporary History, the Journal of European Integration History, and Middle East Critique. She is also a co-editor of Jadaliyya's Maghreb Page.

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Thomas Serres
Thomas Serres

Adjunct Professor at UCSC and Researcher with Développement & Société

Thomas Serres has a PhD in political science from the EHESS. He is currently an associated researcher with Développement & Société in Paris and an Adjunct Professor at the University of California-Santa Cruz.  His research focuses on the politics of crisis and trans-nationalization in Algeria

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Alain Gresh
Alain Gresh

Journalist and specalist in the Near East. 

Publication director of Orient XXI. A specialist in the Near East, he is the author of several books, including De quoi la Palestine est-elle le nom ?, Les Liens qui libèrent, 2010 and et Un chant d’amour. Israël-Palestine, une histoire française, with Hélène Aldeguer, éditions La Découverte, 2017.

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Bassam Haddad
Bassam Haddad

Associate Professor at George Mason University

Bassam Haddad is Director of the Middle East and Islamic Studies Program and Associate Professor at the Schar School of Policy and Government at George Mason University. He is the author of Business Networks in Syria: The Political Economy of Authoritarian Resilience (Stanford University Press, 2011). Bassam serves as Founding Editor of the Arab Studies Journal and the Knowledge Production Project. He is co-producer/director of the award-winning documentary film, About Baghdad, and director of the series Arabs and Terrorism. Bassam is Co-Founder/Editor of Jadaliyya Ezine and Executive Director of the Arab Studies Institute. He serves on the Board of the Arab Council for the Social Sciences and is Executive Producer of Status Audio Magazine. Bassam is Co-Project Manager for the Salon Syria Project. Twitter: @4Bassam 

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Cihan Tekay
Cihan Tekay

PhD candidate in Anthropology at The Graduate Center, City University of New York

Cihan Tekay is a PhD candidate in Anthropology at The Graduate Center, City University of New York. She is writing her dissertation on the political economy of Turkey’s electrical infrastructure during the early 20th century, for which she received Social Science Research Council’s International Dissertation Research Fellowship. Her current research interests include the relationships between the rise of global finance, internationalism, worker’s movements and novel forms of citizenship around World War I. She is currently a Graduate Fellow at the Futures Initiative, serving as the program’s Institutional Leadership and Administration Specialist. Previously, she earned her BA from Hampshire College. She is a co-editor of the Turkey page at Jadaliyya. Contact her at ctekay@gradcenter.cuny.edu.

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