Middle East & North Africa

Share

Recent publications

Building Energy Institutions in a Conflict Zone

Interventions by International Organisations in Afghanistan

How do international development organisations develop institutional capacity in conflict zones? Here we take a descriptive, topological perspective on the question, using the case of Afghanistan. For twenty years prior to the capture of Afghanistan by the Taliban in August 2021 the international community directed substantial resources to Afghanistan, seeking to build a democratic state. Here we examine selected, energy-related aspects of those institution-building processes, taking the country as a case study of institutional development for energy and other transitions that is explicitly driven by particular values. We find that this institutional development can be categorized in terms of three main themes: development of a regulatory framework for the energy sector; privatisation of energy systems; and women's empowerment in terms of knowledge, skills and engagement in energy sector provisioning. 

Author/s
Dr. Abdullah Fahimi
External Publications

Improvisieren als Strategie

Erfahrungen beim Schutz der Zivilbevölkerung in Südsudan

Author/s
Sebastian Gräfe
Externe Publikationen

Atomdeal mit Iran

Die Hardliner werden nicht stillhalten

Author/s
Dr. Ali Fathollah-Nejad
Externe Publikationen

Events

Past events

19:00 - 20:30 | 22 Sep 2011

Friedensgutachten 2011

Die Aufbrüche in der arabischen Welt als Herausforderung für Türkei und EU

Das Friedensgutachten 2011 stellt revolutionäre Umbrüche, Krieg und Intervention im arabischen Raum an den Anfang seiner Bilanz. Diese haben die europäische Politik überrascht. Was sagt das über Europa aus?

DGAP Regionalforum NRW
Bonn
09:00 | 11 - 21 Jul 2011

“A revolution is not a democracy”

15th DGAP International Summer School

Although the Western media has already shifting its focus to other topics, the revolutions in Egypt and Tunisia are far from over. How will the events in North Africa affect democracy and security in the region? Can the West play a positive role moving forward?

Program Event
15:30 - 17:00 | 07 Jul 2011

Germany, France, and the Tunisian Spring

What positions have Germany and France adopted in the light of mass demonstrations and regime change in Tunisia? What is expectated of Germany, France, and the EU by Tunisia and other Arab states during the process of transformation? These questions were discussed at the “German-French Future Dialogue” by Sami Ben Sassi, Internet activist from Tunis, Béligh Nabli, director of research at the French Council on Foreign Relations and Strategy (IRIS) in Paris, and Klemens Semtner, head of the task force on transformation partnership with Tunisia in the German Foreign Office.

Program Event
Diskussion
12:00 - 13:30 | 05 Jul 2011

Demokratischer Wandel in Tunesien

Außenminister Mohamed Mouldi Kefi in der DGAP

Mit dem Sturz Ben Alis Mitte Januar hat Tunesien den Grundstein für einen Entwicklungsprozess gelegt, der inzwischen neben Ägypten auch auf andere Staaten der Region übergegriffen hat. Seither ist eine Übergangsregierung im Amt, die sich in dem nordafrikanischen Land um Stabilität und Demokratisierung bemüht.

Veranstaltung der Gesellschaft
Vortrag
10:00 - 18:00 | 01 Jul 2011

After the Arab Spring

Expectations for Summer, Fall, and Winter

How will the Arab world develop after its stormy spring? This was one of the questions that Jack A. Goldstone of George Mason University, Paul Freiherr von Maltzahn, executive vice-president German Council on Foreign Relations (DGAP), and Almut Möller, head of the Alfred von Oppenheim-Center for European Policy Studies at the DGAP discussed.

Council Event

Further Topics & Regions