Security in Context

Security in Context

Security in Context is a podcast project from the research network of the same name, aimed at promoting new thinking on security from a global perspective. It features discussions about key questions on peace and conflict, the political economy of security and insecurity, militarism, and geopolitics, as they intersect with the processes of climate change, population movement, and the reorganization of global powers. In order to delve into these topics, we interview writers, researchers, activists and professionals from inside and outside the Security in Context network.

  1. ١٦ يونيو

    Arang Keshavarzian: Space and Regionalism in the Persian Gulf

    NOTE: This episode is an audio version of our video “Arang Keshavarzian: Space and Regionalism in the Persian Gulf” from June 15, 2026. ⁠⁠⁠Click here to watch the original video⁠.⁠ The statements made and opinions expressed in this publication are solely the responsibility of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Security in Context network, its partner organizations, or its funders. In this episode, Professor Arang Keshavarzian discusses the historical context of contemporary issues in the Persian Gulf. This episode is the sixth in a series that aims to educate the public about the history, past and present, of the US relationship with the Middle East from different perspectives. This lecture series is part of a broader research initiative "Rethinking US Middle East Policy: Past, Present, and Prospects", a collaboration between Security in Context and the Arab Studies Institute. Arang Keshavarzian is a professor at New York University. His fields of research and teaching are comparative politics of the Middle East with a focus on issues related to political economy, contentious politics, spatialization of politics. Much of his research and writing focuses on modern Iran and the Persian Gulf. His 2024 book, "Making Space For the Gulf: Histories of Regionalism and the Middle East," reveals how for over a century capitalism, empire-building, geopolitics, and urbanism have conditioned and been shaped by different understandings of the Persian Gulf as a region. From this vantage point the Gulf comes into view as a mutable, unbounded space and a dynamic assemblage of social relations, rather than a fixed object, timeless national territory, or civilizational boundary. His approach reveals how the Gulf has been globalized through transnational relations, regionalized as a geopolitical category, and cleaved along myriad national divisions and enduring inequalities. For more please visit www.securityincontext.org or follow us on X @SecurityContext

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  2. ١٣ يونيو

    Negar Razavi: The Geopolitics of Expertise and the US Israeli War on Iran and Lebanon

    NOTE: This episode is an audio version of our video “Negar Razavi: The Geopolitics of Expertise and the US Israeli War on Iran and Lebanon” from June 8, 2026. ⁠⁠Click here to watch the original video⁠.⁠ The statements made and opinions expressed in this publication are solely the responsibility of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Security in Context network, its partner organizations, or its funders. In this episode, Dr. Negar Razavi discusses the geopolitical issues in association with Israel and the United States' conflict with Iran and Lebanon. This episode is the fifth in a series that aims to educate the public about the history, past and present, of the US relationship with the Middle East from different perspectives. This lecture series is part of a broader research initiative "Rethinking US Middle East Policy: Past, Present, and Prospects", a collaboration between Security in Context and the Arab Studies Institute. Dr. Negar Razavi is a Senior Researcher at Security in Context and a political anthropologist at the MRC, where she is working on her first book on the role of think tank experts in shaping U.S. security policies toward the Middle East generally and Iran specifically. Broadly, Razavi’s work sits at the intersections of critical security studies, anthropology, gender studies, human rights, and global Middle East studies. Razavi has published her research in Social Text, Political and Legal Anthropology Review (PoLAR), Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, and Critical Studies on Security. As a publicly-engaged scholar, she has also shared her findings in Security in Context, Jadaliyya, the Iran Podcast, the Message, GenderAvenger, and the Middle East Report. For more please visit ⁠www.securityincontext.org⁠ or follow us on X ⁠@SecurityContext

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  3. ١٣ يونيو

    Toby Craig Jones: US Empire and the Middle East

    NOTE: This episode is an audio version of our video “Toby Craig Jones: US Empire and the Middle East” from June 1, 2026. ⁠⁠Click here to watch the original video⁠.⁠ The statements made and opinions expressed in this publication are solely the responsibility of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Security in Context network, its partner organizations, or its funders. This episode features historian Toby Craig Jones discussing the historical context of the current Iran conflict and the ongoing events in the Persian Gulf as it pertains to both the Middle East and the United States. This episode is the fourth in a series that aims to educate the public about the history, past and present, of the US relationship with the Middle East from different perspectives. This lecture series is part of a broader research initiative "Rethinking US Middle East Policy: Past, Present, and Prospects", a collaboration between Security in Context and the Arab Studies Institute. Toby Craig Jones is associate professor of history at Rutgers University, New Brunswick. He teaches courses on global environmental history, energy, and the modern Middle East. During 2008-2009 he was a fellow at Princeton University's Oil, Energy, and the Middle East project. From 2004 to early 2006 Jones worked as the Persian Gulf political analyst for the International Crisis Group. His research interests focus on the environment, energy, and the history of science and technology. He is the author of Desert Kingdom: How Oil and Water Forged Modern Saudi Arabia (Harvard University Press, 2010), Running Dry: Essays on Energy, Water and Environmental Crisis (Rutgers University Press, 2015), and is currently working America's Oil Wars (under contract at Harvard University Press). He has written for the International Journal of Middle East Studies, Journal of American History, Middle East Report, Raritan Quarterly Review, The Nation, The Atlantic, the London Review of Books, the New York Times, and elsewhere. In 2015 Jones was recognized as a Rutgers Chancellor’s Scholar for distinguished scholarship. For more please visit ⁠www.securityincontext.org⁠ or follow us on X ⁠@SecurityContext

