The pressing water shortages, extreme population growth, and high food dependency rates lie at the roots of the contemporary food crisis in the MENA region. These circumstances will exaggerate in...Show moreThe pressing water shortages, extreme population growth, and high food dependency rates lie at the roots of the contemporary food crisis in the MENA region. These circumstances will exaggerate in the near future, leading to even more challenges in guaranteeing food security. There is an ongoing academic debate on whether the region should focus on the international food market or strive for food self-sufficiency. According to some, the former lies at the roots of the food crisis, while the latter is challenging because of climate issues. To contribute to this debate, this thesis critically examines the coming about of the food crisis based on food regime theory. It takes Tunisia, Morocco, and Egypt as case studies to reflect on the agricultural policy in the MENA region from the colonial period onwards. There is a large focus on the neoliberal food regime, being the current global system of food production, consumption, and distribution that can be characterised by 1) a liberalised agricultural market, 2) a centralisation of power and wealth through large agribusiness from the Global North, 3) a focus on the export market and 4) the significant role of International Financial Institutions like the WB and the IMF. This thesis expounds on the contemporary food crisis in the MENA region, both in socio-economic and ecological terms, and explores the relationship between the neoliberal food regime and these issues. As for prospects, it suggests combining food self-sufficiency with the global market, striving for a fair and sustainable global food system that takes into account the contemporary context, its historical background, economic and collaboration opportunities and ecological restrictions. This entails a critical reflection on the role of the persisting Global North in the contemporary food regime and the global food crisis.Show less
Research master thesis | Middle Eastern Studies (research) (MA)
open access
This project investigates how memory contributes to the reproduction and contestation of processes of economic dispossession in Tunisia, examining more specifically the relation between memory and...Show moreThis project investigates how memory contributes to the reproduction and contestation of processes of economic dispossession in Tunisia, examining more specifically the relation between memory and political economy in two directions. First, it investigates the dispossession of memory, that is: how the top-down manufacturing and mobilisation of collective memory has consolidated feelings of marginalisation and exclusion among subordinated individuals and social groups, aiming to perpetuate existing social and economic hierarchies. Second, this study also seeks to explore the memory of dispossession, particularly with reference to how the memory of dispossession is experienced from below and eventually contested. Building on Gramscian notions of hegemony, the project argues that struggles over memory are a crucial aspect in processes of dispossession, their reproduction from above, as well as challenges to them from below in Tunisia.Show less
The thesis is about the polarization in Israeli society between the ultra-Orthodox and secular population. This polarization is largely caused by a difference of opinion about Israeli identity and...Show moreThe thesis is about the polarization in Israeli society between the ultra-Orthodox and secular population. This polarization is largely caused by a difference of opinion about Israeli identity and the political power of the ultra-Orthodox political parties.Show less
The current international order, the Liberal International Order, has become increasingly unpopular both in the Global North and South. There are multiple factors that are to blame for this like...Show moreThe current international order, the Liberal International Order, has become increasingly unpopular both in the Global North and South. There are multiple factors that are to blame for this like the effects of neoliberalism or a feeling of exclusion for the countries that diver from being a liberal democracy. At the same time, China's unorthodox rise has proven to the world that a country does not need to be a liberal democracy to succeed. Therefore, China is creating a system that would enable more diversity for the Global South. One important region that might switch from the current system to China's alternative is the Middle East. The Middle East will benefit more from China since they are investing billions of dollars in the Middle East through the Belt and Road Initiative projects. At the same time, the Middle East will not have to comply with Western values anymore which will create both benefits and implications for the region in the future.Show less