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population flows
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Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2018) 29 (1): 36–47.
Published: 01 March 2018
... countries and in
the Middle East. Some are likely to move within or enter EU borders to exact
vengeance. terrorism immigration Mediterranean population flows camps Greek public opinion © 2018 by Mediterranean Affairs, Inc. 2018 ...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2014) 25 (4): 107–123.
Published: 01 December 2014
...El Hassan The Middle East has 10 percent of the planet's land and 5 percent of its population, but it contains less than 1 percent of the world's freshwater resources. Thirteen of the twenty-two members of the Arab League rank among the world's most water-scarce nations. The effects of climate...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2003) 14 (3): 12–24.
Published: 01 September 2003
... extensive list of positive consequences for
the United States and negative consequences for its enemies to flow from the
military defeat of Saddam. Granted, those making the arguments knew that
much of this rhetorical hype was aimed at convincing the American people
to support a preemptive attack...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2013) 24 (2): 59–80.
Published: 01 June 2013
... “normal” citizens. The imperatives of international mobility have forced a country, in a sense, to redraw its boundaries and to acknowledge a different status for a section of its population from a province that it continues to claim. This essay unpacks the puzzle of why supporters of the “integral Kosovo...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2004) 15 (2): 6–16.
Published: 01 June 2004
..., their reactions to different circumstances, and what they
believe to be the grace of God.
The Imperative of Change in the Middle East
If, hypothetically, all factors except population growth were somehow to
remain unchanged, the Middle East would still see monumental change over
the next two...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2018) 29 (1): 48–69.
Published: 01 March 2018
... structure approach in several instances, with special reference to the so-called refugee crisis during 2015–16. It argues that there is no simple and straightforward connection between immigration and an increase of extremism, and that even sudden and massive immigration flows is not a sufficient condition...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2009) 20 (1): 119–144.
Published: 01 March 2009
... of seaborne migrants landing on the island has been rather modest, given the country's small size and very high population density, illegal immigration has become one of Malta's top policy priorities, nationally as well as on the EU level, and it has been calling for more support and burden-sharing mechanisms...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2015) 26 (1): 152–154.
Published: 01 March 2015
... for an appropriate twenty-first-century, Greek expression of psychiatric care amidst
a diverse population.
In part 1, Davis uses the framework of truth games to examine power in therapeutic
settings. “Clinical diagnosis,” she writes, “is the key to the problematic status of truth
in contemporary...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2017) 28 (1): 133–136.
Published: 01 March 2017
.... This is a
highlight of the work, as the policy on non-Ashkenazi Jews remained fluid during the
occupation.
The Holocaust in the Crimea and the North Caucasus has a methodical format. Fol-
lowing a brief history and ethnography, Feferman discusses the flow of refugees into
the regions and eventual evacuation...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2018) 29 (1): 1–18.
Published: 01 March 2018
...-
stitute the strongest military power in the region. Moreover, Iran and Egypt
are also important powers with strong armies, while Israel, which possesses
nuclear weapons, has a comparative advantage over all other states in the
region.
Additionally, a state’s population size is important...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2016) 27 (2): 67–88.
Published: 01 June 2016
... but the meltdown in Syria is by far the most significant driver
of the population shift affecting Europe. By March 2013 the civil war in Syria
had produced 1 million refugees. Six months later that number had doubled.
As the Syrian conflict ebbed and flowed, refugees poured into Jordan, Leba-
non...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2002) 13 (3): 119–134.
Published: 01 September 2002
... among
nations but also among terrorist groups has become a source of concern.
Threats of environmental degradation and massive human rights violations
leading to massive flow of refugees are also issues of concern for national
and international...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2004) 15 (1): 17–38.
Published: 01 March 2004
... made Germany the most populous
country in the EU. But the current expansion will add 100 million people to
the ranks of EU citizenry. This represents a huge increase—about 25 per-
1. Informal European Council, Athens Declaration, 16 April 2003, at httpue.eu.int/pressData/
en/misc/75478.pdf...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2017) 28 (2): 30–52.
Published: 01 June 2017
... percentage of the Greek population that finds itself experi-
Tina Mavrikos-Adamou is adjunct professor of political science at Hofstra University, New York.
Her research and publications focus on migration, civil society, and the democratization process in
the western Balkans and southeastern...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2011) 22 (1): 41–60.
Published: 01 March 2011
...: AY Chromosome Perspective,” Science, no. 290 (2000): 1,155–59. See Also Marijana
Pericic et al., “High-Resolution Phylogenetic Analysis of Southeastern Europe Traces Major Epi-
sodes of Paternal Gene Flow Among Slavic Populations,” Molecular Biology and Evolution, no. 22
(2005): 1,964 – 75.
58...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2009) 20 (2): 113–137.
Published: 01 June 2009
... own energy
resources, as well as its strategic location and control over most export routes
for Central Asian oil and gas, make the country the most important actor
regarding issues related to the outward flow of Caspian Sea Basin (CSB)
energy resources.
China is the world’s most populous...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2017) 28 (3): 131–133.
Published: 01 September 2017
.... Finally, more academic treatises have received publicity as
they seek to provide more sophisticated treatments of the country’s prolonged economic
difficulties. Michael Mitsopoulos and Theodore Pelagidis’s Understanding the Greek
Crisis and Takis S. Pappas’s Populism and Crisis Politics in Greece...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2003) 14 (4): 42–55.
Published: 01 December 2003
.... From this beginning the relationship became mutually ben-
eficial but never truly warm or understanding in either direction.
We knew that Saudi Arabia, with its small population, was a weak reed
militarily, but we counted on the combination of the wealth of the Saudis
and their prestige in being...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2011) 22 (2): 11–19.
Published: 01 June 2011
... recently concerning the problem
of war reparations with regard to the destruction the German armies inflicted
during World War II on the populations and the lands of the various countries
that were occupied. In this essay the special case of Greece is discussed. The
Germans occupied Greece from...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2006) 17 (1): 16–22.
Published: 01 March 2006
... was driven fundamentally by strategic consid-
erations. Israel was concerned with resolving demographic concerns driven
by a declining birthrate within the Green Line and an ever-increasing Pales-
tinian population beyond it, and of course the resolution of the “Palestinian
issue,” while safeguarding...
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