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Events

War-Torn: The Unmaking of Syria

Hosted by the Middle East Centre

ONLINE AND IN-PERSON PUBLIC EVENT

Speaker

Leïla Vignal

Leïla Vignal

École normale supérieure, Paris

Chair

Deen Sharp

Deen Sharp

ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳

 leila vignal book cover

This event will be the launch of Leïla Vignal's latest book  published by Hurst.

In order to consider the future of Syria, it is crucial to assess not only what has been destroyed, but also how it was destroyed. It is equally vital to address the structural and possibly enduring results of large-scale destruction and displacement. These dynamics are not only at play in Syrian society, but are tearing at the economic fabric and very territorial integrity of the country. If war is a powerful process of human and material destruction, it is equally a powerful process of spatial, social and economic reconfiguration. Nor does it stop at national borders—the unravelling of Syria, and of the idea of Syria, has affected and will continue to affect the entire Middle East.

War-Torn explores these transformations and the processes that fuel them. The book throws light on neglected aspects of the Syrian war, and contributes towards understanding conflicts in the twenty-first century.

Leïla Vignal is Professor of Geography at the École normale supérieure, Paris, and the editor of The Transnational Middle East: People, Places, Borders. Specialised in cities, globalisation and transnational dynamics in the Middle East, since 2011 she has studied the transformations of Syria and of its society through the war.

Deen Sharp is an ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳ Fellow in Human Geography at the Department of Geography and Environment, ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳. He is an urban geographer whose research focuses on the political economy of urbanization in the “Middle East”. He is the co-editor of Beyond the Square: Urbanism and the Arab Uprisings (Urban Research: 2016) and Open Gaza (University in Cairo Press: In Print). He is currently working on a edited volume on the spatial dynamics of the conflict in Syria with Nasser Rabbat, provisionally entitled, Reconstruction as Violence: The case of Syria

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Image: ©Hurst