Academic literature on the topic 'Yemenis'

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Journal articles on the topic "Yemenis"

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Thabit, Budoor Mohammed, and Hanisa Hassan. "STUDY ON USAGE OF FABRIC REMNANTS ON YEMENI’S FASHION FOR WOMEN." International Journal of Heritage, Art and Multimedia 3, no. 9 (June 10, 2020): 01–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.35631/ijham.39001.

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The big quantity of fabric remnants was thrown away in Yemen due to a lack of knowledge and competency in reusing the remnants as material for making clothes. It has become a burden to the consumers and also bad for the environment. Therefore, this research aims to understand why the seamstress in Yemen wasted a lot of remnants and the possibility of using the remnants in making innovative designs on Yemenis traditional clothing such as Abaya and Galabiah. In order to answer the objectives, the researcher applies the qualitative approach in order to describe and understand the problems stated for this study by made several interviews with Yemeni’s respondent who used to be a seamstress in Yemen, besides her personal experience when working in the workshop in Yemen. The prior objective is to recognise what was done to remnants in sewing workshops. Secondly, the researcher will be producing a design line using remnants with various techniques of embellishment to create new designs for Yemen's traditional costume of Abaya and Galabiah. The researcher hopes that through her innovation can inspire other designers or seamstress to use remnants as a source of material in making clothes. At the end of this study, the researcher found out that her Yemeni’s respondents threw away remnants because they do not have the knowledge and skill to turn remnants into fashion. Plus, they are also lazy to think of recycling remnants since they had lots of orders from clients. In the end, the researcher made a questionnaire about the final designs and they did agree that remnants can be used to make beautiful traditional Yemeni’s dress. Since remnants came from different sources, the design made is unique and one-off, which is the preference for most Yemenis. The researcher also proved that innovative and creative thinking are vital in creating designs, and hopefully it can change the perspective of Yemeni women towards the usage of remnants in fashion.
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Beckerleg, Susan. "From Ocean to Lakes: Cultural Transformations of Yemenis in Kenya and Uganda." African and Asian Studies 8, no. 3 (2009): 288–308. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156921009x458127.

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Abstract Migration from Yemen to East Africa has been occurring for centuries and continued well into the twentieth century. Since the European explorations of the nineteenth century the term 'Arab-Swahili', as distinguished from 'African', has been in use. The ways that Yemenis have both adopted and changed Swahili culture in Kenya are outlined in this paper. Most Yemeni migrants who settled in Uganda passed through Mombasa, acquiring some knowledge of the Swahili language en route. However, the Yemenis of Uganda are not Swahili, despite using the Swahili language as a major medium of communication, even at home. Ugandan 'Arab' food eaten at home and cooked by Yemenis in cafes is actually Indian/Swahili cuisine. The ways that Yemenis have promoted the cultivation of qat across Uganda and have made its consumption a marker of identity are described. The degree that the terminology of diaspora studies can be applied to Yemenis in Kenya and Uganda is assessed, and concludes that the migrants are both 'cultural hybrids' and 'transnationals'.
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Salem, Nabil. "A Socio-semiotic Analysis of Qat culture in Yemen." southern semiotic review 2021 i, no. 14 (July 14, 2021): 68–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.33234/ssr.14.5.

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Qat, Catha edulis has become synonymous with Yemen, as the phenomenon of Qat chewing in Yemen dates back hundreds of years in history. No social, cultural, or political gathering in the afternoon time can do without Qat. Afternoon time becomes the sign of Qat sessions and socialization. Despite Yemen's openness to other cultures and the recent revolution in all kinds of social media, Yemenis do not stop the habit of chewing Qat. The purpose of the present research work is to analyze 'Qat' as a linguistic sign consisting of a signifier and a signified to understand its various social, cultural, and political signifieds that give it the semiotic power to dominate all aspects of life in Yemen and to ground the coinage of many lexical items that are culturally specific to Qat culture and Yemeni dialects. The present paper uses semiotics as a research method in which it adopts Saussure's linguistic model of sign, signifier, and signified and Barthes' concepts of denotation and connotation. Semiotically, this paper shows that the Yemeni people are not addicted to Qat as a drug, as might be assumed by some foreigners who are not familiar with the sign system of Yemeni culture. The Yemeni people are addicted to Qat as a polysemous sign that is associated with values, norms, rituals, enjoyment, relationship, and socialization at the connotative level.
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Burrowes, Robert D. "The Famous Forty and Their Companions: North Yemen's First-Generation Modernists and Educational Emigrants." Middle East Journal 59, no. 1 (January 1, 2005): 81–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.3751/59.1.15.

