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Recent episodes
"Barbarian” Women: North African Literary Perspectives on Emancipation
Jun 15, 2026
57m 57s
Contingency of Structures: Triggers and the Social Geography of Revolutionary Episodes in Iran 2017–2022
May 12, 2026
35m 33s
Decolonizing Security Studies - a North African perspective
Apr 14, 2026
51m 40s
An Autocratic Middle Class? State Dependency and Protest in the Middle East and North Africa
Mar 17, 2026
50m 32s
Saudi Arabia and the Global Trajectory of Islamic Law
Feb 18, 2026
56m 27s
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| Date | Episode | Topics | Guests | Brands | Places | Keywords | Sponsor | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6/15/26 | ![]() "Barbarian” Women: North African Literary Perspectives on Emancipation | Dr Farah Ben Jemaa (University of Manouba) delivered this seminar at the MEC, chaired by Professor Michael Willis (St Antony’s College), as part of the Gender and Sexuality Seminars series. This talk examines examples of North African literature, from early twentieth-century texts to more recent works. These writings question forms of female emancipation associated with Western norms and imaginaries, while opening space for alternatives rooted in affects and collective experience. The talk will also reflect on the methodological approaches — particularly spatial ones — that may help us read and understand these literary representations. Farah Ben Jemaa is a professeure agrégée of French literature at the University of Tunis. Her research focuses on space and representations of the self in modern and contemporary literature. She completed a PhD in French Literature at the University of Manouba, with a dissertation on spatiality in the work of Valery Larbaud. She has published on authors including Georges Perec, René Char, and Valery Larbaud, as well as on contemporary cultural productions and artistic practices. Her recent work explores alternative cartographies, and the intersections of literature, politics, and feminist critique. She is currently a visiting academic at St Antony’s College for the Trinity term, thanks to the support of the Hazem Ben-Gacem Tunisia-Oxford Cooperation Programme. | 57m 57s | ||||||
| 5/12/26 | ![]() Contingency of Structures: Triggers and the Social Geography of Revolutionary Episodes in Iran 2017–2022✨ | revolutionary episodessocial geography+4 | Dr Ali Kadivar | Boston CollegeRadcliffe Institute for Advanced Study+1 | — | Iranrevolution+5 | — | 35m 33s | |
| 4/14/26 | ![]() Decolonizing Security Studies - a North African perspective✨ | DecolonizationSecurity Studies+3 | Nizar Messari | Al Akhawayn UniversitySt Antony’s College+5 | — | DecolonizationSecurity Studies+3 | — | 51m 40s | |
| 3/17/26 | ![]() An Autocratic Middle Class? State Dependency and Protest in the Middle East and North Africa✨ | public sector employmentanti-regime protests+5 | Professor Neil Ketchley | St Antony’s College | AlgeriaEgypt+4 | public sectorprotests+6 | — | 50m 32s | |
| 2/18/26 | ![]() Saudi Arabia and the Global Trajectory of Islamic Law✨ | Islamic lawSaudi legal thought+4 | Dr Dominik Krell | Wolfson CollegeMagdalen College | Saudi ArabiaThe Gambia+2 | Saudi ArabiaIslamic law+6 | — | 56m 27s | |
| 11/25/25 | ![]() Seeds in the Rubble: Cultural Vitality in the Arab World✨ | Cultural VitalityArab World+4 | Sultan Sooud Al-Qassemi | Barjeel Art FoundationNew York University+10 | Arab Gulf States | Arab WorldCultural Vitality+5 | — | 1h 04m 49s | |
| 11/21/25 | ![]() Egypt’s Role, Identity, and Foreign Policy in a River of De-Nile✨ | Egypt's foreign policynational identity+3 | Dr May Darwich | University of BirminghamSt Antony’s College | EgyptArab world | Egyptforeign policy+5 | — | 34m 45s | |
| 11/21/25 | ![]() Morocco’s Party of Justice and Development in Government: The Experience and the Future✨ | Moroccopolitics+4 | Mustapha El Khalfi | Middle East CentreOxford University | Morocco | MoroccoJustice and Development Party+5 | — | 1h 37m 41s | |
| 10/31/25 | ![]() NGOization of the Palestinian civil society post-Oslo: our community-based ways out✨ | Palestinian civil societyNGOization+5 | Dr Amal NazzalSoheir Asaad | Rawa | Palestine | Palestinian civil societyNGOization+8 | — | 1h 05m 49s | |
| 10/20/25 | ![]() Gaza Genocide as a Symptom: Fragile World Order and Regional Impacts✨ | Gazagenocide+3 | Ahmet Davutoğlu | Middle East CentreTürkiye | — | Gazagenocide+4 | — | 1h 00m 57s | |
