CENTRE for MEDITERRANEAN, MIDDLE EAST & ISLAMIC STUDIES

  • Ελληνικά
  • English
  • Home
  • About us
    • CEMMIS
    • The team
  • Publications
    • Middle East Flashpoints
    • Middle East Bulletin
    • Policy Papers
    • Points of view
    • Book Reviews
    • Interviews
    • Kurdish Report
    • Turkey Report
    • Society and Culture Review
    • CRPME Reports
  • Resources
  • Multimedia
  • Events
  • Announcements
  • Contact

  • Middle East Flashpoints
  • Middle East Bulletin
  • Policy Papers
  • Points of view
  • Book Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Kurdish Report
  • Turkey Report
  • Society and Culture Review
  • CRPME Reports

Subscribe

captcha 

*Please note that articles are written either in Greek or in English and are not translated.

*CEMMIS collects personal information for the sole purpose of informing the newsletter subscribers about new publications. You may unsubscribe from our newsletter at any time.

  • Home
  • Publications
  • Policy Papers
  • μουσουλμανική αδερφότητα

Displaying items by tag: μουσουλμανική αδερφότητα

Subscribe to this RSS feed
Sunday, 01 October 2017 15:38

Συνέντευξη της Alison Pargeter, συγγραφέα του Return to the Shadows: The Muslim Brotherhood and An-Nahda since the Arab Spring

pdf big

Διαβάστε επίσης τη βιβλιοκριτική του Alison Pargeter, Return to the Shadows: The Muslim Brotherhood and An-Nahda since the Arab Spring (Saqi Books, 2016).

Published in Συνεντεύξεις
Read more...
Sunday, 01 October 2017 14:41

Alison Pargeter, Return to the Shadows: The Muslim Brotherhood and An-Nahda since the Arab Spring, Saqi Books, 2016

Alison Pargeter, Return to the Shadows: The Muslim Brotherhood and An-Nahda since the Arab Spring, Saqi Books, 2016

A lot of ink has been spilt on the role of political Islam in post-Arab Spring politics. In the beginning, there was an assumption of an almost teleological nature whereby the democratic renaissance of the region would at a minimum bring the forces of political Islam to the fore. There was even the potential for it to be rendered the single most important socio-political actor in part of the region. While the first premise has certainly proved true, Alison Pargeter’s book is a detailed, eloquent attempt at explaining the second: political Islam’s inability to ensconce itself in power, once in its antechamber.

Published in Book Reviews
Read more...
Wednesday, 21 June 2017 00:05

Egypt: There and back again | Middle East Bulletin 32

Egypt: There and back again | Middle East Bulletin 32
Published in Middle East Bulletin
Read more...
Tuesday, 30 September 2014 03:00

In the name of 25 January Revolution: Sisi’s neoliberal ‘‘War on Terror’’ and the Muslim Brotherhood’s ideological transformations

More than a year has passed since Abdel Fattah Sisi’s coup d’etat, which led to the ouster of elected President Muhammad Morsi from power. The supporters of the army’s involvement in the political process spoke of a “corrective” movement, that was necessary in order to help the Egyptian people ‘‘save their revolution’’, while President Morsi’s supporters spoke of ‘‘putchists’’ against legitimacy and ‘‘usurpers’’ of 25 January’s legacy. Since then, both sides have clashed politically and ideologically on the streets, the suburbs, the universities, the Press and social media, fiercely defending their claim as protectors of the same revolution.
Published in Points of view
Read more...
Sunday, 01 February 2009 02:00

Bernard Rougier (ed.), Qu'est-ce que le salafisme?, Paris: PUF (Presses Universitaires de France), 2008

Bernard Rougier (ed.), Qu'est-ce que le salafisme?, Paris: PUF (Presses Universitaires de France), 2008

A series of French and foreign scholars and researchers have embarked on an effort to approach a phenomenon that has increased in ìpopularityî since 9/11 in western media, academic communities and thinkñtanks; however, it still remains widely ambiguous. Analyses which focus on extremist movements in the Muslim world quite often use the term ìSalafismî along with ìJihadismî, ìWahhabismî and ìextremist Islamî. This kind of mixing of theological, militant and political terms obscures more than it reveals while confusing the reader and intensifying his or hers already troubled perception of the phenomenon under discussion. This work - the first one to approach the Salafist phenomenon under a global prism - sheds light on the course of salafism from its cradle in the Arabian Peninsula to its apparition in the Parisian suburbs, passing by the Middle Eastern world and particularly Morocco.

Published in Book Reviews
Read more...
Saturday, 01 November 2008 02:00

Brynjar Lia, Architect of Global Jihad, New York: Columbia University Press, 2008

Brynjar Lia, Architect of Global Jihad, New York: Columbia University Press, 2008

Under different circumstances Abu Musíab al-Suri could have been an established academic as he is characterized by strict methodological adherence, intellectual arrogance, inclination to self-citation, strained relations with colleagues and thirst for recognition. Nevertheless, the current international situation renders his candidacy for a university chair out of question. Hence, he rightfully occupies a position in the unofficial intelligencia of militant jihadi Islamism and he holds the undisputed chairmanship in the ëdepartment of strategics. However, more than that and besides his intellectualism, he is an ëadeptí heir of the tradition of field guerrilla warfare theoreticians. If unconventional warfare is doomed to irrelevance in the face of superior technology, organization and intelligence of the modern armies, Suri appears to give it a new breath.

Published in Book Reviews
Read more...
Wednesday, 05 September 2012 03:00

The relationship between Islam and ideology in relation to the political thought of Hassan al-Banna and Sayyid Qutb

The aim of this essay is to show the way in which the political thought of Hassan al-Banna and Sayyid Qutb has influenced Islam’s non-religious (mainly social and political, i.e. ideological) aspects. The concepts of religion and ideology will be quickly examined both in relation to Islam and to each other as well, al-Banna’s and Qutb’s political thought will be thematically analysed, while in the end a critique will take place.

Published in Policy Papers
Read more...
  • logo with shadow

The Centre for Mediterranean, Middle East & Islamic Studies posts a multitude of positions in the context of free academic debate. These do not necessarily reflect the positions of the CEMMIS. The use and reproduction of the multimedia material displayed in the CEMMIS website has non-profit character and serves academic and educational purposes, with full respect to copyright and intellectual property laws, and in accordance with the Greek Laws 2121/1993 and 2557/1997.

Copyright © Copyright © 2016-17 CEMMIS 2021 All rights reserved. Custom Design by Youjoomla.com