Dissertation & Forthcoming Book: “United States Economic Aid

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DINA JADALLAH, Ph.D.
Irvine, CA 92603
Phone: (703) 314-3027
Email: dinajadallah@gmail.com; jadallah@email.arizona.edu
EDUCATION
University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, Ph.D. School of Near Eastern & North African Studies, History Minor, May
2014. GPA 4.0.
University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, Ph.D. Candidate in Political Science. ABD, 1996, due mainly to two of the
three chairs on my committee leaving to teach at other universities, as well as work opportunities. GPA 3.7.
Georgetown University, Washington, DC, Master of Arts in Arab Studies (MAAS), Political Science
concentration, May, 1993. GPA 4.0, Valedictorian, Presented commencement address.
Georgetown University, Washington, DC, Bachelor of Science in Foreign Service (BSFS), International
Relations, Middle East concentration, May, 1991. Graduated Cum Laude, GPA 3.7.
Awards: Three College of Social and Behavioral Studies Graduate Tuition Scholarships, University of Arizona
2012 -2013.
Three Graduate Thesis/Dissertation Awards, University of Arizona, 2012 -2013.
Jean Labat, French, Georgetown University, School of Foreign Service, 1991
Michael Hudson Award for Arab Studies, Georgetown University, School of Foreign Service, 1991.
Languages: Fluent in Arabic, English, French. Intermediate reading ability in Hebrew.
LIST OF PUBLICATIONS AND ACTIVITIES
Dissertation & Forthcoming Book: “United States Economic Aid: Imperfect Hegemony in Egypt.” Defended:
February 2014. Ph.D. awarded May 2014. Book to be published by I.B. Tauris in Fall 2015 – U.S. Economic Aid to
Egypt: Strategies for Democratization and Reform.
The book assesses the narrative framework for U.S. aid to Egypt in the latter half of Mubarak’s rule – to
promote democracy and free markets – against the U.S. aim to achieve specific strategic goals in the region,
placing the analysis within the context of significant Egyptian discourses regarding the reform processes. I
demonstrate that the US interest in making the peace with Israel ‘warm’ or comprehensive (aka ‘normalization’)
affected the processes of economically and structurally re-aligning Egypt. A dual strategy of targeting allies and
privatization was used to re-orient institutions, businesses, territories, and civil organizations. The dissertation
reveals under-reported effects from reforms on macro-economic policies, currency valuations, trade policy
institutions and actors, foreign direct investment flows, development of natural gas, the privatization of public
sector enterprises, Qualified Industrial Zones, transparency, and governance. Contrary ramifications undercut
dominant efforts to achieve societal consensus over policies undertaken under the mantle of aid. Egyptian
critical discourses about economic viability, institutionalized corruption, globalization, authoritarianism,
citizenship, and foreign policy re-alignment reveal perspectives and political behaviors that are often unexplored
in Western academic studies of aid-induced reforms under Mubarak.
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Articles in Peer-reviewed Journals
“Economic Aid to Egypt: Promoting Progress or Subordination?” Class, Race, and Corporate Power,
(Forthcoming in Fall 2015).
“Conflict of Sovereignties in the Urban Space of Jerusalem,” Middle East Journal, Vol. 68(1), (Winter 2014: 7798). http://dx.doi.org/10.3751/68.1.14.
“State Sovereignty and Citizen Agency: The Nationalist-Islamic Discourse of Shaykh Muhammad Mahdi Shams
al-Din,” Mathal, Vol. 3, Issue 1, 2013. http://ir.uiowa.edu/mathal/vol3/iss1/4/.
"Democracy Promotion and Abstracted Sovereignty," Arab Studies Quarterly, Vol. 34(4), Fall, 2012, pp. 205229). http://arabstudiesquarterly.plutojournals.org/ArticleDetails/tabid/397/ArticleID/539/Democracy-Promotionand-Abstracted-Sovereignty.aspx.
Dina Jadallah and Laura el-Khoury, “State Power and the Constitution of the Individual: Racial Profiling of Arab
Americans,” Arab Studies Quarterly, Pluto Journals, Vol. 32 , No. 4, (Fall 2010).
Book Reviews in Peer-reviewed Journals
Book review of Ziad Fahmy’s Ordinary Egyptians: Creating the Modern Nation through Popular Culture, Arab
Studies Quarterly, Vol. 34, No. 2, Spring, 2012.
Book review of Albert Memmi’s Decolonization and the Decolonized: “The Shibboleths within Albert Memmi’s
Universalism,” Jadaliyya, October 8, 2011, http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/2829/the-shibboleths-withinalbert-memmis-universalism.
“The Questionable Nature of Sovereignty in the Arab World,” book review of Gokhan Bacik’s Hybrid Sovereignty
in the Arab Middle East: The Cases of Kuwait, Jordan, and Iraq (2008), Arab Studies Quarterly, Pluto Press,
Vol. 33, No. 2, (Spring 2010).
