3. مدونات مقروؤة

اقرأ المدونات التي صاغها الباحثون والخبراء المدعوين حول بعض القضايا المهمة المتعلقة بكأس العالم لكرة القدم في قطر 2022..

كيف أثرت اقامة كأس العالم في كرة القدم على الاستدامة في قطر وماهي التحديات المتبقية بعد انتهاء المسابقات ؟
Blog 17, May 11, 2021
مدونة 17 ، 11 مايو 2021
كاترين شولتز بارث هي مديرة شركة للاستشارات تحمل اسمها ورئيسة شركة “قطر للاستدامة” ، وهي مؤسسة فكرية وتنفيذية تعمل كمحفز لمحاربة تغير المناخ للاتجاه بدولة قطر نحو مسار أكثر استدامة حيث قوة الفرد – الإجراءات الشخصية وقرارات المستهلك المستنيرة —تغيير السلوكيات وقيادة التنمية المتجددة. وضمن برنامج كأس العالم لكرة القدم قطر 2022 في الفترة من 2012-2015، ساعدت في تحديد و إنشاء استراتيجيات الاستدامة والابتكار على مستوى البرنامج. قامت كاترين شولتز بارث بالتدريس في جامعة هارفارد وجامعة بنسلفانيا وهي مؤلفة مشاركة في كتاب “أنظمة السطح الأخضر: دليل لتخطيط وتصميم وبناء اسطح المباني” (دار نشر وايلي وأولاده ، 2009).

Qatar’s Empowered Sportswoman Narrative May Obscure Inequalities
Blog 16, April 25, 2021
Geoff Harkness is an Assistant Professor of Sociology at Rhode Island College. He is the author of two books, including Changing Qatar: Culture, Citizenship, and Rapid Modernization (New York University Press 2020). Harkness’s scholarship includes ten journal articles, book chapters, and invited essays based on fieldwork he conducted in Qatar and Iraq.

Qatar’s Labor Rights Legacy: Between a Rock and a Hard Place
Blog 15, April 11, 2021
Andreas Krieg is an Assistant Professor at the School of Security Studies at King’s College London, Royal College of Defence Studies, and fellow at the Institute of Middle Eastern Studies. He has spent more than ten years living, studying, and working across the MENA region. Andreas was able to complement his years in the Levant, i.e. Lebanon, Syria, Israel, and Palestine, with four years in Qatar where he was involved in delivering a strategic contract between the State of Qatar, the UK Ministry of Defence, and King’s College London.

Citizenship vs. Identity: What a Passport or Football Jersey Can and Cannot Show
Blog 14, March 29, 2021
Eddie Kolla teaches history at Georgetown in Qatar and is currently the 2020–2021 CIRS Faculty Fellow.

Why the FIFA World Cup 2022 in Qatar Should be not Boycotted
Blog 13, March 18, 2021
Danyel Reiche is Visiting Associate Professor at Georgetown University Qatar. He is on leave from the American University of Beirut in Lebanon where he is a tenured Associate Professor of Comparative Politics. His past research has focused on two areas: energy and sport policy and politics; the latter his recent priority. He is the author of Success and Failure of Countries at the Olympic Games (Routledge, 2016) and co-editor with Tamir Sorek of Sport, Politics, and Society in the Middle East (Oxford University Press, 2019). Reiche is the faculty lead of the GU-Q/CIRS research initiative “Building a Legacy: Qatar FIFA World Cup 2022.”

Can Qatar Show FIFA the Way? Towards More Flexible Eligibility rules in International Football
Blog 12, March 14, 2021
Gijsbert Oonk is the founding director of the Sport and Nation network. He is interested in migration, citizenship, and national identity.

Qatar’s 2022 World Cup has Put the Spotlight on Migrant Workers, but What Legacy will it Deliver?
Blog 11, February 21, 2021
James Lynch is a director of FairSquare, which carries out research and advocacy on human rights issues. He led Amnesty’s work on migrant workers in Qatar for several years and was the lead author on major reports on the construction sector and domestic workers. Prior to that, he worked at the British Embassy in Doha as the political and press/public affairs officer.

