Founded by the late Professor Barry Rubin, the Rubin
Center is one of the most versatile and active Mid-East research centers in the
world. The center is committed to making the most
up-to-date; accurate; and in many cases, otherwise inaccessible information available
to policymakers and to the broader public. The Rubin Center’s groundbreaking
frontline reporting and research—frequently picked up by the major media
outlets—sets us apart from other research centers.
- Frontline reporting:
Rubin Center researchers regularly visit the region, including
Iraq and war-torn Syria, witnessing developments first-hand. The center has exposed many important news stories. In addition to being first to reveal ISIS’s
use of chemical weapons, Rubin Center Director Dr. Jonathan Spyer visited
Baghdad this year and obtained unprecedented access to the Shi’a militias, interviewing
senior officials from those organizations there. Spyer and Rubin Fellow Aymenn
Jawad al-Tamimi published
the first piece anywhere to call out the role being played by the militias,
which later became mainstream knowledge. Spyer later
published a detailed report on the subject. Spyer has also reported from
Syria and Turkey, conducting groundbreaking research on the nature and
limitations of U.S.-Kurdish cooperation in Syria.
- Primary research: The Rubin Center was ahead of the game on the importance of ISIS as a proto-state. In the first attempt to understand ISIS ideology through use of primary resources in Arabic, Rubin Fellow Aymenn Jawad al-Tamimi has been translating and analyzing key ISIS documents--including recruitment, training, textbooks, administrative, and other primary sources. Jawad obtained an ISIS “masterplan” for the governance of the Islamic State, which was a front page story in the Guardian—which received the information directly from Jawad—and in other major media outlets around the world. Senior U.S. officials referred to the document as significant. In another major, but non-public, media monitoring project, Rubin Research Associate Alex Grinberg has been conducting pioneering research on Iran using Farsi-language resources.
- Media and consultancy: The Rubin Center consults for government--including
the United States, UK, China, Israel, India, Canada, and the Czech Republic--news
media, and academic research. Rubin
researchers have been sought out by the White House, the British
parliament, and other Western governments, as well as media bodies, and
human rights NGOs. Rubin Research Fellow Aymenn Jawad al-Tamimi, for
example, has testified before the British House of Commons on the threat
represented by the Islamic State. The Rubin Center also
provides research work for important pro-Western organizations as
well as for major media outlets. Its work has been published/cited in the New
York Times, Huffington Post, FOX News, and more. Dr. Jonathan Spyer
is also a regular contributor to The Australian and to Jane’s Intelligence
Review.
- Middle East
Review of International Affairs (MERIA): Covering the latest developments in the
region from a wide variety of viewpoints, including U.S. policy, radical
movements, and minorities, the Rubin Center’s quarterly journal MERIA has a
circulation of over 25,000. Get your free subscription today!
- Turkish
Studies: In a crucial
geographical and political location, Turkey’s
importance is growing rapidly throughout Europe, the Middle East, and the
Caucasus. With an upsurge in interest in its
history, politics, and foreign policy, Turkish Studies quarterly--listed
in the Social Sciences Citation Index (SSCI)--offers scholarly discussion
on these topics and more.
- Books:
The Rubin Center has produced numerous books on subjects
of importance, including Nazis,
Islamists and the Making of the Modern Middle East—about the political alliance forged among Third Reich leaders, Arab
nationalists, and Muslim religious authorities during the 1930s and 1940s—and The
Transforming Fire: The Rise of the Israel-Islamist Conflict—which
deals with the emergence of Islamist movements as Israel’s main
adversaries and Israel’s response to this. In 2015,
The
Military History of the Modern Middle East
was published, covering the military history of the past hundred years,
including such topics as both world wars, the Turkish-Greek conflicts,
Arab nationalism, the Arab-Israeli conflicts, and the post-2003 fighting
in Iraq. As part of the center’s Free Books project,
we also offer 13 of Barry Rubin’s books online, including on the
Israel-Palestinian conflict, Syria, U.S. policy, Jewish assimilation, and
more.