Crisis in the Geopolitics of MENA: “The more things change, the more they stay the same”

This event is organised by MEI Political Economy cluster.

 

A year ago, the Middle East region was in a state of flux in certain ways, but seemed to be stabilising in others. Confrontation paradigms were giving way to what seemed to be de-escalation plans: Normalisation of relations between Saudi and Iran, and the widening of the Abraham Accords, among others.  October 7 upended all of that – or did it? Dr HA Hellyer will examine how things have changed – and how, indeed, they’ve stayed the same.

This public talk was conducted both in-person and online via Zoom on Wednesday, 17 April 2024, from 4.30 pm to 6 pm SGT.

Watch the full talk here:

Listen to the full event here:


 

Photo Caption: A salvo of rockets is fired by Palestinian militants from Gaza towards Israel on October 10, 2023. – Israel said it recaptured Gaza border areas from Hamas as the war’s death toll passed 3,000 on October 10, the fourth day of gruelling fighting since the Islamists launched a surprise attack. (Photo by MAHMUD HAMS / AFP)

About the Speakers
Dr. H. A. Hellyer FRHistS
Senior Associate Fellow | International Security Studies
Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security Studies, London

Dr H. A. Hellyer, a British scholar of geopolitics, security studies, and belief, has more than 20 years of senior experience in academic, governmental, and corporate advisory environments in Europe, USA, South-east Asia, and the Middle East. He is Senior Associate Fellow in International Security Studies at the Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security (RUSI) in London, and holds a simultaneous attachment as scholar in the Middle East Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington DC. He was appointed Deputy Convenor of the Home Office Taskforce on tackling radicalisation within the Counter-Terrorism Team by the UK government. He has held research posts at the Brookings Institution, Harvard University, the Atlantic Council, and Cambridge University, and regularly contributes to international media networks including the BBC, Foreign Policy, and The New York Times.

Dr Clemens Chay
Research Fellow
Middle East Institute, National University of Singapore

[Moderator] Dr Clemens Chay is a research fellow at the National University of Singapore’s Middle East Institute. His research focuses on the history and politics of the Gulf states, with a particular emphasis on Kuwait, Oman and Qatar. At MEI he spearheads a public education series entitled “Bridging the Gulf”. His recent academic publications include a chapter that examines Kuwait’s parliamentary politics in The Routledge Handbook of Persian Gulf Politics (2020), a chapter in the edited volume Informal Politics in the Middle East (Hurst, 2021), and a study appearing in the Journal of Arabian Studies, titled “The Dīwāniyya Tradition in Modern Kuwait: An Interlinked Space and Practice.” His commentaries also feature across different outlets, including ISPI, KFCRIS, and AGSIW. He is currently working on a book project related to Kuwait’s diwaniyas (affectionately known as diwawin, and more widely known as majalis outside Kuwait), the reception rooms for informal meetings that have implications for society, politics and diplomacy.

Prior to joining MEI, Dr Chay was the Al-Sabah fellow at Durham University, where he taught and completed his PhD in Middle Eastern and Islamic studies, and where he also received an MSc in defence, development and diplomacy. He is also a Sciences Po Paris alumnus, having read his BA at the Menton campus.

Event Details

Hybrid Event

1. Middle East Institute, NUS
MEI Conference Room
29 Heng Mui Keng Terrace
Blk B #06-06 Singapore 119620

2. via zoom

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