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Quick Thoughts / Hugh Roberts on Algeria's Ongoing Protests

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Quick Thoughts
Hugh Roberts on Algeria's Ongoing Protests
{{langos=='en'?('11/04/2019' | todate):('11/04/2019' | artodate)}} - Issue 6.1
Hosted by Mouin Rabbani
In this interview recorded on 1 April 2019, Jadaliyya Co-editor Mouin Rabbani interviews Hugh Roberts, Professor of North African and Middle Eastern History at Tufts University, as Algerian mass protests extend into their eighth week. Roberts is a leading commentator and scholar of Algeria. His most recent works include The Battlefield: Algerian 1988-2002. Studies In A Broken Polity (Verso 2003). The interview covers a wide range of issues, including the most recent developments in the protest movement, the context of their emergence and the various actors involved, and a prognosis on where things may be heading.

Guests

Hugh Roberts
Hugh Roberts

Specializes in North African and Middle Eastern History

After graduating from Oxford, Roberts undertook doctoral research on Algeria, spending a year teaching English in Bouïra in the Kabylia region and another year as a French Government Scholar at the University of Aix-Marseille while carrying out extensive fieldwork in Algeria in the long vacations. Roberts taught politics and political history in the School of Development Studies at the University of East Anglia from 1976 to 1988 and then worked in London as an independent scholar and free-lance writer in order to be able to follow the developing crisis in Algeria full time.

In 1997, he returned to academic life as a Senior Research Fellow at the London School of Economics, a post Roberts held till 2002. In 2001 he lived in Cairo until 2012, continuing my work on Algeria, conducting additional research on Egyptian political history and the history of Islamism in North Africa and working for the International Crisis Group as Director of its North Africa Project in 2002-2007 and again from January to July 2011. Hugh Roberts have also taught at the Institute of Development Studies at the University of Sussex (1986-7), the University of California, Berkeley (spring semester 1996) and the School of Oriental and African Studies at the University of London (1997-8).

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