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Raphaël Lefèvre
Nonresident Scholar, Middle East Center

about


Raphaël Lefèvre is no longer with the Carnegie Middle East Center.

Raphaël Lefèvre was a nonresident scholar at the Carnegie Middle East Center, where his research focuses on Sunni Islamist movements in Lebanon.

Lefèvre is currently the Rank-Manning Junior Research Fellow in Social Sciences at the University of Oxford (New College). He holds a doctorate in politics and international relations from the University of Cambridge where he was a Gates Scholar and the recipient of the 2015 Bill Gates Sr. Award.

Lefèvre is the author of Ashes of Hama: The Muslim Brotherhood in Syria (Oxford University Press, 2013) and co-author of State and Islam in Baathist Syria: Confrontation or Co-Optation? (Lynne Rienner, 2012). His publications on Islamist movements in the Middle East and North Africa have appeared in the Guardian, the Cambridge Review of International Affairs, Sada, and the Journal of North African Studies.


education
PhD, University of Cambridge, MPhil, University of Cambridge, BA, Sciences Po and University of Kent
languages
English, French

All work from Raphaël Lefèvre

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29 Results
paper
The Sociopolitical Undercurrent of Lebanon’s Salafi Militancy

The rise in Salafi militancy in Lebanon is not only due to the spillover of the Syrian war, but also to the Sunni elite’s failure at tackling the grievances of their co-religionists.

· March 27, 2018
commentary
Man of the Moment?

Ashraf Rifi would like to replace Saad al-Hariri as leader of Lebanon’s Sunnis, but his bid for leadership is risky.

· November 13, 2017
commentary
Holiday Asides

As 2016 comes to a close, Diwan offers recommendations for this period of relative rest.

commentary
No More ‘Hama Rules’

Syrian rebels are borrowing from the legacy of the Fighting Vanguard.

· September 19, 2016
commentary
A New Direction for Lebanon's Muslim Brothers

The newly-elected leader of Lebanon’s Jamaa al-Islamiya faces the uphill task of reforming the party and injecting new blood into its veins.

· February 11, 2016
In the Media
The Syrian Brotherhood’s Islamic State Challenge

To avoid losing brigades to extremist rebel groups, the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood must clarify their ideological stance toward a range of issues and disassociate themselves more clearly from extremist groups.

· February 11, 2015
Project on Middle East Political Science
commentary
The Muslim Brotherhood's Role in Syria

The Syrian Muslim Brotherhood had been in exile for a long time, so it had to work very hard to gain a measure of influence on the Syrian uprisings.

· February 10, 2015
Project on Middle East Political Science
article
Lebanon’s Dar al-Fatwa and the Search for Moderation

To revive the Sunni authority’s long tradition of Islamic moderation, Dar al-Fatwa’s new leader must unite all of Lebanon’s Sunni community.

· January 5, 2015
article
Tackling Sunni Radicalization in Lebanon

The roots of the recent surge of Sunni extremism in Lebanon are local and deep. Pragmatic steps are needed to protect the country from the fate of Syria and Iraq.

· December 24, 2014
article
New Leaders for the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood

With its 2014 leadership election, the Islamist group signaled that it is opening a new chapter. But some young members wanted to see even greater change.

· December 11, 2014