Panarchy – The Political System That Never Reached Reality
Comprehensive guide to panarchy—the revolutionary political system that allows choosing laws without changing location, from ancient philosophy to modern applications.
Political and geopolitical issues: world affairs, Arab politics, political analysis, and politics’ impact on daily life. Content bridging major international issues and local concerns.
Comprehensive guide to panarchy—the revolutionary political system that allows choosing laws without changing location, from ancient philosophy to modern applications.
In “Washington Bullets,” Vijay Prashad provides a political dissection of American hegemony, tracing a history of interventions and coups through a manual that explains how modern imperialism operates.
Uncovering the political dimensions behind modern identity movements and the role of former colonial powers in restructuring regional populations by dismantling historical heritage.
A philosophical and historical analysis of Afrocentrism, exploring how this ideology conflicts with geographical logic and the realities of cultural interaction in the Mediterranean.
Is the law always just? A personal essay on intellectual property rights and digital piracy — from Coca-Cola to Zorro, from TRIPS to the Arab internet.
It is 10 PM in Damascus. In five hours, either a diplomatic deal materializes or Trump says a civilization ends. Here is what war philosophers would say about tonight.
The Damascus taxi protests of April 2026 are not just a labor dispute. They reflect a social contract beginning to come apart at the seams.
Today, power in the Islamic Republic passed from a father to his son. The strange part is that this republic was built on rejecting exactly that. But the strangest part is that the loudest voice against this inheritance belongs to the son of the king that same revolution overthrew. This is not just an Iranian crisis — it is a question about human nature itself.
The executioner always needed a justification — a story to tell himself before sleep. Mamdouh Adwan mapped this with painful precision in “The Bestialization of Man.” But what happens when we invent something that doesn’t sleep and needs no story?