One World Lecture Series: Prof. Elizabeth Nugent (NWL)

Primary tabs

Age Group:

Adult
Please note you are looking at an event that has already happened.
Registration for this event is no longer open.

Program Description

Description

ONE WORLD LECTURE: "THE POLITICS OF REPRESSION IN THE MIDDLE EAST"

SUMMARY STATEMENT: The legacies of repression in Egypt and Tunisia contributed to developments in each country after the 2011 'Arab Spring' uprisings. This lecture will dissect the ways in which repression affects groups psychologically, and during moments during possible democratic transitions.  In Tunisia, political actors faced widespread repression under long-serving authoritarian president Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali (1987-2010), and this facilitated cooperation and compromise after Ben Ali's fall. Meanwhile in Egypt, targeted repression against the Muslim Brotherhood under authoritarian president Hosni Mubarak (1981-2011) created a polarized atmosphere, undermining the cooperative behavior necessary for political reform. 

REGISTER BELOW

Elizabeth R. Nugent is assistant professor of political science at Yale University. Her research explores the political psychology of religion and repression in the Middle East, and has been published in the American Journal of Political Science, Comparative Politics Studies, Journal of Conflict Resolution, and Political Science Research and Methods. Dr. Nugent received her doctorate in politics from Princeton University with a specialization in comparative politics and a focus on the Middle East in June 2017. During AY2017-2018, she was a postdoctoral research fellow with the Middle East Initiative at Harvard Kennedy School of Government's Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs. She also holds a B.A. in Arabic and an M.A. in Arab Studies, both from Georgetown University. She served as an AY2007-2008 Fulbright Fellow in Cairo, Egypt and has conducted fieldwork for a variety of projects in Egypt, Lebanon, Tunisia, and the United Arab Emirates.

SUPPORT: This series is made possible with a grant from the Stanley D. and Hinda N. Fisher Foundation, administered by the Hartford Foundation for Public Giving.

LINKS to ONE WORLD LECTURE Dates:
Oct. 25, 2018 [Thur., 7PM] - Prof. Cheryl Greenberg
     “Why Not Restrict Hate Speech? (An Historical Perspective)”
Nov. 14, 2018 [Wed., 7PM] - Prof. Fiona Vernal
     "How Did West Indians Become the Largest Foreign-Born Population in Connecticut?”
Dec. 6, 2018 [Thur., 7PM] - Prof. Okey Ndibe
     “The Seduction of Silence: Five Reasons Not to Surrender!”
Jan. 9, 2019 [Wed., 7PM] - Prof. Mary-Jane Rubenstein 
     “God and the Multiverse: A Melodrama” 
• Feb. 10, 2019 [Sun., 2PM] - Prof. Thomas S. Harrington
     "Is Resurgent Nationalism a Threat or a Renewal?: Exploring the Case of Catalonia"
March 12, 2019 [Tues., 7PM] - Prof. Edward Stringham
     "How Markets and the Invisible Hand Creates Order in Society: From PayPal to the Blockchain"  
March 26, 2019 [Tues. 7PM] - Prof. Elizabeth R. Nugent
     "The Politics of Repression in the Middle East"
Sept, 19, 2019 [Thur. 7PM] - Prof. Ian Shapiro [Moved from May 9 to Sept. 19]
     "Democratic Competition: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly"
Oct. 10, 2019 [Thur. 7PM] - Prof. Peter Gottschalk
     "Feeling the Difference: Islamophobia and the Emotions of Intolerance in US History"

PARKING: There is ample library parking in the nearby Isham Garage. Please bypass the garage payment kiosks and come directly to the lecture in the Noah Webster Library Meeting Room, 20 South Main Street, where you may validate your parking with your license plate number.