• 032 | Ending Persecution: Charting the Path to Global Religious Freedom | Knox Thames
    Sep 2 2024

    Knox Thames is an international human rights lawyer, advocate, and author who has dedicated his career to promoting human rights, defending religious minorities, and combatting persecution. Over his 20 years of service in the U.S. government, Knox held several key positions advocating for freedom of religion or belief, including at the State Department and two different U.S. government foreign policy commissions. Knox has deep experience regarding South/Central Asia, the Middle East, Europe, and U.S. foreign policy relating to human rights. Serving in the Bush, Obama, and Trump administrations, he has worked at the intersection of global affairs, religion, and human rights.

    He is the author of Ending Persecution: Charting the Path to Global Religious Freedom (Notre Dame University Press, 2024).

    The Middle East File podcast is a publication of the Religious Freedom Institute.


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    31 mins
  • 031 | Regime change and religious discrimination after the Arab uprisings | Jason Klocek
    Apr 28 2024
    Jason Klocek is an Assistant Professor in Politics and International Relations at the University of Nottingham. He is also a senior researcher at the United States Institute of Peace and a Faculty Affiliate of the University of Notre Dame's Center for the Study of Religion and Society. In this conversation, we discuss Regime change and religious discrimination after the Arab uprisings, published in the Journal of Peace Research. The article looks at how times of political turmoil and regime change impact experiences of religious persecution. The article tests its findings across Egypt, Libya, Tunisia, and Yemen, four countries that experienced regime change following 2011. The article highlights not only that societal religious discrimination increases, but explores some of the reasons for why this is the case. The Middle East File is a publication of the Religious Freedom Institute.
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    41 mins
  • 030 | Findings from Pew Research Center's 14th Annual Global Restrictions on Religion | Samirah Majumdar
    Apr 15 2024

    Samirah Majumdar is a research associate at the Pew Research Center, where she focuses on global restrictions on religion. She is an alumnus of Barnard College and Georgetown University and the author of multiple Pew Research Center reports, including the latest study: Globally, Government Restrictions on Religion Reached Peak Levels in 2021, While Social Hostilities Went Down.


    The Middle East File podcast is a publication of the Religious Freedom Institute.


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    36 mins
  • 029 | More Than "Ink on Paper" Taking Stock Three Years After Yazidi Survivors Law | Mairéad Smith
    Mar 25 2024
    Mairéad Smith is a consultant with the Coalition for Just Reparations (C4JR) and a PhD candidate at Brown University. In this conversation we discuss the C4JR Annual Report on implementation of the Yazidi Survivors Law: More than "Ink on Paper": Taking Stock Three Years After the Adoption of the Yazidi [Female] Survivors Law. The report provides an overview of YSL implementation and the work of the General Directorate for Survivors’ Affairs (GDSA) in implementing the YSL, including the latest information on the verification and appeals process, application statistics, and administrative capacity of the GDSA, highlighting challenges that hinder the delivery of benefits in a trauma-informed and survivor-centered manner. Additional Resources: More than “Ink on Paper”: Taking Stock two Years After the Adoption of the Yazidi [Female] Survivors Law (C4JR, 2023) International Protocol on Documenting Violations of Religious Freedom (Religious Freedom Institute and Open Doors, 2022) Guidance Note: Protecting Vulnerable Religious Minorities in Conflict and Crisis Settings (Religious Freedom Institute, 2020) The Middle East File podcast is a publication of the Religious Freedom Institute's Middle East Action Team.
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    33 mins
  • 028 | A Retrospective: 25th Anniversary of International Religious Freedom Act | Lou Ann Sabatier
    Mar 11 2024

    Lou Ann Sabatier is a consultant with decades of leadership experience in non-profit and corporate publishing, marketing and communications. She has worked with clients including World Vision/Save the Children, the International Monetary Fund, the OECD, the Federal Reserve Bank, National Geographic, the U.S. Marine Corps, and the Chronicle of Higher Education. She also currently serves as Director of Communications for 21Wilberforce and in 2021 cofounded the FoRB Women's Alliance.


    In this conversation, we discuss A Retrospective: 25th Anniversary of the International Religious Freedom Act. The retrospective looks back on the stories, people, successes, and challenges of the past 25 years, considering not only the legislation and policy, but the broader IRF movement in the United States and around the world.