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| 9/30/25 | ![]() Big Tech and the Automation of Genocide in Gaza✨ | Big TechAutomation+4 | Dr Samer Abdelnour | University of Edinburgh Business SchoolMiddle East Centre | — | Big TechAutomation+5 | — | 1h 02m 13s | |
| 5/30/25 | ![]() The Devaki Jain Lecture - Empowered voices: Jordanian women shaping their future | The Middle East Centre was honoured to host the 2025 Devaki Jain Lecture. This year’s lecture was delivered by Rana Husseini, Jordanian activist, journalist and author. The Middle East Centre was honoured to host the 2025 Devaki Jain Lecture. This year’s lecture was delivered by Rana Husseini, Jordanian activist, journalist and author. The Devaki Jain lecture series, established in 2015 by Devaki Jain, welcomes esteemed women speakers from the South. Past speakers have included Dr Graça Machel, Professor Eudine Barriteau, and Dr Noeleen Heyzer. Rana Husseini is an internationally recognized human rights activist, gender trainer and a senior journalist with more than 25 years’ experience in the Middle East and North Africa. She has published two books, ‘Murder in the Name of Honour’ and ‘Years of Struggle – The Women’s Movement in Jordan’. This lecture was chaired by Professor Eugene Rogan. | 1h 05m 20s | ||||||
| 5/27/25 | ![]() Liberation Theology in Palestine | A paper delivered by Rev. Dr Mitri Alraheb at the Palestine Research Centre symposium held at the MEC on Friday 9 May 2025. This paper was part of a panel chaired by Professor Eugene Rogan. A paper delivered by Rev. Dr Mitri Alraheb at the Palestine Research Centre symposium held at the Middle East Centre on Friday 9 May 2025. The symposium was entitled ‘Toward an Inclusive Archaeological and Historical Narrative of Palestine: The Archaeology and History of Palestine’. This paper was part of a panel chaired by Professor Eugene Rogan. | 17m 21s | ||||||
| 5/27/25 | ![]() Towards an Inclusive Narrative, History, and Methodology | A paper delivered by Dr Hamdan Taha at the Palestine Research Centre symposium held at the MEC on Friday 9 May 2025. This paper was part of a panel chaired by Professor Eugene Rogan. A paper delivered by Dr Hamdan Taha at the Palestine Research Centre symposium held at the Middle East Centre on Friday 9 May 2025. The symposium was entitled ‘Toward an Inclusive Archaeological and Historical Narrative of Palestine: The Archaeology and History of Palestine’. This paper was part of a panel chaired by Professor Eugene Rogan. | 15m 27s | ||||||
| 5/23/25 | ![]() After the End of the World: Another Season of War in South Lebanon | In this talk anthropologist Munira Khayyat revisits the South Lebanon borderland, where she has conducted long term fieldwork in the wake of its almost total destruction after the latest season of war there. In this talk anthropologist Munira Khayyat revisits the South Lebanon borderland, where she has conducted long term fieldwork in the wake of its almost total destruction after the latest season of war there. This talk reflects on ecologies of resistance and survival through storms of war and the steadfastness of life after the end of the world. Munira Khayyat is Clinical Associate Professor at NYU Abu Dhabi and currently also Visiting Professor at NYU New York. Chaired by Pascal Menoret, Khalid bin Abdullah Al Saud Professor in the Study of the Contemporary Arab World and Professorial Fellow at Magdalen College. | 56m 20s | ||||||
| 5/22/25 | ![]() The Archaeology and History of Palestine - Book introduction | A paper delivered by Dr Iman Saca at the Palestine Research Centre symposium held at the MEC on Friday 9 May 2025. This paper was part of a panel chaired by Professor Eugene Rogan. A paper delivered by Dr Iman Saca at the Palestine Research Centre symposium held at the Middle East Centre on Friday 9 May 2025. The symposium was entitled ‘Toward an Inclusive Archaeological and Historical Narrative of Palestine: The Archaeology and History of Palestine’. This paper was part of a panel chaired by Professor Eugene Rogan. | 16m 30s | ||||||
| 5/22/25 | ![]() History of the British Mandate in Palestine | A paper delivered by Dr Issam Nassar at the Palestine Research Centre symposium held at the MEC on Friday 9 May 2025. This paper was part of a panel chaired by Professor Eugene Rogan. A paper delivered by Dr Issam Nassar at the Palestine Research Centre symposium held at the Middle East Centre on Friday 9 May 2025. The symposium was entitled ‘Toward an Inclusive Archaeological and Historical Narrative of Palestine: The Archaeology and History of Palestine’. This paper was part of a panel chaired by Professor Eugene Rogan. | 16m 43s | ||||||
