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Alternative Frequencies / Episode 1 - Who Does the Parliament Represent?

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Alternative Frequencies
Episode 1 - Who Does the Parliament Represent?
{{langos=='en'?('14/07/2020' | todate):('14/07/2020' | artodate)}} - Issue 7.2
Hosted by Nadim El-Kak

In the first episode of Alternative Frequencies, Nadim El Kak hosts LCPS Director Sami Atallah who discusses how members of Parliament are disconnected from citizens’ concerns, have relinquished the authorities granted to them as lawmakers, and are incapable of managing Lebanon's overlapping crises.

Courtesy of the Lebanese Center for Policy Studies (LCPS)

Music by Carol-ElShaar

Resources:

In 2018, LCPS published a book on the performance of the Parliament (2009-2017) and released "report cards" for each member of Parliament, which you can access here: http://niyabatanani.com/alhazab.php#

In-depth infographics can also be found here: http://niyabatanani.com/pdf/Infographics.pdf

In a "Government Monitor" series, LCPS looked at recent legislative sessions and examined whether law proposals that passed carried any reform element: https://www.lcps-lebanon.org/agendaArticle.php?id=175

For more from LCPS and "Alternative Frequencies":

Listen and subscribe on Soundcloud , Spotify , or Apple Podcasts!

Guests

Sami Atallah
Sami Atallah

Director of the Lebanese Center for Policy Studies (LCPS)

As Director of the Lebanese Center for Policy Studies (LCPS), Sami Attallah is currently leading several policy studies on the governance of the gas sector, electoral behavior, monitoring the Parliament and political parties, economic diversification, and decentralization and service delivery. From November 2012 till April 2014, Atallah served on the Committee established by the Lebanese Prime Minister to draft a decentralization law. He has several policy and academic publications, and is the editor of Towards Achieving a Transparent and Accountable National Budget in Lebanon (Beirut: LCPS 2013), and co-editor of Local Governments and Public Goods: Assessing Decentralization Experiences in the Arab World (with Mona Harb, Beirut: LCPS 2015). He holds two Master’s degrees in International and Development Economics from Yale University (1996) and in Quantitative Methods from Columbia University (2004), and a PhD in Politics from New York University.

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