Beyond Political Islam: the Muslim Brotherhood
and the Future of the Middle East
Thursday 01 November, 2012
6 - 8pm, $5/Rsvp
New York University, School of Law
108 West 3rd Street, Lipton Hall
Tarek Masoud, an associate professor at Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government, will deliver a public lecture, “Beyond Political Islam: The Muslim Brotherhood and the Future of the Middle East,†on Thursday, Nov. 1, 6 p.m., at NYU’s School of Law, D’Agostino Hall, Lipton Hall (108 West 3rd Street, between Sullivan and MacDougal Streets). Registration begins at 5:30 PM, and the lecture starts at 6 pm. There will be a Q&A session after the lecture, followed by a reception.
The lecture is co-sponsored by NYU’s Center for Dialogues, the Foreign Policy Association, and the World Affairs Councils of America. An RSVP is required by emailing eventsdepartment@fpa.org. Admission is $5, but the admission fee will be waived if “NYU†is mentioned in your registration email. For more information, call 212.481.8100, Ext. 240. Subway Lines: A, B, C, D, E, F, M (W. 4th St.).
A political scientist and Middle East specialist, Masoud focuses on political development in countries that are poor and unfree. He is the author of a forthcoming book on Islamic political parties and is the co-editor of Problems and Methods in the Study of Politics (Cambridge, 2004) and Order, Conflict, and Violence (Cambridge, 2008). His articles and reviews have appeared in the Journal of Democracy, Middle Eastern Law and Governance, Foreign Policy, and the International Journal of Middle East Studies, among other publications.
This lecture is part of the World Affairs Councils of America’s Understanding Muslim Societies Lecture Series, with support provided by a grant from the Carnegie Corporation of New York.
The lecture is co-sponsored by NYU’s Center for Dialogues, the Foreign Policy Association, and the World Affairs Councils of America. An RSVP is required by emailing eventsdepartment@fpa.org. Admission is $5, but the admission fee will be waived if “NYU†is mentioned in your registration email. For more information, call 212.481.8100, Ext. 240. Subway Lines: A, B, C, D, E, F, M (W. 4th St.).
A political scientist and Middle East specialist, Masoud focuses on political development in countries that are poor and unfree. He is the author of a forthcoming book on Islamic political parties and is the co-editor of Problems and Methods in the Study of Politics (Cambridge, 2004) and Order, Conflict, and Violence (Cambridge, 2008). His articles and reviews have appeared in the Journal of Democracy, Middle Eastern Law and Governance, Foreign Policy, and the International Journal of Middle East Studies, among other publications.
This lecture is part of the World Affairs Councils of America’s Understanding Muslim Societies Lecture Series, with support provided by a grant from the Carnegie Corporation of New York.