Who’s Who in the Middle East: The Nuclear Powers

05.09.2024 11:00 - 12:00English

Amid rising instability in the Middle East, are nuclear weapons a security concern?

qwq Photo: KeithBinns

Today, Israel is the only nuclear power in the region. Their rhetoric around nuclear weapons raises alarm bells across the world. Iran’s nuclear aspirations, combined with US and Russian strategic interests, further complicates the picture. What is the status of nuclear weapons in the Middle East? What are the prospects for a nuclear weapons-free zone in the Middle East?

Why is nuclear energy witnessing a resurgence in the region, with many actors investing in building nuclear powerplants? Some observers have expressed concern that nuclear energy can be used as a step towards the proliferation of nuclear weapons in the Middle East. This lecture will provide a history and context of nuclear programmes in the Middle East, from the mid-1940s until today.

A light lunch will be served after the lecture.


The event is part of the series Who’s who in the Middle East. In this series, Pelle Valentin Olsen (UiB) invites researchers to help you navigate the many actors in the region.

They will explain the role of state and non-state actors and their ideologies. What are the interests of regional and global powers? What are the histories we have not been taught What histories and perspectives have simply been reduced to footnotes in international news coverage?

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Event info.

Bergen Global
Jekteviksbakken 31, Bergen

05.09.2024
11:00 - 12:00
English
Add to calendar 05.09.2024, 05.09.2024

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Hebatalla Taha
Associate Senior Lecturer, Lund University

Hebatalla Taha (PhD) is Associate Senior Lecturer at the Department of Political Science and the Center for Advanced Middle Eastern Studies at Lund University. Her research deals with intersections between political economy, technology, and war.

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Pelle Valentin Olsen
Associate Professor, UiB

Pelle Valentin Olsen is a cultural, social, and transnational historian of the modern Middle East. His research and teaching focus on the history of leisure, labor, gender, sexuality, popular culture, and cultural production.

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Bergen Global is a joint initiative between the University of Bergen and Chr. Michelsen Institute that addresses global challenges.