AID   Alaa Majeed   Alex Stonehill   Andre Lambertson   Andre Lambertson   Anna-Katarina Gravgaard   Anna-Katarina Gravgaard and William Wheeler   Arthur Lieber   ausoc   beja   Bunker Hill Community College   Carlos Avila Gonzalez   Charles Lane   Christopher Booker and Jason George   Christopher Milner   Civitas   Common Language Project   cornerstone   Dane Liu and Carmen Russell   Daniel Grossman   David Case   David Hecht   David Morse   Davidson   Dawn Shapiro   Dawn Sinclair Shapiro   Discovery Charter   dmccarey   donte   DRC: Kids   duchesne   East Side High   Ernest Waititu   Ethan Steinman   Fred de Sam Lazaro   freespirit   fwparker   Georgetown University   Ginny Hill   Glenn Baker   Greg Pillar   Guest User   Haley Sweetland Edwards   Haley Sweetland Edwards and Paul Stephens   Hanna Ingber Win   Heba Aly   helium   Houston: North Shore 9th Center   ics   Ilan Greenberg   Iraq: Students   Jason George   Jason Maloney and Kira Kay   Jason Motlagh   Jeffrey Barbee   Jen Marlowe   Jennifer Redfearn   Jessica Partnow   John Burroughs   Jon Sawyer   Just Vision   kate   Keene State University   Kelly Hearn   KellyMill   Kenya: Karen C   Kenya: Olympic School   Lewis & Clark College, Portland, Oregon   Lisa Armstrong   Lisa Biagiotti   Maha Atal   Marco Vernaschi   Mary Wiltenburg   Mercy Corps   Meredith May   Miami Lakes   Micah Fink   Michael Kavanagh   Michael Kavanagh   Michelle Nijhuis   miramonte   Montgomery Blair   Narayan Mahon   Nepal: Kamlaris   Nir Rosen   NY: Satellite Academy   NY: School for International Studies   NYU   Oakville High School   Olivas   ONA   PA: D.H. Eichhorn Middle School   PA: Lewisburg High School   Paul Stephens   Pennsylvania: George School   Perspectives   peter   Peter DiCampo   Pfeiffer University   Philip Brasher   priorpark   Pulitzer Center   Pulitzer Center   Pulitzer Center   Pulitzer Center   Rebecca Byerly   Rose   Ruthie Ackerman   Samuel Loewenberg   Sara Peach   Sarah Stuteville   schoolwithoutwalls   Sean Gallagher   Seattle: Bellevue International   Seattle: Chief Sealth   Seattle: Franklin   Seattle: Highline   Seattle: Lake Washington   Seattle: Nathan Hale   Seattle: Redmond   Seattle: Skyline   Sharon Schmickle   Shaun McCanna   SIU Carbondale   socialjustice   Soldan   St. Louis: Collinsville   St. Louis: Crossroads   St. Louis: Hixson Middle School   St. Louis: Lift for Life   St. Louis: Lindbergh   St. Louis: M. Richmond Heights   St. Louis: Metro   St. Louis: Nerinx Hall   St. Louis: Parkway West   St. Louis: Rosati-Kain   St. Louis: St. Joseph's Academy   St. Louis: St. Louis University High   St. Louis: University City High School   St. Louis: Washington University   St. Louis: Webster Groves   Stephanie Guyer-Stevens   Stephen Sapienza   summer   Susan Schulman   Tracy Boyer   Tristan McConnell   Tristan McConnell and Narayan Mahon   Uchicago   University of North Carolina   VA: William & Mary   VALOR Freshman Academy at South Plantation High School   Vanessa M. Gezari   Wauwatosa West High School   West Forsyth   William Wheeler   wilson   wingra  

Yemen

Print   Text +  Text - 


Arabia’s first democracy stands at a crossroads. The poorest nation in the Arab world struggles with high population growth, 40% unemployment and a persistent flow of refugees from Somalia. In the next decade, its 22 million citizens will compete for increasingly scarce water supplies, as aquifers are drilled, pumped and drained unsustainably.
This is a hybrid [...]

read more » « close description

Arabia’s first democracy stands at a crossroads. The poorest nation in the Arab world struggles with high population growth, 40% unemployment and a persistent flow of refugees from Somalia. In the next decade, its 22 million citizens will compete for increasingly scarce water supplies, as aquifers are drilled, pumped and drained unsustainably.

This is a hybrid regime where modern Western-style institutions are grafted onto parallel, informal patronage networks. President Saleh’s divide-and-rule strategy enables him to govern by proxy through tribal sheikhs, but dwindling oil reserves will severely limit the future capacity of the state.

From the northern mountains, guerrilla fighters have mounted a four-year rebellion, bringing their recent incursions to the suburbs of the capital. In July, the government declared an end to the war but thousands of displaced residents have yet to return home. In the south, complaints of discrimination revive the fault-lines underpinning the 1990 unification between the Yemen Arab Republic (North Yemen) and the People’s Democratic Republic of Yemen (South Yemen).

And Yemen‘s regime has become a target of terrorism, from a new generation of al-Qaeda inspired Salafi jihadis who oppose President Saleh’s co-operation with the United States.

President Saleh has now survived three decades at the top. He will be 70 at the time of the next election - in 2013 - when his country is expected to attempt a peaceful transition of power.

Ginny Hill examines the growing social and political pressures in this strategic Arabian Peninsula state that borders Saudi Arabia and controls the Bab al-Mandab strait, one of the busiest shipping lanes in the world.

After the attempted bombing of Northwest flight 253 in December, Yemen again became the focus of US and international counterterrorism policy. A flurry of media reports in January gave the world a glimpse of this fragile country, sliding disastrously towards collapse.

Through their long-term project, “Yemen: Assessing the Threat,” reporters Paul Stephens and Haley Sweetland Edwards will explore the complex politics, society, and history of Yemen, with the goal of providing a more in-depth understanding of this often misunderstood nation. While the international media is primarily focused on the terrorist threat in Yemen, policy makers will have to work to solve the numerous other crises contributing to the country’s instability.

Your Responses

Moderated by the Pulitzer Center

You must be logged in to post a comment or question.