Middle East & North Africa

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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

Egypt’s Lost Truth

Amal Dib and AbdelGhany Sayed on the Transformation of the Media Scene in 2012–2013

Author/s
Amal Dib
AbdelGhany Sayed

Ennahda in Practice

Democracy, Gender, and Sharia in Tunisia’s New Constitution

Author/s
Karima El Ouazghari
Policy Brief

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