Sarah Phillips, “Talib or Taliban? Pour obtenir l'appli gratuite, saisissez votre numéro de téléphone mobile. Sarah Phillips, “Assisting al-Qaeda” Foreign Affairs, 30 August 2015. Sarah Phillips, “Yemen” in David Coates (ed.) Sarah Phillips, “Proximities of Violence: Civil Order Beyond Governance Institutions” International Studies Quarterly, 17 June 2019, Sarah Phillips, "Making al-Qa’ida legible: Counter-terrorism and the reproduction of terrorism" European Journal of International Relations, 3 April 2019, pdf ( Listen to Sarah discussing the article ), Sarah Phillips, “Order beyond the state: Explaining Somaliland’s avoidance of maritime piracy” (with Justin Hastings) Journal of Modern African Studies, 65:1, February 2018. 5,0 sur 5 étoiles 1 évaluation. Le pays le plus peuplé de la péninsule arabique et la seule république de cette région du monde ne manque pas de singularités et continue à être l’objet tant de fantasmes que d’ignorance. ( Log Out /  Sarah Phillips, “Yemen” in Ellen Lust (ed.) « Arabie heureuse », « patrie d’origine de Ben Laden », « royaume de la reine de Saba », « pays aux soixante millions d’armes » : les clichés sur le Yémen abondent. Sarah Phillips, "Yemen terrorists are pawns of power," The Australian, 5 April 2011. ( Log Out /  Sarah’s most recent book, When There Was No Aid: War and Peace in Somaliland (Cornell University Press, March 2020), is concerned with the place of war in establishing and maintaining peace and civil order in a place that was unusually isolated from the international system during its foundational years. Critiquing the ‘democratic transitions’ literature, this book explores the ways in which opposition groups and non-state actors (often inadvertently) act in support of the state actors and structures they purport to challenge. Merci d’essayer à nouveau. Trouver tous les livres, en savoir plus sur l'auteur. Infos sur La Plate-forme Auteurs. The book did not go into verbose details but gave a very good overview of the major issues it tackled. The networks of trust and solidarity that are being consolidated are likely to endure. American Democracy Promotion in a Changing Middle East. À la place, notre système tient compte de facteurs tels que l'ancienneté d'un commentaire et si le commentateur a acheté l'article sur Amazon. Although difficult, this is a crucial step. Il y a 0 commentaire et 0 évaluations venant de France, Livraison accélérée gratuite sur des millions d’articles, et bien plus. Change ), You are commenting using your Facebook account. Sarah Phillips, “Yemen” in Ellen Lust (ed.) Sarah Phillips, “Maritime Piracy Business Networks and Institutions in the Horn of Africa and the Gulf of Guinea” (with Justin Hastings) African Affairs 114: 457, 2015, pp. 555-576. Des tiers approuvés ont également recours à ces outils dans le cadre de notre affichage d’annonces. Ces promotions seront appliquées à cet article : Certaines promotions sont cumulables avec d'autres offres promotionnelles, d'autres non. ( Log Out /  Pour en savoir plus, veuillez vous référer aux conditions générales de ces promotions. Les liens de récupération et les ebooks ne peuvent pas être revendus. 95-120. Veuillez renouveler votre requête plus tard. A Must-read for Understanding Modern Yemeni Politics. PDF. Against International Relations Norms: Postcolonial Perspectives, London: Routledge ‘Worlding Beyond the West’ Series, 2017. The informal rules that guide Yemeni society and its dysfunctional political settlement look set to endure, in spite of unprecedented protests. Her research draws from years of in-depth fieldwork, and focuses on international intervention in the global south, knowledge production in conflict-affected states, state-building, and non-state governance, with a geographic focus on the Arabian Peninsula and Horn of Africa. Ce livre contient-il un contenu inapproprié ? Sarah Phillips, “Yemen: The Centrality of Process,” Beyond the Façade: Political Reform in the Arab World (Washington, DC: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 2008) pp. The Middle East, 13th edition (Thousand Oaks: CQ Press, 2014), pp.866-886. Sarah Phillips (Auteur) › Consulter la page Sarah Phillips d'Amazon. Désolé, un problème s'est produit lors de l'enregistrement de vos préférences en matière de cookies. Nombre de pages de l'édition imprimée  Sarah Phillips is a lecturer at the Centre for International Security Studies, The University of Sydney. This episode of One Plus One features Sydney University Centre for International Security Studies academic Dr. Sarah Phillips. Sarah has also been awarded a number of prestigious competitive grants, including three from the Australian Research Council (one examining state-formation and external finance in Somalia/Somaliland, another on the organisational dynamics of maritime pirate organisations and, most recently, a