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  • 67 Arab Universities Included in 2024 QS Rankings by Subject

    The fourteenth edition of the QS World University Rankings by Subject, released today, features 67 universities from 12 Arab countries. These subject-specific rankings are a part of the annual QS World University Rankings series published by QS Quacquarelli Symonds, a British higher-education analytics company. The 2024 subject listings analyse the performance of 16,400 individual academic programmes across 56 subjects at over 1,500 universities worldwide. Among these rankings are 477 programmes from the Arab region, with 56 of them ranking within the top 100 globally for their subject. Saudi Arabia’s King Fahd University of Petroleum & Minerals (KFUPM) boasts two of the region’s top programmes, ranking fourth globally in petroleum engineering and ninth in mineral and mining engineering.

  • The Urgent Need for Transparency Reform in Gulf Central Banks

    The currencies of Gulf Arab states are pegged to the dollar, limiting in significant ways the room for maneuver in central banks’ decision making, as their interest rates need to follow the decisions of the U.S. Federal Reserve. Transparency remains important nonetheless to these banks’ broader governance and accountability framework as well as to their independence from political interference. And conversely, lack of transparency can lead to uncertainty about the ability of Gulf monetary authorities to continue defending the peg, which may encourage speculation and eventually the collapse of the fixed exchange rate regime.

  • Saudi Arabia Interior Design Potential Unveiled in Milan

    When French design collective Hall Haus traveled to Saudi Arabia to begin Haus Dari, a modern-Majlis-type seating system that mimics desert dunes, settling on the approach and seeing their creation come to fruition took a good six weeks. Started in 2020 by Zakari Boukhari, Sammy Bernoussi, Teddy Sanches and Abdoulaye Niang, the f ...

  • White House Makes Fresh Push for Historic Deal to Forge Saudi-Israel Ties

    As inducements to recognize Israel, the White House is offering Riyadh a more formal defense relationship with Washington, assistance in acquiring civil nuclear power and a renewed push for a Palestinian state—a package that U.S. officials say they are in the final stages of negotiating.

    The U.S.-brokered effort offers Israel a prize it has long sought: a historic normalization deal with Riyadh, Israel’s most powerful Arab neighbor.

    U.S. officials say the successful multicountry effort to shoot down Iranian missiles and drones on Saturday should make it clear to Israel that its security against threats from Tehran can be enhanced through closer integration with Saudi Arabia.

  • EV maker Lucid beats first-quarter delivery estimates as price cuts boost demand

     Lucid reported first-quarter deliveries above market expectations on Tuesday as price cuts helped boost demand for its luxury electric sedans, sending its shares up about 3%.
    The electric-vehicle startup handed over 1,967 vehicles in the first quarter, compared with estimates of 1,745, according to eight analysts polled by Visible Alpha.
    Lucid in February had cut prices of its flagship Air sedans by 1% to 10% to support demand at a time when consumers are rethinking EV purchases and turning to more affordable hybrid alternatives due to high interest rates.

  • Morocco Among ‘Big 5’ Wealthiest Countries in Africa

    Morocco has yet again locked a place in the “Big 5” wealth markets in Africa in 2023, according to an annual report from the consultancy firm Henley and Partners (H&P).

    Released this week, the report ranks Morocco in fifth place, behind South Africa, Egypt, Nigeria, and Kenya. Together, these five countries are home to 56% of Africa’s high-net-worth individuals and over 90% of the continent’s billionaires.

  • Iran’s strikes did little damage to Israel — but analysts say Tehran benefits anyway

    “For other countries in the region, the Iranian attack on Israel is a preview of the nightmare scenario involved in a direct confrontation with Iran,” Alhasan told Breaking Defense. “Whereas Israel has the capabilities and Western support it needs to intercept most of Iran’s missiles and UAVs, other states in the region (which are less capable and geographically closer to Iran) do not.”

  • Flooding spotlights Dubai construction quality

    Each flooding incident will have its own specific issues, but the reasons will come from three key areas: design, construction and maintenance. Many projects will not have been designed to cope with such a deluge. Others will have been poorly constructed, allowing water to ingress into properties, and others will have drainage that was poorly maintained and failed when it was most needed. Dubai is heavily incentivised to address these concerns. In the past, Dubai has been a transient city with many expatriates living and working in the emirate for only a few years. There has been little collective memory of major weather incidents.

  • One Gulf City Preserves Streets After Others Bulldozed Old Buildings

    Although Sharjah has its share of generic office towers, its leaders are preserving swaths of the city. Its original center is undergoing a rebirth as a heritage and arts district, known as the Heart of Sharjah. Scheduled for completion in 2025, it offers visitors narrow, old-style alleys; an old souk, or market; and museums in historic buildings.

  • Commentary: The Next U.S. Administration to Confront a Middle East of New Partnerships, New Tensions, as the End of History Repeats Itself

    The Gaza war, with its potential for regional escalation, is just one (albeit major) concern in a region prone to instability, insecurity, and unpredictability. This paper puts the evolving crisis and nuclear proliferation concerns in the Middle East into global context, alongside other U.S. foreign and domestic policy priorities, such as Russia’s war in Ukraine, competition with China, and the U.S. economy.