July 11-13, 2023, Cambridge UK

3 DAYS / 10 Workshops
MORE THAN 200 ACADEMIC PAPERS

The Future of Yemen

Yemen is building new political structures following the upheavals of 2011 and the election of an interim president in 2012. A transition process aims to create a system that will include previously disadvantaged groups and find ways of meeting the aspirations of all Yemenis. There is a special focus on Saada in the north and in the lands of the formerly independent South Yemen. The international community, with the GCC in the lead, is p ...


Yemen is building new political structures following the upheavals of 2011 and the election of an interim president in 2012. A transition process aims to create a system that will include previously disadvantaged groups and find ways of meeting the aspirations of all Yemenis. There is a special focus on Saada in the north and in the lands of the formerly independent South Yemen. The international community, with the GCC in the lead, is playing a critical role in helping Yemen to manage the transition. Yemenis will need to work together and with their international friends to deal with the many profound economic and social problems and to find better ways of countering terrorism. The workshop will examine these issues in depth, analyse their causes, and suggest ideas that will help Yemenis to find solutions. 

The year 2014 is likely to be a momentous one for the future of Yemen. An agreement between Yemen and the GCC, in association with the United Nations Security Council, 2 in November 2012 for a process of political transition should have led to the adoption of a new constitution and elections for a new president and parliament. A parallel restructuring of the military and security forces is being designed to bring these institutions under the supervision of an elected government. The international community, led by the GCC, has promised to provide massive economic support. While these developments offer the prospect of a much better future for Yemen and its peoples, the process could still fail or only partially succeed because of a number of very difficult problems: the question of the future of the south, the problem in Saada, the presence of Al-Qaeda and the profound economic and social problems that contribute to, and reflect, Yemen’s impoverishment. Even if the political transition process does succeed, the new authorities will have to deal with these issues. It is important that they are fully understood. The workshop seeks to attract papers that will analyse the most important problems in order to understand the causes and identify obstacles to implementing solutions.  




Share on



More

Details


Workshop

Directors


Dr. Noel

Brehony

British Yemeni Society Member, Advisory Board -
London Middle East Institute at SOAS



Dr. Saud Saleh

AlSarhan

Director of Research -
King Faisal Centre for Research and Islamic Studies


Copyright ©️ 2009 - 2024 Gulf Research Centre Cambridge. All rights reserved.
Terms, Conditions and Privacy Policy