| 5/22/25 | ![]() New Critical Assessment of the Archaeology and History of Palestine During the Early and Middle Islamic Periods | A paper delivered by Dr Mahmoud Hawari at the Palestine Research Centre symposium held at the MEC on Friday 9 May 2025. This paper was part of a panel chaired by Professor Eugene Rogan. A paper delivered by Dr Mahmoud Hawari at the Palestine Research Centre symposium held at the Middle East Centre on Friday 9 May 2025. The symposium was entitled ‘Toward an Inclusive Archaeological and Historical Narrative of Palestine: The Archaeology and History of Palestine’. This paper was part of a panel chaired by Professor Eugene Rogan. | 16m 41s | ||||||
| 5/22/25 | ![]() Palestine Research Centre symposium at the MEC – Opening remarks | Speech delivered by H.E. Dr Mohammad Shtayyeh, Chairman of the Palestine Research Centre and former Palestinian Prime Minister, at a symposium held at the MEC on Friday 9 May 2025. Speech delivered by H.E. Dr Mohammad Shtayyeh, Chairman of the Palestine Research Centre and former Palestinian Prime Minister, at a symposium held at the MEC on Friday 9 May 2025.The symposium was entitled ‘Toward an Inclusive Archaeological and Historical Narrative of Palestine: The Archaeology and History of Palestine’. | 22m 35s | ||||||
| 5/22/25 | ![]() The Prehistory of Palestine | A paper delivered by Dr Ghattas Sayej at the Palestine Research Centre symposium held at the MEC on Friday 9 May 2025. This paper was part of a panel chaired by Professor Eugene Rogan. A paper delivered by Dr Ghattas Sayej at the Palestine Research Centre symposium held at the Middle East Centre on Friday 9 May 2025. The symposium was entitled ‘Toward an Inclusive Archaeological and Historical Narrative of Palestine: The Archaeology and History of Palestine’. This paper was part of a panel chaired by Professor Eugene Rogan. | 14m 03s | ||||||
| 5/22/25 | ![]() Philip Michael Wolfson on Dame Zaha Hadid and the 10 Year Anniversary of the Investcorp Building | Former head of design for Dame Zaha Hadid, Philip Michael Wolfson, reflects on her work and career in the first of two lectures marking the 10-year anniversary of the Investcorp Building. Former head of design for Dame Zaha Hadid, Philip Michael Wolfson, reflects on her work and career in the first of two lectures marking the 10-year anniversary of the Investcorp Building. The iconic building, opened by Dame Zaha Hadid in May 2015, is at the heart of the Middle East Centre today. It was the last of her buildings for which she attended the opening ceremony before her tragic death in 2016. | 50m 15s | ||||||
| 3/6/25 | ![]() The chaos (fawḍà) Bashshar al-Asad warned against – Damascus University 10th November 2005 – and present-day Syria | On Friday 21 February 2025, Professor Johannes Waardenburg gave the Middle East Centre’s Friday seminar Biography: Professor JST Waardenburg teaches the general history of the Arab world at the IULM in Milan. As a historian, he specialises in the period of the Ba‘th party in power in 20th century Syria. In 2021 he published two volumes with the Nallino Institut in Rome, ‘La Siria contemporanea : ridisegnando la carta del Vicino Oriente’, in which he describes the transformations of the state economy in Syria and the diverse international backing the As‘ad family has enjoyed. Abstract: With the fall of the al-Asad dynasty in Syria in the early hours of Sunday 8th December 2024, nearly fourteen years after the start of the Arab Spring, a question arises: Has the warning given by Bashshar al-Asad in his speech at Damascus University in the autumn of 2005 come true? Have his departure and the breakdown of al-muqāwamah wa-l-ṣumūd – identified commonly as the strategy of resistance – really brought chaos to the region? If that is not the case, why did the decisive actors keep him in power in Syria for approximatively another 20 years after he made that presentation? Imagining al-Asad bluffed while he felt the whole international community was after him in the 2005 follow-up to the murder of Rafīq al-Ḥarīrī, the Prime Minister who oversaw Lebanon’s reconstruction*, why did no one at the time call his bluff out? Rather, looking at the remarkably rapid reintroduction of Bashshar al-Asad to the international scene after 2005, this presentation will try to assess critically what the chaos was that everyone was afraid of in the event of the al-Asads falling then. Why does this same chaos seem manageable now? Have Western actors together with Turkey and the Gulf countries simply studied the regional setup better, or might the incidence of Israel’s forever war strategy have been a decisive factor for others to make a shift unthinkable until recently, for the sake of the future of the region. *To clarify: at 23:03 & 24:08 in the recording, the specification of Rafīq al-Ḥarīrī's title (of Prime Minister) should not be understood as referring to his institutional role at the time of his assassination on 14th February 2005. As he didn't occupy that office anymore back then. al-Ḥarīrī had resigned on 20th October 2004 and a government led by ʿUmar Karāmī had been set up less than a week later on 26th of October. | 51m 18s | ||||||