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This article is a study of the several hundred North Yemenis who went out from isolated Yemen for education between 1947 and 1959. It focuses on their backgrounds, what and where they studied, the impact on them of this experience, what they did when they returned and, finally, the impact they have had on the Yemen most hoped to change. The major conclusion is that their impact has been modest and that this is best explained by Yemen's socio-cultural system and the political structure it supports.
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de Regt, Marina, and Aisha Aljaedy. "“We Are All Suffering Equally”: The Impact of the War on Muwalladin in Yemen." Northeast African Studies 22, no. 1 (April 1, 2022): 165–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.14321/nortafristud.22.1.0165.

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Abstract This article focuses on the impact of the war on people of mixed Yemeni-African descent in Yemen. These so-called muwalladin have been the target of discriminatory practices for decades. Since the start of the civil war in Yemen, stigmatization and discrimination on the basis of one's family background has increased. Based on a qualitative study among muwalladin in Yemen we argue that discrimination on the basis of race and gender is highly prevalent in Yemen, even though many interviewees were of the opinion that differences between Yemenis had decreased as a result of the war because “everyone is suffering equally.” Indeed, the daily lives of the Yemeni population are affected on many different levels, yet those who are considered second class citizens based on the intersection of their gender, race, lineage, and skin color, are suffering more than others.
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Suvorov, Mikhail. "Otherworldly Beings in Modern Yemeni Ethnographic and Fiction Literature." Manuscripta Orientalia. International Journal for Oriental Manuscript Research 28, no. 1 (June 2022): 23–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.31250/1238-5018-2022-28-1-23-30.

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The society of Yemen, which in many respects retains its traditional features, is characterized, among other matters, by a strong belief it the existence of otherworldly beings, such as jinn, ghoul, ghost, werewolf, etc. This paper is intended to discuss to what extent and in what way this belief is manifested in the modern ethnographic and fiction literature of Yemen. Appropriate fragments of short stories, novels, memoir and scholarly works of Yemeni authors help to clarify what Yemenis think about the nomenclature of supernatural creatures, about their appearances, abilities, habits and “specializations” in contacts with humans, about their harm and their possible benefits for humans.
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BAYASHOT, Mohammed. "THE EFFECT OF NEW MEDIA ON FORMATTING A PUBLIC OPINION ABOUT THE WAR IN YEMEN "A FIELD STUDY AMONG YEMENIS RESIDING IN TURKEY"." RIMAK International Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences 05, no. 04 (July 1, 2023): 179–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.47832/2717-8293.24.11.

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The research aims to find out the extent of the effect of the new media on forming public opinion about the war in Yemen among Yemenis residing in Turkey, Moreover, to know the extent to which the research sample relies on social media in following up situation in Yemen compared to reliance on traditional media. The qualitative research "descriptive" methodology was used, through the an in-depth semi-structured interview method, to collect research data with eight Yemenis residing in Turkey. The results of the research concluded that most of the Yemenis residing in Turkey depend on social media as a main source in following up the war in Yemen, furthermore, the facebook was the first platform compared to other platforms in the following. The results of the research also revealed that the social media contributed greatly to the formation of the mental image that is closest to reality about the events of the war in Yemen among the research sample, in addition to the fact that most of the research sample do not trust all posts that were published on social media about the war in Yemen
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Alrefaee, Yasser, Naimah Alghamdi, and Najeeb Almansoob. "A Sociolinguistic Study of the Realization of Refusals Among Yemeni EFL Learners." International Journal of English Linguistics 9, no. 6 (October 20, 2019): 172. http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/ijel.v9n6p172.

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The present paper attempts to study the realization of refusal responses to invitations and requests among Yemen EFL learners in equal, higher and lower social status. It also aims to find out the pragmatic failure resulted from negative pragmatic transfer. In order to do so, refusals of 40 Yemeni EFL (20 high and 20 low proficient) learners were compared with refusals of 20 native speakers of English (ENS) and 20 native speakers of Arabic (ANS). Data were collected using a Written Discourse Completion Test (WDCT) consisting of six refusals to invitations and requests in higher, equal and lower social status. This study finds out that Yemenis and Americans used different refusal strategies when refusing persons of equal and lower social status. ANS also used the adjunct of invoking the name of God which is religiously rooted and culturally specific to assert their excuses. Interestingly, Yemeni EFL learners showed a tendency toward the L1 pragmatic norms in the use of invoking the name of God and also in the use of more Direct strategies when refusing someone equal or lower in status. With respect to the content of refusals, Yemenis used general and vague excuses when refusing someone equal or lower in social status whereas Americans, on the other hand, were found to use detailed and clear excuses with persons of different social status.
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Al-Eriani, Kamilia. "Mourning the death of a state to enliven it: Notes on the ‘weak’ Yemeni state." International Journal of Cultural Studies 23, no. 2 (September 20, 2019): 227–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1367877918823774.