Not the 2022 World Cup, Joe Biden Paved the Way for Ending the Qatar Blockade
Blog 10, January 31, 2021
Hilal Khashan is a Professor of Political Science at the American University of Beirut. He is the author of six books, including Hizbullah: A Mission to Nowhere (Lanham, MD: Lexington, 2019). He has more than 150 articles published in journals, such as The Journal of Conflict Resolution, The Scientific Journal of Religion, Orbis, Security Dialogue, The Brown Journal of World Affairs, International Affairs, World Affairs, Middle East Quarterly, Shia Affairs Journal, Il Politico, and Geopolitical Futures. He is currently completing a book titled Saudi Arabia: The Dilemma of Political Change and the Illusion of Economic Development.

The Impact of the Lifting of the Blockade on the Qatar World Cup
Blog 9, January 24, 2021
Kristian Coates Ulrichsen is a Fellow for the Middle East at Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy and an Associate Fellow at Chatham House. He is the author of five books on the Gulf States, most recently Qatar and the Gulf Crisis (Hurst & Co., 2020).

The Ongoing Struggle for a Qatar 2022 Narrative
Blog 8, January 11, 2021
Paulino R. Robles-Gil Cozzi is a PhD candidate at the Gulf Studies Center, Qatar University and an Islamic Studies graduate from Hamad Bin Khalifa University. His research interests lie at the intersection of Islam, geopolitics, and the Global South.

Why Media Liberalization in Qatar Would Serve an Important 2022 Legacy
Blog 7, December 16, 2020
Craig L. LaMay is a professor at Northwestern University in Chicago, currently in residence at the university’s campus in Qatar, where he has served as dean and director of the journalism program. He teaches media law and journalism ethics.

How Powerful has Qatar become in Elite Sport?
Blog 6, December 1, 2020
Nadim Nassif is an Associate Professor in Physical Education and Sports in Notre Dame University – Louaize (NDU). He created the World Ranking of Countries in Elite Sport, which annually measures the performance of all the countries in all the recognized sport. He is also member of the coaching staff of both the Lebanese futsal and mixed martial arts national teams.

The Qatar World Cup 2022 Stadiums Are Built, But Will Pandemic-Era Fans Still Come?
Blog 5, November 16, 2020
Simon Chadwick is Director of Eurasian Sport, Professor of the Eurasian Sport Industry and Director of the Centre for the Eurasian Sport Industry, at Emlyon Business School, based in Paris and Shanghai. He is Senior Fellow of the University of Nottingham’s China Policy Institute, where he is Founding Director of the China Soccer Observatory.

FIFA World Cup 2022: Increased Opportunities for Qatar’s Women Footballers?
Blog 4, November 3, 2020
Charlotte Lysa is a postdoctoral research fellow at the Norwegian Centre for Human Rights, University of Oslo. She holds a PhD in Middle Eastern studies from the Institute of Culture Studies and Oriental Languages from 2020.

The Qatar World Cup: Dreaming of Bridging the Gulf Rift
Blog 3, October 29, 2020
James M. Dorsey is an award-winning journalist and a senior fellow at Nanyang Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies and the National University of Singapore’s Middle East Institute. He is also the author of the syndicated column and blog, The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer.

National Identity in the Qatar Men’s National Football Team
Blog 2, October 25, 2020
Ross Griffin is an Assistant Professor of Postcolonial Literature in Qatar University. His research interests include the relationship between sport and culture, national identity, and sports history. He has published work on a range of subjects including the social legacies of Qatar’s hosting of mega-sporting events, as well as Orientalism in the British broadsheet press coverage of the 2022 World Cup.

Avoiding White Elephants: Why the Education City Stadium is Built to Last
Blog 1, October 25, 2020
Danyel Reiche joined Georgetown University Qatar in summer 2020 as a Visiting Associate Professor. It is the second time he is joining GU, after being a Visiting Assistant Professor at the main campus in Washington D.C. in 2006-2007. He is on leave from the American University of Beirut (AUB) in Lebanon where he is a tenured Associate Professor of Comparative Politics.