About the Ten Years On Project
The Ten Years On Project, launched in December 2020, seeks to produce analysis, research and pedagogical resources on the Arab Uprisings of 2011 and the ongoing political reverberations of the mass mobilizations that continue throughout the region till today. It's a collaborative, one-year long project organized by the Arab Studies Institute, Princeton's Arab Barometer, and George Mason's Middle East and Islamic Studies Program. The project is co-sponsored by 15 institutions and organizations.
Project Launch Statement, December 202
What can the successes and failures of uprisings teach us about notions of time, space, and people? How do waves of persistent resistance reshape our understandings of “stability”? What precisely is revolution? How do we confront its dark underbelly, counter-revolution? How are these uprisings both continuous with and a rupture from the past? What can they reveal about the intersections and mutually constitutive forces of the local and the global, the political and the economic, the affective and the material? Considering the dire and turbulent conditions in the Middle East and globally, these reflections are more urgent than ever.
We seek to collaboratively reflect on multidisciplinary frameworks that can identify how mass protests take shape. We will attend to both commonalities and differences across spaces and times, centering gender, race, sect, class, and the environment as key arenas of experience, theory, surveillance, and resistance.
Over the coming year, we will curate events and projects to reflect on the tenth anniversary of the Arab uprisings. Workshops, panels, and roundtables as well as a variety of artistic expressions, a podcast series, a resources module/portal, and ultimately a volume will attend to these questions and visions. This endeavor centers multiplicity in contributions, disciplines, frameworks, and geographies. We are particularly interested in forging space for scholars, organizers, and revolutionaries from the Arab world and the Middle East and North Africa more broadly. We hope to feature events and knowledge production in Arabic, Turkish, and Farsi.
This was originally a collaborative effort between the Arab Studies Institute, Princeton’s Arab Barometer project, George Mason University’s Middle East and Islamic Studies Program, and Georgetown University’s Center for Contemporary Arab Studies. It quickly expanded and gained more partners from other institutions across the region, as well as Europe and the United States. The collective includes: Arab Studies Institute, Princeton’s Arab Barometer, GMU’s Middle East and Islamic Studies Project, Georgetown University (Center for Contemporary Arab Studies), the Arab Council for Social Sciences (ACSS), American University of Beirut’s Asfari Institute, Brown University (Center for Middle East Studies), UC Santa Barbara (Center for Middle East Studies), University of Chicago (Center for Contemporary Theory), Harvard University’s Center for Middle East Studies, University of Exeter’s Institute of Arab and Islamic Studies, Birzeit University’s Department of Political Science, Stanford University’s Center for Democracy, Development, and Rule of Law, AUC Affiliates, Georgetown University (Qatar), The Global Academy (MESA Affiliated), and Institute of Palestine Studies.
We seek to collaboratively reflect on multidisciplinary frameworks that can identify how mass protests take shape. We will attend to both commonalities and differences across spaces and times, centering gender, race, sect, class, and the environment as key arenas of experience, theory, surveillance, and resistance.
Over the coming year, we will curate events and projects to reflect on the tenth anniversary of the Arab uprisings. Workshops, panels, and roundtables as well as a variety of artistic expressions, a podcast series, a resources module/portal, and ultimately a volume will attend to these questions and visions. This endeavor centers multiplicity in contributions, disciplines, frameworks, and geographies. We are particularly interested in forging space for scholars, organizers, and revolutionaries from the Arab world and the Middle East and North Africa more broadly. We hope to feature events and knowledge production in Arabic, Turkish, and Farsi.
This was originally a collaborative effort between the Arab Studies Institute, Princeton’s Arab Barometer project, George Mason University’s Middle East and Islamic Studies Program, and Georgetown University’s Center for Contemporary Arab Studies. It quickly expanded and gained more partners from other institutions across the region, as well as Europe and the United States. The collective includes: Arab Studies Institute, Princeton’s Arab Barometer, GMU’s Middle East and Islamic Studies Project, Georgetown University (Center for Contemporary Arab Studies), the Arab Council for Social Sciences (ACSS), American University of Beirut’s Asfari Institute, Brown University (Center for Middle East Studies), UC Santa Barbara (Center for Middle East Studies), University of Chicago (Center for Contemporary Theory), Harvard University’s Center for Middle East Studies, University of Exeter’s Institute of Arab and Islamic Studies, Birzeit University’s Department of Political Science, Stanford University’s Center for Democracy, Development, and Rule of Law, AUC Affiliates, Georgetown University (Qatar), The Global Academy (MESA Affiliated), and Institute of Palestine Studies.