While there is near consensus among mainstream Islamist leaders in key Arab countries and Turkey on the value of democratic participation—that is, contestation for power via competitive elections—it remains unclear what impact involvement in electoral politics has on Islamist political parties. Do they moderate their politics and strategies in an effort to gain ground politically and, if so, in what ways?

Presentations focused on dilemmas facing the Justice and Development Party in Turkey and how it handled them; calls for changes in goals and strategies by Islamist parties in Egypt, Jordan and Kuwait; and the impact of participation by the Islamic Action Front in Jordan in a coalition of 13 opposition groups, the Higher Committee for the Co-ordination of Opposition Parties. Presentations by these USIP grantees were followed by a roundtable discussion.

Speakers

  • Janine Astrid Clark
    Associate Professor of Political Science
    University of Guelph, Toronto
  • Dr. Sultan Tepe
    Assistant Professor of Political Science
    University of Illinois, Chicago
  • Dr. Carrie Rosefsky Wickham
    Associate Professor of Political Science
    Emory University, Atlanta
  • Dr. Daniel Brumberg, Discussant
    Associate Professor, Georgetown University
    Special Advisor, U.S. Institute of Peace Muslim World Initiative
  • Dr. Judy Barsalou, Discussant
    Director of Grants, U.S. Institute of Peace

Media Inquiries

Please contact the Office of Public Affairs and Communications at 202.429.3832.

Latest Publications

The Red Sea Crisis Goes Beyond the Houthis

The Red Sea Crisis Goes Beyond the Houthis

Friday, July 19, 2024

The Red Sea is in crisis. At the center of the storm are Yemen’s Houthi rebels, who have unleashed a wave of attacks on ships traversing one of the world’s most pivotal maritime straits, putatively in support of Hamas’s war against Israel. The Houthi gambit in the Red Sea is imposing serious costs on global trade, as did the problem of Somali piracy, which reached its peak in 2010. The United States and some of its allies have stepped in to militarily suppress the threat, bombing Houthi positions inside Yemen. But although this episode is illustrative of the difficulties of Red Sea security, the crisis extends far beyond the trouble emanating from Yemen.

Type: Analysis

Conflict Analysis & Prevention

Saisir l'Instant : Le Rôle de la Diaspora dans l'Avenir d'Haïti

Saisir l'Instant : Le Rôle de la Diaspora dans l'Avenir d'Haïti

Wednesday, July 17, 2024

En début juillet, le Premier ministre haïtien Gary Conille a effectué sa première visite à Washington, où il a cherché à mobiliser la diaspora haïtienne pour qu'elle soit plus active dans la restauration de la gouvernance, de la sécurité et du développement d'Haïti, tout en s'opposant à la « fatigue d'Haïti » qui affecte les autorités officielles de Washington. La diaspora haïtienne est un atout important pour les efforts multinationaux visant à résoudre les crises auxquelles le pays est confronté aujourd'hui et pourrait être un facteur déterminant dans la construction d'un avenir durable et prospère.

Type: Analysis

Global Policy

Ugandans Wield Faith and Youth Against Climate-Fueled Violence

Ugandans Wield Faith and Youth Against Climate-Fueled Violence

Thursday, July 18, 2024

At age five, Muhsin Kaduyu began following his father, a respected imam in southern Uganda, on missions of peace — constant meetings, mediations, consolations and prayers among Muslims and Christians in their town and surrounding farmlands. So years later, Kaduyu felt sickened when Islamist suicide bombers killed 74 soccer fans in a crowd near his university, deforming and defaming his faith. That bombing, and an anti-Muslim backlash, ignited a life’s mission that has made Kaduyu a prominent peacebuilder among millions of Ugandans who struggle for survival, prosperity and peace amid communal conflicts, violent extremism and growing climate disaster.

Type: Analysis

EnvironmentReligionViolent Extremism

View All Publications