the NATO Southern HUB
  • Topics
  • Regions
  • In the news
  • Our Network
  • About us

Home  /  In the news  /  Weekly reading

  Weekly readings










































































































































































































Why Iran Struck Israel Despite the Risks



[ © Stimson ]

 The continued lack of decisive action from Iran, while Israel steadily “salami sliced" the leadership of the Axis of Resistance, risked diminishing Iran’s influence in the region and over its partners and proxies  

Tunisias Economy in the Eye of the Storm



[ © Carnegie Endowment for International Peace ]

 Absent rapid reform, Tunisia’s economic policies will plunge the country into an abyss. Already, a financial crisis is brewing. This is the worrisome outcome of the path the country has followed since President Kais Saied’s power grab in July 2021. The path is underpinned by two main aspects of economic policy.  

Impulser la transformation de la Mauritanie par la réforme de l'architecture financière mondiale



[ © African Development Bank Group ]

 Avec une croissance de 3,4% par an au cours de la période 1980-2019, la Mauritanie a enregistré de bonnes performances économiques au cours des quatre décennies précédant la période de Covid-19, qui l’ont fait passer au rang de pays à « revenu intermédiaire de la tranche inférieure ».  

Improving food security and child health in Burkina Faso in a changing climate



[ © The London School of Economics and Political Science ]

 Burkina Faso, a low-income country in the Sahel region of Africa, has improved many of its human development indicators in recent decades, including reducing child mortality rates. This has been achieved in part through investing to improve nutrition and women’s access to health care through the Universal Health Insurance Scheme  

Modi 3.0: India Confronts New Realities in a Chaotic Middle East



[ © The Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington ]

 After winning India’s general elections in June by a slender majority, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has encountered deepening challenges in the Middle East – a region that generously credited him many foreign policy successes in the last decade. During his first two terms in office (2014-19 and 2019-24), Modi’s renewed focus and proactive approach toward the Middle East  

Africa and the Middle East: The Shift from Geopolitics to Geoeconomics



[ © Policy Center for the New South ]

 In the post-Cold War era, the Middle East and Africa were defined largely by their geopolitical significance. The West, especially the United States and Europe, engaged with these regions through a lens focused on security, energy supply, and strategic alliances. However, this dynamic has shifted significantly over the last two decades.  

Why Gender matters in violent extremist propaganda strategy



[ © International Centre for Counter Terrorism ]

 This policy brief presents the gender representations theoretical framework to analyse how and why gender is used in the propaganda and politico-military strategies of violent extremist movements. It argues that violent extremist ideologies break down in-group and out-group collective identities into individual “good” and “bad” gender identities, or gender representations.  

Reading of the Week: A Wider Middle East War Can Still Be Stopped



[ © International Crisis Group ]

 A year after Hamas’s 7 October 2023 attack in southern Israel, the Middle East is on the cusp of all-out war. Since Israel launched its military response in Gaza, the Biden administration has tried both to broker a ceasefire there and to manage the risk of regional escalation. But the lack of a Gaza deal has fuelled hostilities elsewhere, and today the regional containment effort is at grave risk.  

The UAEs Network-Based Vision for Economic Integration



[ © The Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington ]

 China’s mega Belt and Road Initiative, once President Xi Jinping’s flagship project, does not lack leadership support. Yet, 11 years after its inception, the project has yet to take off as envisioned. Meanwhile, the global trade and investment strategy of the United Arab Emirates – a country of just 11 million people – is providing an alternative vision  

In Lebanon, a Rare Moment of Opportunity



[ © The Washington Institute ]

 On September 30, after a devastating ten-day stretch culminating in Israel’s killing of Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, Lebanon’s caretaker prime minister Najib Mikati announced his government’s support for implementing UN Security Council Resolution 1701. The 2006 resolution was endorsed by Beirut, but the state never implemented its most important provision  

Population Mobility in the Sahel: Implications for Social Protection Programs and Systems



[ © The World Bank ]

 Population mobility in the Sahel is a multifaceted phenomenon. Economic factors play an important role, with many seeking better livelihoods, higher wages, and improved living standards in response to widespread poverty, unemployment, and limited job opportunities. The large scale of internal mobility reflects opportunities and challenges for migrants and their families  

African states on the UN Human Rights Council, 2006-2022



[ © South African Institute of International Affairs ]

 This report examines the record and participation of the African Group at the UN Human Rights Council from 2006 to 2022. The study considers 450 votes and 5 850 voting decisions, with the focus on the African states’ records on country-specific resolutions and civil and political rights. It uses five categories to classify the African Group’s commitment to human rights