Displaying 71 - 80 of 120.
Under the headline, ’Citizenship and the State,’ Nabīl ‘Abd al-Fattāh writes aboutMuhammad ‘Alī Pāshā’s success in building a modern Egyptian state, based on justice and the equality of all citizens before the law.
The article gives a brief overview of the history of Armenians in Egypt, who have been living as minorities for hundreds of years. It also shows some aspects of their social life.
The author asserts that Egypt is becoming Bedouinised. In part 1 of his study on this subject, the author discusses Bedouin history and culture.
This article sheds light on one of the most important manuscripts that covers the history of Egypt from the first century AD until the modern era. The manuscript was recently reviewed and published after important annexes and references were added.
A discussion of tolerance and the relationship between religion and politics in Egypt from the era of Muhammad Ali, through the Nasser and Sadat years and concluding with two choices for the future for Egypt.
With the end of the Ḥizb Allāh-Israel war, which claimed nearly 900 lives on both sides, a number of Egyptian writers have devoted several articles to the issue, raising questions about what they described as the short-sightedness of the Ḥizb Allāh.
The author reviews the history of the Azhar University. He argues that the university still exists in the world of knowledge.
Dr. Jason Thompson, history professor at AUC, emphasizes the role that orientalists have played in intercultural understanding.
The author discusses citizenship rights in Egypt exposing the opinions of various Egyptian prominent figures during a seminar held by the High Council for Culture.
The author deals with the issue of democracy and how Egypt was a liberal state until the outbreak of the 1952 revolution that brought a military regime in power, which disbanded all political parties and established a one-party system with no clear political agenda in mind.

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