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Observers interested in Yemen often worry about the near collapse of the Yemeni state. Such worries assume that the death of the state will lead to a complete social disintegration. With a brief reflection on the 2011 Gulf Cooperation Council Initiative, the recent US–Saudi-led intervention, this article argues that thinking about the Yemeni state through public worry is an exercise in symbolic violence. This violence articulates itself through the erasure of Yemenis’ communitarian culture; an erasure that becomes the condition for perpetuating the life of the discursively produced ‘weak’ state, and the domination of regional-international powers. This article proposes an alternative approach towards rethinking the ‘weak’ Yemeni state. It suggests that rethinking the Yemeni state through mourning its death could possibly give birth to a novel form of political community. It is through acts of mourning the injury and (imagined) death of the weak Yemeni state that the promise of the state as a unifying apparatus is reclaimed.
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Bokov, Timofey A. "One Problem in the Study of the Houthi Movement (Three Сliches of anti-Houthi Propaganda)." Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. Asian and African Studies 13, no. 1 (2021): 74–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.21638/spbu13.2021.105.

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The article identifies and analyzes three main accusations leveled in the 2000s by the Yemeni Government against Houthis: a desire to restore the Imamate, gaining support from Iran and conversion to Twelver Shiism. It is shown that these accusations are incorrect and are consequences of the Yemeni authorities’ discrimination policy against practicing Zaydis and especially sayyids — Zaydi religious “aristocracy”. It is demonstrated that reestablishment of theocratic rule was not part of the Houthi political agenda since a majority of Yemenis were against it; the goal of allegations about Houthi connections with Tehran, made by the Yemeni political establishment, was to secure additional financial aid from Washington and Riyadh; Al-Houthi was not a Twelver Shiite and was critical of the main ideas of this denomination. The author of the article suggests that many Yemenis and several Russian and Western scholars believed the accusations due to the dominance of anti-Zaydi sentiment in the Yemeni information space and the fact that these accusations complement each other in a quasi-logical way: to reestablish the Imamate, Houthis need support, which can be gained from Iran, while conversion to Twelver Shiism guarantees such support.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Yemenis"

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Kangas, Beth E. "The lure of technology: Yemenis' international medical travel in a global era." Diss., The University of Arizona, 2002. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/280190.

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Using Yemen as a case study, this medical anthropological dissertation examines experiences of serious illnesses and injuries in developing countries that lack the financial and medical capabilities to treat them. Yemeni patients suffering from cancer and other complicated conditions must currently go abroad to pursue advanced medical care. Despite the great cost, medical travellers are from all social classes. The dissertation draws on multi-sited and multi-locale research to explore hardships that result when medical possibilities, and awareness of them, surpass financial abilities. I situate the international medical travel of Yemeni patients and family members in a global context. This highlights both worldwide commonalities surrounding sophisticated medical technology, and specifics related to Yemen as a developing country with its particular historical and cultural context. In this study, I employed an array of methods: interviews with Yemeni medical travellers in India and Jordan, participant observation in Yemen's central hospital, scourings of Yemen's Arabic newspapers from the first half of the 20th century, and open-ended surveys with doctors, religious scholars, and members of the Yemeni Parliament. Data sources are interwoven throughout the dissertation. Chapters parallel the various steps that patients and family members take throughout their medical journeys. In the conclusion, I argue that medicine should not be viewed as a consumer good for the market to regulate. In pursuing and providing high-tech medicine, patients and their families fulfill moral, social, and familial obligations.
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Mansi, Kamel Mahmoud Saleh. "Socio-economic and cultural obstacles to ethnic minority women's engagement in economic activity : a case study of Yemeni women in the UK." Thesis, University of Manchester, 2005. https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.673819.

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Al-Khalqi, Noha F. "Social Entrepreneurship in Yemen: A Yemeni Youth Perspective." Ohio University Honors Tutorial College / OhioLINK, 2017. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ouhonors1502125331858313.

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Vecchierelli, Nausicaa <1990&gt. "La notizia della distruzione del patrimonio culturale yemenita nella dimensione mediatica del conflitto in Yemen." Master's Degree Thesis, Università Ca' Foscari Venezia, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/10579/7768.

