Scholar

Morten Valbjørn

H-index: 15
Political science 64%
Sociology 31%
apsamena.bsky.social
#menasky It's award nomination time for the 2024-2025 year! Please send your nominations our way for Best Book, Best Article, Best Dissertation, & Best Paper on MENA politics!

You can find all the details of eligibility & submission below.

Deadline is February 1, so spread the word!
APSA-MENA Section Awards, 2024-25 - APSA MENA POLITICS
The Middle East and North Africa Politics Section of the American Political Science Association (APSA) seek nominations for several awards recognizing exceptional contributions to the field that integ...
apsamena.org
curtisryan.bsky.social
Dear colleagues: I wanted to let you know that award nominations are now open for all 4 awards for the APSA Middle East Politics section. Details on the awards for Best Book, Best Article, Best Dissertation, and Best APSA Paper can be found here: apsamena.org/awards/apsa-... Good luck!
APSA-MENA Section Awards, 2024-25 - APSA MENA POLITICS
The Middle East and North Africa Politics Section of the American Political Science Association (APSA) seek nominations for several awards recognizing exceptional contributions to the field that integ...
apsamena.org
profmabon.bsky.social
I wrote a piece about Saudi Arabia's possible role in preventing a wider regional escalation. Am I confident that this will happen? No. But Saudi Arabia is perhaps best placed to act.

foreignpolicy.com/2024/11/26/s...
The Off-Ramp Runs Through Riyadh
Neither Saudi Arabia nor the new U.S. president wants a broader regional conflict.
foreignpolicy.com

Reposted by: Morten Valbjørn

charlottelysa.bsky.social
Making my debut here with a reminder that the deadline for submitting your panel and paper proposals for next year’s Nordic Conference on Middle Eastern is coming up December 15. Please help us spread the word! Full cfp: nsmes.org/Thirteenth-N...

Hope to see you in Oslo next year!

Reposted by: Morten Valbjørn

maydarwich.bsky.social
(3)Historical junctures —the 1948 Nakba, the 1967 and 1973 wars, and the 1987 and 2000 intifadas— were central to domestic politics in Arab states, leading to upheavals, coups, repression, and instability. The war is likely to profoundly affect the whole region for years to come.

Reposted by: Morten Valbjørn

maydarwich.bsky.social
(2) Ignoring the Palestine issue, especially the question of statehood, in Arab-Israeli normalization deals will not be a recipe for longer-term interstate stability, nor will it lead to acceptance or support by the majority of Arab populations.

Reposted by: Morten Valbjørn

maydarwich.bsky.social
(1) Episodes of Arab-Israeli war and peace have been tied to global dynamics of bipolarity and unipolarity. Most peace negotiations and agreements were sponsored by the United States during uncontested hegemony. Today, the unipolar moment is over.

Reposted by: Morten Valbjørn

maydarwich.bsky.social
By tracing the continuities and differences with previous eras, we draw 3 important lessons:

Reposted by: Morten Valbjørn

maydarwich.bsky.social
On the other, the war generated novel repercussions. “Palestine” now has broader global resonance than Arab and Islamic framings. And the regional alliance structure has been altered, with the “moderate Arab camp” fading and new actors rising and joining the resistance axis.

Reposted by: Morten Valbjørn

maydarwich.bsky.social
while tracing the regional repercussions of the war, we discuss that, on the one hand, the war has revitalized “Palestine” as a central issue, accentuating the so-called Axis of Resistance, and increasing the prominence of the regimes-people divide in Middle Eastern countries.

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