Results 31 to 40 of about 268 (161)

After Gaddafi

open access: yes, 2011
The end of Muammar Gaddafi's authoritarian regime in Libya is something that should be celebrated. Gaddafi was an often brutal leader whose involvement in terrorist activities earned him enmity from many. The habits of years of largely unchallenged rule contributed to Gaddafi becoming increasingly strange during the later years of his leadership.
openaire   +2 more sources

Libya and Turkey’s expansion policy in Africa

open access: yesJanus.net, 2017
This article analyzes Turkey’s need to make increased efforts to ameliorate relations with Libya in order to successfully advance the “African Evolution” initiatives.
Serdar Erdurmaz
doaj  

Return governance and diplomacy between Türkiye and Afghanistan

open access: yesInternational Migration, Volume 63, Issue 3, June 2025.
Abstract There is growing scholarly and policy interest in understanding how destination and transit countries develop return migration policies and collaborate with origin countries. This study investigates the dynamics, drivers and outcomes of the collaborative process between Turkish and Afghan authorities in governing the return of Afghan migrants.
Zeynep Sahin‐Mencutek   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

The Smuggling of Migrants from Libyan Shores to Italy: Changes After the End of the Gaddafi Dictatorship

open access: yesQuaderni di Sociologia, 2020
The article analyses the organisation of migrant smuggling from Sub-Saharan African countries to Italy, with a particular focus on Libya. It also examines how this activity changed after the end of the Gaddafi dictatorship.
Stefano Becucci
doaj   +1 more source

Antinomies of Alignment Redux: The United Arab Emirates and the United States

open access: yesMiddle East Policy, Volume 32, Issue 2, Page 134-152, Summer 2025.
Abstract Over the past three decades, the United Arab Emirates has forged a sturdy bilateral security alignment with the United States. It has also pursued foreign policies that conflict with US interests in the Gulf and the broader Middle East. This contradiction is usually attributed to a hedging strategy.
Fred H. Lawson, Matteo Legrenzi
wiley   +1 more source

The Correlation Between External and Internal Factors of the Libyan Crisis

open access: yesVestnik MGIMO-Universiteta, 2015
: Nowadays, the region of Middle East and North Africa has become a "testing ground" where the competition between the great powers takes place . The importance of this region is determined by its geopolitical position, concentration of large natural ...
E. N. Koposova
doaj   +5 more sources

La position des pays de l’ALBA et de l’UNASUR face à la guerre en Libye

open access: yesL’Année du Maghreb, 2012
To better understand the Bolivarian countries’ condemnation of the NATO military intervention in Libya and their support of the legitimacy of the Guide of the Revolution Muammar Gaddafi, we had to examine the Latin American context, since the emergence ...
Hortense Faivre d'Arcier-Flores
doaj   +1 more source

Critical Geopolitics 2.0: Geopolitics in the Web of Life

open access: yesGeography Compass, Volume 19, Issue 5, May 2025.
ABSTRACT In his Oceans Rise, Empires Fall, Gerard Toal reformulates Critical Geopolitics in order to better address our planetary ecological crisis. A renewed attention to some of the classic texts of geopolitics, particularly those of Halford Mackinder, recuperates themes somewhat neglected in readings that focus upon the racist and imperialist ...
Gerry Kearns
wiley   +1 more source

RUSSIAN-LIBYAN RELETIONS IN THE RUSSIAN ACADEMIC LITERATURE OF THE LATE 20TH CENTURY AND THE EARLY 21ST CENTURY

open access: yesRUDN Journal of World History, 2016
This article examines the historiographical problems related to the literature on Russian-Libyan relations. We analyze main characteristics of Russian literature in the coverage of this issue.
Ekaterina S Vysochina
doaj  

Circular and return migration of Egyptian migrant workers in Libya

open access: yesInternational Migration, Volume 63, Issue 2, April 2025.
Abstract The return of Egyptian migrants to Egypt following the onset of crisis in Libya in 2011 raises important questions about their classification as “returnees.” This article demonstrates the impact of the crisis on Egyptians' livelihoods. Field research conducted in Egypt in 2016 reveals that, at least in part, from 2011 onwards Egyptians were ...
Mohamed Elsayeh
wiley   +1 more source

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