A combination of political consensus, religious inclusion and economic stability is vital to combat the alienation, deprivation and chaos that lead to extremism.
Refugees in South Sudan's Yida camp dispute UNHCR arguments for their relocation once again.
Questioning revolutionaries’ conventional narrative of the January 25 revolution is the only way for Egypt to move forward.
On the fifth anniversary of the uprising, national dialogue is what brought Tunisia to where it is today.
The usual scapegoat returns, with fears that the land tenure system is the main culprit for low production and thus food shortages in a crisis, when it is not.
Five years ago, today, it began. The uprisings had no master narrative – they were a series of micronarratives produced by ordinary people.
Recent terrorist attacks are an opportunity to push for crucial curriculum and educational reforms in Egypt and the Muslim world.
The selective revival of Nasserism by Egypt's current regime may help expand its support base amongst the masses, but only temporarily, as living standards continue to deteriorate.
An interview with the former foreign minister of Tunisia and a senior party adviser to the Ennahdha party.
Violence is manifested in so many ways, yet it is always the violence that comes within the domestic space that leaves many women silenced, especially when the violence leaves no physical scars.