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Il seguente elaborato di tesi si propone di analizzare il linguaggio mediatico utilizzato nel descrivere le notizie inerenti alla distruzione del patrimonio culturale yemenita. Il conflitto attuale in Yemen ha visto le forze dei ribelli Huthi, nella loro avanzata verso Sud con l’obiettivo della conquista del Paese, schierarsi con le forze dell’ex presidente ‘Abdallah Saleh, un tempo nemiche. A questa alleanza si oppone il presidente ‘Abd Rabbo Mansur Hadi, supportato dalla Resistenza popolare del Sud e, soprattutto, dall’Arabia Saudita, a guida di una Coalizione militare che, con l’annuncio dell’inizio dell’operazione “Decisive Storm” e la successiva “Restore Hope”, ha dato il via ad una campagna militare di bombardamenti contro i siti conquistati dalle forze ribelli. Tale contesto ha provocato, oltre a una crisi umanitaria senza precedenti, aggravatasi in maniera tale da divenire irreversibile nell’arco di pochi mesi, anche profonde devastazioni al ricco e multiforme patrimonio culturale yemenita. Le notizie prese in esame riportano la distruzione dei luoghi-simbolo della civiltà e della storia yemenita; l’analisi linguistica delle notizie vuole mostrare da un lato in che modo esse siano soggette al punto di vista di chi li riporta, esito di determinate influenze politiche, dall’altra come spesso a uno stesso messaggio, proprio a causa di queste influenze, venga assegnato un peso diverso.
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SGUALDO, Paolo. "Caratterizzazione petrologico-geochimica del mantello litosferico della provincia etiopico-yemenita: gli xenoliti di Bir Ali (Yemen) e confronti regionali." Doctoral thesis, Università degli studi di Ferrara, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/11392/2388973.

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Sercu, Jason Alexander. "Yemen's Water Crisis: Approaching a Solution." Thesis, The University of Arizona, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/144958.

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Kirschbaum, Lisa Christina. "The illegal targeting of healthcare in the Yemen armed conflict: A quantitative and qualitative content analysis of the experiences of humanitarian actors and the Yemeni population." Thesis, Uppsala universitet, Teologiska institutionen, 2019. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-388911.

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The illegal targeting of healthcare in armed conflict is nothing new but its continuance and impunity at a time when the protection of it has formally never been higher, for instance through the UNSC Resolution 2286, motivated this study. Therefore, the thesis analyses how the illegal targeting of healthcare affect humanitarian actors operating in Yemen as well as the local population. How the population and humanitarian actors perceive and interpret the violent targeting of healthcare was explored as well.    This study is based on a quantitative and qualitative content analysis of 11 media outlets and 25 documents provided by humanitarian actors. As a theoretical framework the humanitarian principles, international humanitarian law and the politicisation of humanitarian aid were addressed. Moreover, securitization theory was used in order to explain how humanitarian actors securitize the targeting through language. The results show that consequences of the illegal targeting for humanitarian organisations are limited access to the field as well as the closing of facilities and withdrawal of staff due to security issues. For the Yemeni population consequences are a limited access to healthcare as well as a loss of trust in the safety of medical facilities and therefore they often take the decision to not seek medical care. The analysis shows that humanitarian actors present the illegal targeting as a threat to the survival of beneficiaries and connect this to their own organisational survival and through that securitize the illegal targeting.
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Saif, Ahmed Abdul-Kareem. "A legislature in transition : the parliament of the Republic of Yemen 1990-1999." Thesis, University of Exeter, 2000. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.322261.

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Halliday, Fred. "Aspects of South Yemen's foreign policy, 1967-1982." Thesis, London School of Economics and Political Science (University of London), 1985. http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/430/.

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This study analyses the foreign relations of South Yemen (since 1970 the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen) from independence in 1967 until 1982. It covers the first four Presidencies of the post-independence period, with their attendant policy changes, and ends with the resolution of two of the more pressing foreign policy conflicts with which South Yemen was concerned, its support for the guerrillas in North Yemen, who were defeated in the spring of 1982, and its conflict with the Sultanate of Oman, with whom diplomatic relations were concluded in October 1982. Chapter One provides an outline of the background to South Yemen's foreign policy: the outcome of the independence movement itself and the resultant foreign policy orientations of the new government; the independence negotiations with Britain; and the manner in which, in the post-independence period, the ruling National Front sought to determine and develop its foreign policy. The remaining four chapters focus upon specific aspects of South Yemen's foreign policy that are, it is argued, of central importance. Chapter Two discusses relations with the West - with Britain, France, West Germany and the USA. It charts the pattern of continued economic ties with western European states, and the several political disputes which South Yemen had with them. Chapter Three discusses the issue of 'Yemeni Unity' - the reasons for the continued commitment to this goal, the policy of simultaneously supporting opposition in North Yemen and negotiating with the government there, and the course of policy on creating a unified Yemeni state. Chapter Four considers the attempt to promote revolution in Oman, relations with other states in the Arabian Peninsula and the gradual lessening of tensions between them and South Yemen. Chapter Five discusses relations with the USSR and China - the growth of military and economic links with Russia, the large but not complete area of PDRY-USSR political agreement, and the continued if sometimes tense relationship with China. The study ends with a brief Conclusion, suggesting some broader implications of South Yemen's foreign policy in this period.
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Saleh, Abdo Saleh. "The social foundation of the contemporary Yemeni state." Thesis, University of Warwick, 1998. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.300258.

