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This MENA Politics Series Seminar was delivered on Tuesday 18 November in the MEC’s Boardroom by Dr May Darwich (University of Birmingham) and was chaired by Professor Neil Ketchley (St Antony’s College). This paper expl...
Egypt’s Role, Identity, and Foreign Policy in a River of De-Nile is an episode from Middle East Centre by Oxford University. This MENA Politics Series Seminar was delivered on Tuesday 18 November in the MEC’s Boardroom by Dr May Darwich (Un...
This episode belongs to Middle East Centre.
Use the player on this page to stream the episode online.
Published Nov 21, 2025, 34:45 long, audio available.
This MENA Politics Series Seminar was delivered on Tuesday 18 November in the MEC’s Boardroom by Dr May Darwich (University of Birmingham) and was chaired by Professor Neil Ketchley (St Antony’s College). This paper explains Egypt’s foreign policy stagnation, with a novel argument building on role and identity theories. Egypt’s foreign policy exhibits a case where its regional leadership role has changed (and declined), but its identity emphasising Egyptian leadership persists, thus leading to foreign policy that is widely seen as ineffective. This paper examines the theoretical link — and distinction — between national roles and identities. Drawing on previous role research, we argue that, compared to identities, roles are more behaviourally prescriptive, necessarily relational, and are dependent on others’ expectations and acceptance of them. We also discuss the distinct sources of role change and identity change, setting up the possibility that one may change while the other remains stable. We examine the implications of when roles and identities become out of sync with the case of Egypt’s role decay. While Egypt’s leadership role at the regional role has retreated, the leadership identity persists. For Egyptians, Egypt is a ‘natural’ leader of the Arab world and a pivotal state in regional affairs. Herein, we argue, lays the explanations for why Egypt’s foreign policy has suffered from contradictions and ineffectiveness. Empirically, this paper draws upon historical evidence, official statements, memoirs of Egyptian foreign policy makers, and observation of public debates in Egypt’s public sphere.
You can listen to Egypt’s Role, Identity, and Foreign Policy in a River of De-Nile online on Radio and Podcast. Open the player on this page to stream the available audio.
Egypt’s Role, Identity, and Foreign Policy in a River of De-Nile is an episode from Middle East Centre by Oxford University.
This episode is 34:45 long.
This episode was published on Nov 21, 2025.
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You can listen to Egypt’s Role, Identity, and Foreign Policy in a River of De-Nile on this page when the episode audio is available from the podcast feed.
Egypt’s Role, Identity, and Foreign Policy in a River of De-Nile is from Middle East Centre by Oxford University.
Published Nov 21, 2025 and 34:45 long