    Additional Resources:

    • IRFA 20TH ANNIVERSARY RETROSPECTIVE (21Wilberforce)
    • The First 25 Years: IRFA Accomplishments and Next Steps (USCIRF)
    • Surveying the Landscape of International Religious Freedom Policy (Religious Freedom Institute)

    The Middle East File podcast is a publication of the Religious Freedom Institute's Middle East Action Team.

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    39 mins
  • 027 | Protection from Violence Against Women in Forced Displacement: Integrating Religion | Sandra Iman Pertek
    Feb 26 2024
    Dr. Sandra Iman Pertek is a ESRC Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Birmingham. She is a gender and social development specialist with over a decade’s experience in humanitarian, development, and migration settings. Her research integrates intersectional and ecological approaches for developing religious engagement with the continuum of violence in forced migration. In this conversation, we discuss her recent policy brief on the relevance of religion as both a potential factor of vulnerability and a source of resilience in settings of conflict. For additional resources see: Pertek, S., Block, K., Goodson, L., Hassan, P., Hourani, J. and Phillimore, J. (2023) Gender-based violence, religion and forced displacement: protective and risk factors. Frontiers in Human Dynamics (5):1058822. Pertek, S.I. (2022) God Helped Us: Resilience, Religion and Experiences of Gender-Based Violence and Trafficking among African Forced Migrant Women. Social Sciences. 11 (5): 201. doi:10.3390/socsci11050201 Shah, Rebecca, Timothy Shah, Nathan Berkeley, Jeremy Barker, and Samuel Basden. “Guidance Note: Protecting Vulnerable Religious Minorities in Conflict and Crisis Settings.” Religious Freedom Institute, 2020. Sabates-Wheeler, R., & Barker, J. P. (2024). The place of religious inequalities within international development and humanitarian response frameworks: Lessons from Iraq. World Development, 173(106417), 1–11. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.worlddev.2023.106417 The Middle East File podcast is a publication of the Religious Freedom Institute's Middle East Action Team.
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    30 mins
  • 026 | National Report on Freedom of Religion or Belief: Lebanon | Fadi Hachem
    Feb 18 2024

    Fadi Hachem is a human rights lawyer and researcher specializing in Gender and Cultural Rights. He has worked as a consultant and advisor with a number of local and international organizations, including ALEF - Act for Human Rights, the International Commission for Missing Persons, ACTED, Konrad Adenauer Stiftung, UNICEF, and Pax for Peace.

    Fadi served as the editor and coordinator of this research report, as part of Search for Common Ground's project on FoRB Roundtables in Lebanon. The National Report on Freedom of Religion and Belief was produced by the National Working Group on FoRB in Lebanon and includes contributions from more than 18 organizations and individuals covering a wide range of topics.

    The Middle East File podcast is a publication of the Religious Freedom Institute's Middle East Action Team. For more of their work, including recent articles, publications, and events, sign-up for the Middle East File email.


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    31 mins
  • 025 | Politics of Hate | Farahnaz Ispahani
    Jan 22 2023

    Farahnaz Ispahani is a Senior Fellow at the Religious Freedom Institute and joins to discuss her new book: Politics of Hate: Religious Majoritarianism in South Asia (Harper Collins, 2023). 

    South Asia-home to almost 2 billion people representing every major and minor religious belief-has also witnessed religious extremism, often supported by the state apparatus.

    In Politics of Hate, noted scholars-experts on the subject and the region discuss their research on the role of the media and political leaders in deploying hatred for political advantage, covering developments in India, Bangladesh, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. In an era of media incitement, orchestrated attacks on mosques, churches, and temples, and identity politics, this book serves as a timely study of the phenomenon of politically motivated religious and ethnic division. 

    Farahnaz Ispahani has been a leading voice for women and religious minorities in Pakistan for the past twenty-five years, first as a journalist, then as a member of Pakistan's National Assembly, and most recently as a scholar based in the United States. As a Senior Fellow at the Religious Freedom Institute and advisor and consultant to numerous other initiatives, she works at the intersection of human rights, freedom of religion or belief, and the US policy world. She is on Twitter: @FIspahani

    The Middle East File podcast is a publication of the Religious Freedom Institute's Middle East Action Team. For more of their work, including recent articles, publications, and events, sign-up for the Middle East File email.

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    33 mins