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Books on the topic "Yemenis"

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Sadīrah, al-Sayyid Ṭāhā Abū. al- Qabāʼil al-Yamanīyah fī Miṣr: Mundhu al-faṭh al-ʻArabī ḥattá nihāyat al-ʻAṣr al-Umawī (min 20 ilá 132 H/640-750 Mīlādīyah). al-Fajjālah, al-Qāhirah: Maktabat al-Shaʻb, 1988.

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Waysman, Dvora. The pomegranate pendant: A historical novel. Jerusalem: Feldheim Publishers, 1995.

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Aḥmad ibn Muḥammad ibn ʻAbd Allāh Wazīr. Ḥayāt al-Amīr ʻAlī ibn ʻAbd Allāh al-Wazīr. [S.l.]: Manshūrāt al-ʻAṣr al-Ḥadīth, 1987.

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Sadīrah, al-Sayyid Ṭāhā Abū. al- Qabāʾil al-Yamanīyah fī Miṣr: Mundhu al-faṭh al-ʻArabī ḥattá nihāyat al-ʻAṣr al-Umawī (min 20 ilá 132 H/640-750 Mīlādīyah). al-Fajjālah, al-Qāhirah: Maktabat al-Shaʻb, 1988.

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Fred, Halliday. Arabs in exile: Yemeni migrants in urban Britain. London: I.B. Tauris, 1992.

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Fred, Halliday. Arabs in exile: Yemeni migrants in urban Britain. London: I.B.Tauris, 1992.

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Staub, Shalom. Yemenis in New York City: The folklore of ethnicity. Philadelphia: Balch Institute Press, 1989.

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Maṭarī, ʻAbd al-Wadūd. Tāʼih fī bilād al-Injilīz. Landan: Dār al-Nubalāʼ, 1998.

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Yamānī, Muṣliḥ al-Muthanná. Tārīkh manābiʻ al-ansāb al-Yamanīyah. ʻAmmān: Muṣliḥ al-Muthanná al-Yamānī, 2008.

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Bâfaqîh, Muḥammad. al- Mustashriqūn wa-āthār al-Yaman: Qissat al-Suwaydī al-Kūnt Kārlū dī Lindbirj min khilāl murāsalātihi maʻa al-Yamanīyīn 1895-1911. Ṣanʻāʾ: Markaz al-Dirāsāt wa-al-Buḥūth al-Yamanī, 1988.

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Book chapters on the topic "Yemenis"

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Foyth, Joel. "Yemen, the Wound that Still Bleeds in the Gulf and Beyond." In Gulf Studies, 645–61. Singapore: Springer Nature Singapore, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-19-7796-1_38.

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AbstractThis chapter addresses the causes and reasons for continuation of Yemeni civil war. In 2011, Yemenis mobilized to demand the departure of President Abdullah Saleh and the establishment of a better society. After thirty years in power, Saleh signed his resignation and began a political transition that was initially promising. This chapter argues that the absence of real change and the complexity of Yemeni society undermined the process, leading to civil conflict. In addition, the turbulent Yemeni reality was intertwined with dark regional geopolitics, marked by sectarianism and competition between Saudi Arabia, Iran, and United Arab Emirates. This chapter suggests that the war eventually turned into a brutal fight, which has been qualified as The century’s worst humanitarian crisis.
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Augustin, Anne-Linda Amira. "Family Memories and the Transmission of the Independence Struggle in South Yemen." In Re-Configurations, 203–14. Wiesbaden: Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-31160-5_13.

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Abstract In 2007, a protest movement emerged in South Yemen called the Southern Movement. At the beginning, it was a loose amalgamation of people, most of them former army personnel and state employees of the former People’s Democratic Republic of Yemen (PDRY) who had been forced out of their jobs after the southern faction lost the war in 1994. Because of the state security forces’ brutality against protesters, more and more people joined the demonstrations, and the claims began to evolve into concrete political demands, such as the restored independence of the territory that once formed the PDRY, which in 1990 unified with the Arab Republic of Yemen to form the Republic of Yemen, as a separate state. By appropriating hidden forms of resistance, such as the intentionally and unintentionally intergenerational transmission of a counternarrative, South Yemenis have strengthened the calls for independence in recent years.
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Moorthy Kloss, Magdalena. "Slavery in Medieval Arabia." In The Palgrave Handbook of Global Slavery throughout History, 139–58. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-13260-5_8.