project that will explore perceptions of terrorist groups in conflict-affected states). Drawing on research carried out on the ground in Yemen, this Adelphi examines the shadowy structures that govern political life and sustain a network of social elites predisposed against any far-reaching systemic reform. Sarah Phillips, “When less was more: External assistance and the political settlement in Somaliland” International Affairs 92:3, 2016, pp. Indonesian students in Pakistan and Yemen”, (with Anthony Bubalo, and Samina Yasmeen) Lowy Institute for International Policy, September 2011. Some of them are carrying gruesome pictures of those killed by the regime’s snipers to bolster their argument that the president has lost his legitimacy to rule and must leave. Her research draws on in-depth fieldwork, and focuses on international intervention in the global south, knowledge production in conflict-affected states, state-building, and non-state governance, with a geographic focus on the Arabian Peninsula and Horn of Africa. Sarah Phillips is an Associate Professor in international security and development at The University of Sydney. Sarah Phillips, "Yemen crisis: A domestic affair made worse by foreign meddling", Lowy Interpreter, 30 March 2015. La Conférence de dialogue nationale se termine sur un accord entre toutes les parties engagées. Pour signaler une violation de droits d'auteur. The Middle East is in the midst of considerable and unpredictable changes, but deeply patrimonial political systems do not change overnight – and neither do the international and regional structures that have helped them to endure for so long. Change ), You are commenting using your Twitter account. Sarah G. Phillips, “The Primacy of Domestic Politics and the Reproduction of Poverty and Insecurity” Australian Journal of International Affairs, 74:2 2020, 147-164. On Wednesday, it was reported that the annual aid package – believed to be in the region of $1 billion – has been frozen until further notice, and reports suggest that the US are seeking to cultivate links with the protesters. It looks behind the scenes at the regime's opaque internal politics, at its entrenched patronage system and at the 'rules of the game' that will shape the behaviour of the post-Saleh rulers, to offer insights for how the West may better engage within that game. Impossible d'ajouter l'article à votre liste. Vos articles vus récemment et vos recommandations en vedette. Sarah Phillips, “Who Tried to Kill Ali Abdullah Saleh?” Foreign Policy, 13 June 2011. Un problème s'est produit lors du chargement de ce menu pour le moment. Il analyse également les commentaires pour vérifier leur fiabilité. Sarah also holds a Sydney Outstanding Academic Research (SOAR) Fellowship, and is a Research Associate at the Developmental Leadership Program (University of Birmingham, UK) and a Non-Resident Fellow at the Sana’a Centre for Strategic Studies (Yemen and Lebanon). Indiana: Indiana University Press, 2013. Fragile Politics: Weak States in the Greater Middle East (London: Hurst/Oxford University Press, 2016) p.53-80. 75-89. 630-645. Sarah Phillips, "Western policymakers shouldn't accept this Saleh spin," The Guardian, 10 April 2011. The book takes beyond the headlines of the news and gives you a glimpse as to how that regime operated and how it "managed" never ending crises of the country of Yemen. She has conducted extensive fieldwork (approximately five years total) in the Middle East and the Horn of Africa – particularly in Yemen, Somaliland, Kenya, Jordan, Pakistan, Oman, and Iraq – and has consulted to numerous governments and development agencies on matters pertaining to these areas. Envoyer sur votre Kindle ou un autre appareil. The Adelphi Series, 2011, Listen to Sarah discuss the book at its launch. Change ), Bahrain Independent Commission of Inquiry. © 1996-2020, Amazon.com, Inc. ou ses filiales. Yemen’s Democracy Experiment in Regional Perspective examines the nature of changes to Yemen's power structures, political dynamics and institutions since the intention to democratize was announced in 1990. Christopher Boucek and Marina Ottaway, Carnegie Endowment, Washington D.C., United States, 2010, pp. Oxford University Press, 2012. Pour calculer l'évaluation globale en nombre d'étoiles et la répartition en pourcentage par étoile, nous n'utilisons pas une moyenne simple. Yemeni politics – any state’s politics – is not a zero-sum game, and here is a group of young people that wants reform and wants a seat at the table. Sarah Phillips, “Tracing the Cracks in the Yemeni System” in David A. McMurray and Amanda Ufheil-Somers (eds) The Arab Revolts: Dispatches on Militant Democracy in the Middle East. Aucun appareil Kindle n'est requis. Un véritable succès. As such, they are likely to remember how external actors viewed their nascent project.