
Amany Soliman- PhD
- Lecturer at Alexandria University
Amany Soliman
- PhD
- Lecturer at Alexandria University
About
5
Publications
2,704
Reads
How we measure 'reads'
A 'read' is counted each time someone views a publication summary (such as the title, abstract, and list of authors), clicks on a figure, or views or downloads the full-text. Learn more
2
Citations
Introduction
Amany Soliman currently works at the Mediterranean Studies Institute, Faculty of Arts, Alexandria University.
in 2017, she joined the history department of Leiden University as a non- resident researcher and also joined the Netherlands-Flemish Institute in Cairo as a postdoctoral research fellow .
For her PhD thesis (2010), she examined the nationalist movements in Spain, specifically in Catalonia and Basque regions and their journey in the 20th century. She has been awarded a research fellowship in the War Studies Department of King's College London in 2011 as well as the Gingko Library scholarship for East-West Dialogue in 2014.
Current institution
Publications
Publications (5)
This article is published in the international journal: Mediterranean Review published by the Institute of Mediterranean Studies IMS at Busan University of Foreign Studies Vol 10 No 1 June 2017 Earlier raft was presented at the AFOMEDI (Asian Federation Of Mediterranean Studies) Conference that was held in Busan, South Korea in March 2017 About thi...
This book investigates an important phenomenon in the Middle East and the Mediterranean region, namely the role that the military plays in the governments of several states of the region. Can military forces be defined as guardians of a regime in a democratic state? How is it possible to limit the power of armies to solely military prerogatives and...
Amany Soliman Scans a potentially bumpy road ahead for an Egyptian society divided between groups supportive and skeptical of the country's interim military rulers.
Manar Rachwani Asks why the Turkish AKP has enjoyed success as a ‘democratic Islamic’ party, and how lookalike parties might succeed in other post‐revolution Arab countries.