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AbstractThe Arabian Peninsula remains a blind spot in recent scholarship on slavery in medieval Islamic contexts. Given the limited secondary literature on the subject, this chapter will rely largely on primary sources to provide a case study from Yemen during the eleventh to fifteenth centuries CE. Medieval texts offer rare insights into the lives of enslaved persons during that era, revealing a remarkable breadth of occupations and tasks assigned to them in Yemeni societies. They also provide evidence of slave trading practices from East Africaacross the Red Seato Yemen. Taken together, primary sources sketch a vivid picture of what it meant to be a slave in medieval South Arabia.
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Beckerleg, Susan. "Yemeni Migrants." In Ethnic Identity and Development, 29–48. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230107786_3.

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Rijal, Syamsul. "Reviving Yemeni Traditionalist Networks." In Defending Traditional Islam in Indonesia, 82–104. London: Routledge, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003358558-5.

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Orkaby, Asher. "Arabian Minorities." In Yemen. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/wentk/9780190932268.003.0009.

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This chapter addresses the minorities living in Yemen. There is a long tradition of migration between the Horn of Africa and Yemen. This cross-Red Sea migration has led to the prevalence of mixed households of Yemenis, Eritreans, Ethiopians, Djiboutians, and Somalis. Known as muwalladeen, or the birthed, these groups are subject to covert discrimination by those who do not view them as "pure Yemenis," despite legislation abolishing the country's traditional social hierarchy. Aside from the African refugees in Yemen, there is a small population of Jews currently living under government protection in Sana'a. The chapter then looks at how the Jews were treated by local ruling authorities; the role they played in Yemen's economy; why they left the country; and whether there is a connection between the Jewish Yemeni diaspora and Yemen. It also considers other religious minorities in Yemen.
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Mahdi, Waleed. "Sovereignty for Security: The Paradox of Urgency and Intervention in Yemen." In The Struggle to Reshape the Middle East in the 21st Century, 174–92. Edinburgh University Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781399518222.003.0008.

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This chapter examines the paradox of urgency and intervention in Yemen since the start of the twenty-first century by exploring the compromising of Yemen's sovereignty for the sake of security and stability. This paradox stems from the intersection of the US-led 'war on terror' campaign in Yemen after 2000 and competing narratives surrounding Yemen’s future since 2011. The United States’ ‘war on terror’ and the Gulf Cooperation Council initiative ostensibly intended to guide Yemen’s political transition and prevent it from becoming a ‘failed state,’ followed by Saudi and Emirati military intervention beginning in 2015, simultaneously denied Yemenis their sovereignty and produced even greater instability in the country. The chapter investigates how such powerful international and regional actors repeatedly employed discourses of security and state fragility to intervene in Yemen in pursuit of their own national security interests. These discourses have produced neither stability nor security and have had disastrous consequences for millions of Yemenis, further denying them the ability to create a future based on national sovereignty.
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Blumi, Isa. "The Region That Pumps the Heart of the Cold War, 1941–1960." In Destroying Yemen. University of California Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520296138.003.0003.

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This chapter offers a modest historical scan of the contours of the early Cold War while introducing Yemenis whose roles as potential surrogates for global interests both ignited new political opportunities in the country and redefined what constitutes the modern state. Forming a generation of reformists known as the ‘asriyyun, “modernists,” urban intellectuals cultivated an alliance between the Free Yemeni Movement (FYM) or al-Ahrar al-Yamaniyyun (Free Yemenis) and the Muslim Brotherhood (MB) based in Egypt. The resulting coalition of rivals against the Imamate reflected the currents of the larger world and eventually overpowered peoples still resisting global finance capitalism. This chapter tells the story how the Cold War constituted both a threat and opportunity. What happened in Yemen in this period was not solely the consequence of external forces imposing their demands on local societies. Indeed, because Yemenis’ repeated resistance frustrated the ambitions of global powers – British administrators, American oil conglomerates, Soviet strategists, French colonialists in Djibouti, and Egyptian would-be heroes of the Third World – these foreign interests had to adopt new policies towards first Yemen and then with the larger Middle East.
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Blumi, Isa. "Making Yemen Dance." In Destroying Yemen. University of California Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520296138.003.0006.

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It is in this chapter that I begin my detailed revisionist accounting of Yemen’s recent history. Crucially, I do so by emphasizing the global dynamics behind events occurring in Southern Arabia since 2000. The focus will be to identify the origins of the so-called Arab Spring in 2011. I incrementally “retell” what led to the direct confrontation between different groups in Yemen. Quickly identifying these factions may prove useful here. The most important, are a cluster of parties crudely reduced to the “Houthis” found in the Northwest in Yemen. As of March 2015, when Saudi Arabia, the US/UK and UAE initiated a war to reassert hegemony over Yemen, this coalition of parties known as “Huthis” aligned with the Ali Saleh who commands considerable support within the Yemeni military services. Their main rivals are the so-called southern separatists. These southern Yemenis have forged a precarious alliance with other rivals of the “Huthis,” including Islamist groups under the protection of competing external powers—ostensibly pitting Qatar, Saudi Arabia and UAE against each other—as well as with “President” Hadi, whom the US and Saudi Arabia/UAE claim to be the head of Yemen’s “legitimate” government.
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Blumi, Isa. "The Quest for Global Hegemony Starts There." In Destroying Yemen. University of California Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520296138.003.0002.

