From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dutch-Palestinian political analyst
Mouin Rabbani (
Arabic : معين رباني ) is a
Dutch -
Palestinian
Middle East analyst specializing in the
Arab-Israeli conflict and
Palestinian affairs.
[1]
[2] Rabbani is based in
Amman ,
Jordan
[1] and was a Senior Analyst for the
International Crisis Group , the Palestine Director of the
Palestine American Research Center , a Project Director for the
Association of Netherlands Municipalities , and a volunteer and General Editor for
Al Haq .
[2] Rabbani is currently a senior fellow at the
Institute for Palestine Studies ,
[2]
[3] a co-editor of
Jadaliyya ,
[4] and a Contributing Editor to the
Middle East Report .
[2]
Background
Rabbani was born in
Heerenveen , Netherlands. He received his B.A. in History and International Relations from
Tufts University in 1986. Additionally, Mouin Rabbani received his M.A. in Contemporary Arab Studies from
Georgetown University .
[5]
[6]
[7] For a short period of time, Rabbani worked for the
United Nations Office of the Special Envoy for
Syria before resigning in 2014.
[8]
Writing
Rabbani has written for a variety of publications including
Third World Quarterly ,
[2]
Journal of Palestine Studies ,
[2]
The Nation ,
[1]
Foreign Policy ,
[9]
London Review of Books ,
[10]
[11] and
The Hill .
[12] His opinion and analysis has been cited by international news media such as
The New York Times ,
[13]
[14]
The Guardian ,
[15]
Reuters ,
[16]
Haaretz ,
[17]
The Washington Post ,
[18] and
Al Jazeera .
[3]
[19] Unlike some of his contemporaries, he has been critical of the feasibility of a
one-state solution to the Israel–Palestine conflict, at least in the short term.
[20]
Book
Interviews
References
^
a
b
c
"Author Bios: Mouin Rabbani" .
The Nation . Retrieved 2012-10-10 .
^
a
b
c
d
e
f
"IPS Fellow: Mouin Rabbani" .
Institute for Palestine Studies . Retrieved 2012-10-10 .
^
a
b Samaha, Nour (2012-09-22).
"Palestine statehood team a 'cause of concern' " .
Al Jazeera . Retrieved 2012-10-10 .
^
"Bio: Mouin Rabbani" .
Jadaliyya . Retrieved 2012-10-14 .
^
"PARC Who We Are:Mouin Rabbani" .
Palestinian American Research Center . Retrieved 2012-10-14 .
^
"This House believes that after Gaza, Arab unity is dead and buried" . The Doha Debates. Archived from
the original on 2013-02-04. Retrieved 2012-10-14 .
^
"NIMEP INSIGHTS: Volume II, Spring 2006" .
Tufts University . Retrieved 2012-10-14 .
^ Rabbani, Mouin.
"Mr Freeze" .
London Review of Books . Retrieved 2024-03-18 .
^ Rabbani, Mouin (2012-10-10).
"Humpty Dumpty Was Pushed" .
Foreign Policy . Retrieved 2012-10-10 .
^ Rabbani, Mouin.
"Abbas's Next Move" .
London Review of Books . Retrieved 2012-10-10 .
^ Khalidi, Rashid (September 30, 2011).
"The Palestinians' Next Move" . The National Interest . Retrieved 2012-10-10 .
^ Rabbani, Mouin.
"Palestine at the UN: An alternative strategy" .
The Hill . Retrieved 2012-10-10 .
^ MacFarquhar, Neil (2012-09-18).
"Palestinians Turn to U.N., Where Partition Began" .
The New York Times . Retrieved 2012-10-10 .
^ Rabbani, Mouin.
"Mouin Rabbani Quoted in The New York Times" .
Institute for Palestine Studies . Archived from
the original on 2011-10-25. Retrieved 2012-10-10 .
^ Sherwood, Harriet (2012-10-08).
"Romney on foreign policy: view from Israel and the Palestinian territories" . The Guardian . London. Retrieved 2012-10-11 .
^ Entous, Adam (June 18, 2007).
"After Gaza, some question who was overthrowing whom" . Reuters . Retrieved 2012-10-11 .
^
"PA Finance Minister may use foreign account to ease Western embargo" . Haaretz . 20 April 2007. Retrieved 2012-10-11 .
^ Brulliard, Karin (2012-06-21).
"Palestinian anti-corruption court secures conviction but raises questions of bias" . Washington Post . Retrieved 2012-10-11 .
^ Rabbani, Mouin.
"Mouin Rabbani Quoted on Aljazeera" .
Institute of Palestine Studies . Archived from
the original on 2011-09-27. Retrieved 2012-10-10 .
^ Rabbani, Mouin (28 October 2013).
"What Comes Next: Strategy before solutions" .
Mondoweiss . Retrieved 28 October 2013 .
External links