| 2/19/25 | ![]() Israeli Public Opinion, War and Prospects for Peace | Political strategist and public opinion researcher, Dr Dahlia Scheindlin, shares her analysis of public opinion surveys before and during the war in Gaza. Israelis have shown increasingly hardline, right-wing, nationalist trends in public opinion surveys in recent years, leading to lower support for peace, or faith that any democratic-oriented solution to the conflict is possible. Have October 7 and the war in Gaza changed attitudes? Which trends have displayed continuity, which public attitudes are new, and what kind of future do Israelis support? An analysis of surveys before and during the war shows that Israelis continue to hold hardline attitudes, but they are deeply divided by identity, religion, age and ideology, and angry at their government. They are also responsive to changes in circumstances, and there are still opportunities to re-build support for peace. | 1h 10m 27s | ||||||
| 2/11/25 | ![]() The Axis of Resistance | A panel with Kamran Matin (University of Sussex), Yasmeen al-Eryani (Tampere Peace Research Institute) and Neil Ketchley (University of Oxford). Chaired by Raihan Ismail (University of Oxford). | 53m 35s | ||||||
| 2/7/25 | ![]() Sudan's current war: a longer view on peacemaking and prospects | A talk from Dr Richard Barltrop, Visiting Senior Fellow at the LSE Middle East Centre, reflecting on the current war in Sudan and exploring lessons from the longer history of peacemaking in Sudan and other recent civil wars. Bio: Richard is a Visiting Senior Fellow at the LSE Middle East Centre. His research is on contemporary international approaches to peacemaking, and why peace processes fail or succeed, with a particular focus on Yemen, Sudan and South Sudan, and considering other examples. Richard specialises in work on mediation, peace processes and peacebuilding, and international approaches to conflict, development and peace, focusing on the Middle East and Africa. Since 2001 he has worked for the UN Development Programme in Iraq, Libya, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Yemen and regionally, and for the UN peacekeeping mission in South Sudan and the UN political mission in Yemen. He is the author of Darfur and the International Community: The Challenges of Conflict Resolution in Sudan (IB Tauris/Bloomsbury, 2011/2015) and was a visiting fellow at Durham University in 2015. He has a DPhil in International Relations from the University of Oxford. Abstract: In April Sudan will enter the third year of a war that has caused enormous harm to lives, has been ruinous for the country, and shows no sign of ending. The war was unexpected; it is different from previous wars in Sudan’s conflict-ridden modern history; and it is occurring at a time when international politics is not favourable for concerted external and multilateral action to bring about and support peace. For Sudanese and outsiders, an immediate priority is how can lives be protected and suffering minimised. Beyond this, a fundamental question is peace: how can the war be ended and a lasting peace be established? This seminar explores what lessons should be drawn from the longer history of peacemaking in Sudan and from the experience and outcomes of peacemaking efforts in other civil wars in recent times. From this, three main recommendations emerge for Sudanese and external actors. The recommendations concern: (i) the need in the immediate and near term for external actors to push for a ceasefire and to accept the relative benefit of the Sudanese Armed Forces having some ascendancy in the war; (ii) the need to take a long-term approach to peace process and peacebuilding; and (iii) the need to prioritise and support the development of Sudanese vision for and ownership of a peace process for Sudan. | 1h 00m 07s | ||||||
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