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This chapter offers what the historiography tells of Yemen’s rise as a modern, unified (and recently fragmented, chaotic polity). Starting from the beginning of the twentieth century when Yemen was administered by the Ottoman and British Empires, the narrative repositions Yemen as being at the heart of modern European imperialism until World War II. This chapter challenges conventional wisdom by way of providing an accounting for how and why European financial interests sought and finally, through appropriated state resources in Britain, France, Italy, Ottoman Empire gained access to Yemen’s natural and human resources. Beyond this, accounting for the arrival of the United States in this manner by the 1920s seems critical. It is in fact by way of engaging Yemen and the larger Red Sea, often on local Yemeni terms, that the very modern institutions and practices synonymous with American Empire emerge. This rethinking the nature of the relationship Yemenis had with an emergent globalist regime starts with clashes locals had with British capitalist interests, by the mid-nineteenth century firmly entrenched in South Yemen. The relationship that would help create Saudi Arabia, for instance, is drawn specifically from the fact British bankers could not subordinate the ruling family of Northern Yemen—the Imams—forcing them to resort to new tactics, including promoting the rise of KSA and ultimately political Islam as we know it today.
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Conference papers on the topic "Yemenis"

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Sabra, Nabil. "Developing an adult learning approach to enhance the critical thinking of graphic design students in Yemen." In LINK 2021. Tuwhera Open Access, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.24135/link2021.v2i1.114.

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Critical thinking is an essential skill not only for educational achievement but also to enhance the quality of life (Bakry et al., 2019, pp. 632-633). However, Yemen has not traditionally encouraged or utilized critical thinking in graphic design education, a field of study where critical thinking is required to think beyond a problem to create solutions to existing and new problems. Design does not come up with the same solution for each project but looks for new ideas and solutions that have culturally relevant answers to solve a problem (Barbour, 2016). Currently there is a lack of research in the areas of critical thinking in graphic design education in Yemen. To Nordin and Surajudin (2015), Ijtihad is a representative for Higher-Order Thinking Skill that may reflect the Tawhid of Allah (God’s unification) and supported their claim with a hadith (the prophet statements): “Those who know himself, he may know his God” (Nordin and Surajudeen, 2015, p. 37). Thus, in knowing oneself, the lifelong learner needs to have self-regulation to be able to use critical thinking (Szabo, 2019). In exploring the relationship between the Islamic concept of Ijtihad (individual reasoning) and the Western notion of critical thinking, there are several points that require consideration. In particular, establishing what critical thinking means in the context of Western design education relative to Ijtihad’s role in Islamic education. The focus of this presentation is exploring the relationship between the western notion of critical thinking and the equivalent Islamic concept of Ijtihad. It highlights the five elements of Ijtihad: Tadabbur (learning and understanding before judging an idea), Tafkih (analysing using al-Qalb (heart) that depends on al-Aqal (mind)), Tafakkur (reflecting and examining), Ta’qil (gathering information before jumping to the conclusion), and Tadhakkur (summarising to understand wisely). Critical thinking is culturally relative, so it is important to study this phenomenon considering the Yemeni culture proposing a suitable holistic framework of Ijtihad. This research draws on a Ph.D. study in-progress that investigates critical thinking in graphic design education in Yemen from an Islamic perspective. Interviews with Yemeni educators were conducted to explore the concept of critical thinking and Ijtihad. This research ultimately aims to identify essential techniques of thinking that can be shaped to reflect Ijtihad, alongside identifying appropriate adult learning strategies developed by Western educators and researchers to enhance students' critical thinking. The outcome of this study will distinguish frameworks within graphic design curricula promoting students’ critical thinking and reflecting these from a Western context to a Yemeni one considering Ijtihad.
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Sabra, Nabil. "Desarrollar un enfoque de aprendizaje de adultos para mejorar el pensamiento crítico de los estudiantes de diseño gráfico en Yemen." In LINK 2021. Tuwhera Open Access, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.24135/link2021.v2i1.114.g177.

