Archive for 'Politics'
The Iranian Narrative Landscape Stirs
by Jeffry R. Halverson Recently, the Islamic Republic of Iran has been abuzz over the release of a video entitled “The Coming is Very Near,” a 28-minute production created by a group of Twelver Shi‘a devotees of the Hidden Imam al-Mahdi, known as the Harbingers of the Coming (perhaps associated with the Hojjatieh Society). It [...]
Posted: April 21st, 2011 under Analysis, Framing, Iran, Islam, Narrative, Politics, Religion.
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New Third Way Narrative Poses Challenge to U.S. Strategic Communication
by Bud Goodall There is a new narrative responsible for the success of the uprisings that spread from Tunisia through Egypt and now are heard in the streets of Syria, Yemen, Libya, and elsewhere. It is a secular narrative generated by young Muslims who recognize that older jihadist forms of “telling their resistance story” by [...]
Posted: April 11th, 2011 under Analysis, Counterterrorism, Diplomacy, Egypt, Intelligence, Islam, Israel, Language, Movements, Narrative, Obama, Politics, Religion, Strategic Comm..
Comments: 4
Egypt and Iran: A Tale of Two Narratives
by Jeffry R. Halverson and Steven R. Corman Recent events in Egypt have led some quarters to suggest we are witnessing a case parallel to the 1979 revolution in Iran. Back then, the fall of the Shah left a political vacuum that allowed religious hardliners to take control and create a new theocratic and stridently [...]
Posted: February 21st, 2011 under Egypt, Iran, Narrative, Politics.
Comments: 3
Should We Fear Muslim Brotherhood Influence in Egypt?
by Jeffry R. Halverson There are a lot of questions and speculation about the Ikhwan al-Muslimun (The Muslim Brotherhood, or MB) and their role in the future of Egypt. The coverage of the organization in the U.S. media has been better than expected. However, I am still struck by some of the more ominous rhetoric [...]
Posted: February 4th, 2011 under Egypt, Government, Islam, Muslim Brotherhood, Politics, Religion, Sharia.
Comments: 4
Park51 Imagery and the Rhetoric of Contested Space
by Lisa Braverman A couple of weeks ago as I skimmed the news, I saw the freshly-released images of the Park51 Community Center (colloquially known as the “Ground Zero Mosque”). In the same sitting, I also performed my semi-regular check of a former professor’s co-authored blog, No Caption Needed. Perusing the two in such short [...]
Posted: October 27th, 2010 under Analysis, Framing, Image, Politics, Popular Culture, Sensemaking, Strategic Comm..
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Foreign Reaction to U.S. Anti-Muslim Events, Part III: Assorted Incidents
by Steven R. Corman, Jeffry R. Halverson, and Chris Lundry So far in this series we have looked at two high-profile anti-Muslim incidents in the U.S. Part I focused on the Park51 project, the so-called Ground Zero Mosque. In part II we looked at the controversy surrounding the “International Burn a Qur’an Day,” scheduled for [...]
Posted: September 9th, 2010 under Analysis, Framing, Image, Islam, Politics.
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Foreign Reactions to US Anti-Muslim Events, Part II: Qur’an Burning Day
by Steven R. Corman, Jeffry R. Halverson, and Chris Lundry This is the second of a four-part series of posts on foreign reactions to recent anti-Muslim rhetoric in the U.S. In Part I we looked at the Park51 project, also known as the “Ground Zero Mosque,” and found concern over growing anti-Muslim sentiment in the U.S. There [...]
Posted: September 8th, 2010 under Analysis, Image, Indonesia, Islam, Media, Narrative, Politics, Religion, Southeast Asia.
Comments: 1
Foreign Reaction to US Anti-Muslim Events, Part I: Ground-Zero Mosque
by Steven R. Corman, Jeffry R. Halverson, and Chris Lundry Recent weeks have seen an uptick in anti-Muslim events and associated rhetoric in the U.S. Controversies include: The Park51 project in New York, popularly known as the “Ground Zero Mosque” The International Burn a Quran Day being planned for 9/11 by the Dove World Outreach [...]
Posted: September 7th, 2010 under Analysis, Image, Islam, Media, Politics.
Comments: 1
Narrative Closure Eludes Obama in Latest Speech
The president announced that we were “turning the page” on Operation Freedom; but what he failed to do was close the book.
Posted: September 1st, 2010 under Afghanistan, Analysis, Bush, Framing, Iraq, Narrative, Obama, Politics.
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A New Strategy for Somalia
by R. Bennett Furlow To say Somalia has problems would be the very definition of an understatement. Piracy has certainly received its share of attention, primarily because it is sensational and somewhat easy to comprehend. The chaos in the south also gets some attention due to the rise of Islamists groups and the potential for [...]
Posted: July 7th, 2010 under Islam, Movements, Politics, Somaila.
Comments: 1