“Neither One State nor Two State: The Pretense of a Solution,” book review essay of Benny Morris’ One State,
Two States: Resolving the Israel/Palestine Conflict (2009), Arab Studies Quarterly, Pluto Press, Vol. 32, No. 1,
(Winter 2010).
“Home: A Palestinian’s Journey,” book review of Randa Jarrar’s A Map of Home (2008), Arab Studies
Quarterly, Pluto Press, Vol. 31, No. 4 (Fall 2009)
Articles in Non-peer-reviewed Websites (Selection)
“Al-Karama versus Parasitic Symbiosis: Sovereignty in the Middle East,” al-Ahram Weekly, 1/27/2011.
http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2011/1033/re1401.htm.
“UNRWA’s Challenges and Mixed Record,” Palestine Chronicle, 12/18/2009.
http://www.palestinechronicle.com/view_article_details.php?id=15623.
“Hiding the State: On Exploiting Land and Natural Gas,” Counterpunch, 8/03/2009.
http://www.counterpunch.org/jadallah08032009.html.
Translated into German by Anja Zuchmantel, “Siedlungs- und Rohstoffpolitik: Geplanter Rückzug des
Staates,” and published into German language magazine Inamo, No. 59 (Autumn 2009). Reprinted in
Schattenblick at www.schattenblick.de; http://www.schattenblick.de/infopool/politik/ausland/panah571.html.
Academic Conference Presentation
“Democracy Promotion and Abstracted Sovereignty," Arab Studies Quarterly, Vol. 34(4), Fall, 2012, pp. 205229). Presented at Twelfth Annual Southwest Graduate Conference in Middle East and North African Studies,
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March 28-30, 2012.
http://menas.arizona.edu/sites/menas.arizona.edu/files/2012%20Conference%20Program.pdf.
Media and Community Outreach
Interview, “Arab Spring Watched Closely from Tucson,” KUAT TV – Arizona Illustrated, 10 March 2012,
http://originals.azpm.org/azill/story/2012/3/20/161-arab-spring-watched-closely-from-tucson/.
Presentation to Great Decisions Oro Valley Chapter, Tucson, on the Uprisings in Egypt and the Middle East,
January 19, 2012.
Presentation to Great Decisions Voyager Chapter, Tucson, on Democracy Promotion and Contested
Sovereignty in the Arab World, March 8, 2012.
Arabic Workshop for the “Teach Syria” Educators’ Trip, at University of Arizona (3 sessions), Spring 2011.
Presentation to Great Decisions Oro Valley Chapter, Tucson, on the Recent Changes in Egypt Placed Within a
Regional Context, April 7, 2011.
Presentation to Great Decisions Voyager Chapter, Tucson, on Egypt, March 17, 2011.
Radio Interview with Maggy Zanger, KXCI (Tucson) Panel honoring International Women’s Day and the Role of
Women in the Changing Landscape of the Middle East, March 7, 2011.
Panel Discussant in Conference hosted by SISMEK, Near Eastern Studies, University of Arizona; discussing
Egypt and the Middle East, “Democracy or Dictatorship? Winds of Change,” February 4, 2011.
YouTube videos: 9 parts. The parts where I speak are below:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yyreIKi5WU&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pURVRKPgC7o&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=919-uH50CzM&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uWolJqcf0EI&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KQ7W8cfiNig&feature=related
Interview on Egypt with KGUN-9 Tucson TV Station, 1/29/2011
http://www.kgun9.com/Global/category.asp?C=172043.
Courses Taught
Advanced Arabic (for the Social Sciences), University of Southern California, Fall 2015.
Perspectives on U.S. Foreign Policy in the Middle East, University of Southern California, Fall 2015.
Modern Arab State and Society: Media and Intellectual Works, University of Southern California, Fall 2015.
First Year Arabic 101, University of Arizona, Fall, 2010.
First Year Arabic 102, University of Arizona, Spring 2011.
Experience
Instructor of Arabic, University of Arizona, August 2010 – May 2011
Taught first year modern standard Arabic. Responsible for all aspects of instruction, including lectures, creation
of classroom interactive activities, preparation of multi-media instructional content, writing and administering of
exams, and grading. Classes ranged between 28-30 students.
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Intern, al-Jazeera, Washington, D.C., January 2010- August 2010
Worked at al-Jazeera as a transitional step while seeking education in the field of my planned career change. I
conducted research into potential stories, articles, and proposed topics for shows. I translated and transcribed
interviews. I also interviewed guests when needed (to fill in for reporters) and helped with the production of
news stories. In a more technical capacity, I edited and scripted news feeds and compiled background roll for
(video) editing.
Professional Landscape Artist, Newport Beach, CA, 1998-2009.
Oil-based, plein air and studio painter of landscapes sold through various galleries. Work can be seen at
www.dinataschler.com. Member of the Southern California Plein Air Painters Association (SOCALPAPA) and
American Women Artists.
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