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  4. ١١ يونيو

    Aaron Berman: Abraham Rihbany, Amin Rihany, and America's Arab Nationalists

    NOTE: This episode is an audio version of our video “Aaron Berman: Abraham Rihbany, Amin Rihany, and America's Arab Nationalists” from May 19, 2026. ⁠Click here to watch the original video⁠. The statements made and opinions expressed in this publication are solely the responsibility of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Security in Context network, its partner organizations, or its funders. In this episode, Aaron Berman discusses the historical context of his book "America's Arab Nationalists: From the Ottoman Revolution to the Rise of Hitler." This episode is the second in a series that aims to educate the public about the history, past and present, of the US relationship with the Middle East from different perspectives. This lecture series is part of a broader research initiative "Rethinking US Middle East Policy: Past, Present, and Prospects", a collaboration between Security in Context and the Arab Studies Institute. Aaron Berman is Professor Emeritus of History at Hampshire College. He received his doctorate in American History from Columbia University. His first book, Nazism, the Jews and American Zionism explained how American Jewry’s understanding of their own history shaped the Zionist response to the extermination of European Jewry. His research interests center on the history of nationalism (particularly Arab and Jewish nationalisms) and internationalism. For eleven years he served as Dean of Faculty and Vice President for Academic Affairs at Hampshire College. For more please visit www.securityincontext.org or follow us on X @SecurityContext

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  5. ١١ يونيو

    Mouin Rabbani: US, Israel, and the Palestinians

    NOTE: This episode is an audio version of our video “Understanding Iran's Grand Strategy: A discussion with Vali Nasr” from May 11, 2026. ⁠⁠Click here to watch the original video⁠.⁠ The statements made and opinions expressed in this publication are solely the responsibility of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Security in Context network, its partner organizations, or its funders. This episode features analyst Mouin Rabbani discussing the historical context of US, Israel, and Palestine relations. This episode is the first in a series that aims to educate the public about the history, past and present, of the US relationship with the Middle East from different perspectives. This lecture series is part of a broader research initiative "Rethinking US Middle East Policy: Past, Present, and Prospects", a collaboration between Security in Context and the Arab Studies Institute. Mouin Rabbani is a co-editor of Jadaliyya, where he also hosts the Connections podcast and edits its Quick Thoughts feature. He is also the managing editor and associate editor of the Journal of Peacebuilding and Development and a contributing editor of Middle East Report. In addition, Rabbani is a nonresident fellow at the Center for Conflict and Humanitarian Studies (CHS) and at Democracy for the Arab World Now (DAWN). For more please visit www.securityincontext.org or follow us on X @SecurityContext

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    India-Pakistan Tensions and the Indus Waters Treaty: An Interview with Daanish Mustafa

    NOTE: This episode is an audio version of our video interview “India-Pakistan Tensions and the Indus Waters Treaty: An Interview with Daanish Mustafa” from Jun 20, 2025. ⁠Click here to watch the original video⁠. The statements made and opinions expressed in this publication are solely the responsibility of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Security in Context network, its partner organizations, or its funders. Security in Context's Anita Fuentes interviews Daanish Mustafa on the recent India-Pakistan crisis. Professor Daanish Mustafa obtained his BA in Geography from Middlebury College, USA, his MA from University of Hawai'i Manoa, and his PhD in Geography from University of Colorado. He has taught at George Mason University in Fairfax, VA and then at the University of South Florida, St Petersburg, before finding his intellectual home in the Department of Geography. While at King's, he has received the School of Social Science and Public Policy excellence in teaching award. His research has been funded by the Belmont Forum, International Development Research Centre (IDRC), Department for International Development (DfID), Natural Environment Research Council (NERC), National Geographic Society, Royal Geographical Society, and the British Academy. Daanish was the co-author of the first climate change response strategies for Pakistan, in addition to being the lead author for the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) in Pakistan five-year flood response strategy. In addition, he has also undertaken policy-related work with the DfID, International Organization for Migration (IOM), Stimson Centre, and United States Institute for Peace (USIP). For more please visit www.securityincontext.org or follow us on X @SecurityContext

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Security in Context is a podcast project from the research network of the same name, aimed at promoting new thinking on security from a global perspective. It features discussions about key questions on peace and conflict, the political economy of security and insecurity, militarism, and geopolitics, as they intersect with the processes of climate change, population movement, and the reorganization of global powers. In order to delve into these topics, we interview writers, researchers, activists and professionals from inside and outside the Security in Context network.