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El pensamiento crítico es una habilidad esencial no solo para el logro educativo sino también para mejorar la calidad de vida (Bakry et al., 2019, págs. 632-633). Sin embargo, Yemen no ha fomentado ni utilizado tradicionalmente el pensamiento crítico en la educación en diseño gráfico, un campo de estudio en el que se requiere el pensamiento crítico para pensar más allá de un problema para crear soluciones a problemas nuevos y existentes. El diseño no presenta la misma solución para cada proyecto, sino que busca nuevas ideas y soluciones que tengan respuestas culturalmente relevantes para resolver un problema (Barbour, 2016). Actualmente, hay una falta de investigación en las áreas de pensamiento crítico en la educación del diseño gráfico en Yemen. Para Nordin y Surajudin (2015), Ijtihad es un representante de la habilidad de pensamiento de orden superior que puede reflejar el Tawhid de Allah (la unificación de Dios) y apoyó su afirmación con un hadiz (las declaraciones del profeta): “Aquellos que se conocen a sí mismos, pueden conoce a su Dios ”(Nordin y Surajudeen, 2015, p. 37). Así, para conocerse a sí mismo, el aprendiz de por vida necesita tener autorregulación para poder utilizar el pensamiento crítico (Szabo, 2019). Al explorar la relación entre el concepto islámico de Ijtihad (razonamiento individual) y la noción occidental de pensamiento crítico, hay varios puntos que requieren consideración. En particular, establecer lo que significa el pensamiento crítico en el contexto de la educación de diseño occidental en relación con el papel de Ijtihad en la educación islámica. El enfoque de esta presentación es explorar la relación entre la noción occidental de pensamiento crítico y el concepto islámico equivalente de Ijtihad. Destaca los cinco elementos de Ijtihad: Tadabbur (aprender y comprender antes de juzgar una idea), Tafkih (analizar usando al-Qalb (corazón) que depende de al-Aqal (mente)), Tafakkur (reflexionar y examinar), Ta’qil (recopilar información antes de saltar a la conclusión), y Tadhakkur (resumir para comprender sabiamente). El pensamiento crítico es culturalmente relativo, por lo que es importante estudiar este fenómeno considerando la cultura yemení proponiendo un marco holístico adecuado de Ijtihad. Esta investigación se basa en un Ph.D. estudio en curso que investiga el pensamiento crítico en la educación en diseño gráfico en Yemen desde una perspectiva islámica. Se llevaron a cabo entrevistas con educadores yemeníes para explorar el concepto de pensamiento crítico e Ijtihad. En última instancia, esta investigación tiene como objetivo identificar las técnicas esenciales de pensamiento que pueden moldearse para reflejar el Ijtihad, junto con la identificación de estrategias de aprendizaje de adultos apropiadas desarrolladas por educadores e investigadores occidentales para mejorar el pensamiento crítico de los estudiantes. El resultado de este estudio distinguirá los marcos dentro de los planes de estudio de diseño gráfico que promueven el pensamiento crítico de los estudiantes y los reflejan desde un contexto occidental a uno yemení considerando Ijtihad.
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Alnowaini, Ghazi, Aisha Alabsi, and Heba Ali. "Yemeni Paper Currency Detection System." In 2019 First International Conference of Intelligent Computing and Engineering (ICOICE). IEEE, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icoice48418.2019.9035192.

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Zhang, Bojian. "The Impact of Climate Change on Yemen's National Stability." In 2018 International Conference on Mechanical, Electronic, Control and Automation Engineering (MECAE 2018). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/mecae-18.2018.35.

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Alnowaini, Ghazi, Azmi Alttal, and Aisha Alabsi. "Design and development SST Prototype for Yemeni paper currency." In 2021 International Conference of Technology, Science and Administration (ICTSA). IEEE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ictsa52017.2021.9406534.

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Saeed, Ahmed Y. A., Abdulfattah E. Ba Alawi, and Ahmed N. Hassan. "Yemeni Banknote Recognition Model based on Convolution Neural Networks." In 2021 1st International Conference on Emerging Smart Technologies and Applications (eSmarTA). IEEE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/esmarta52612.2021.9515728.

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Baarimah, Salem O., and Abdullah O. Baarimah. "PVT Properties for Yemeni Reservoirs Using an Intelligent Approach." In 2021 Third International Sustainability and Resilience Conference: Climate Change. IEEE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ieeeconf53624.2021.9668185.

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Sinnah, Mohamed, and Robert Hirst. "Preserving Yemen." In Middle East Health, Safety, Security, and Environment Conference and Exhibition. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/136524-ms.

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Dabwan, Basel A., and Mukti E. Jadhav. "A Deep Learning based Recognition System for Yemeni Sign Language." In 2021 International Conference of Modern Trends in Information and Communication Technology Industry (MTICTI). IEEE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/mticti53925.2021.9664779.

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Fakhraddin, S., and N. A. Alsowidi. "Advances of Yemeni women in physics: Climbing toward a better status." In WOMEN IN PHYSICS: 4th IUPAP International Conference on Women in Physics. AIP, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4794272.

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Reports on the topic "Yemenis"

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Carter, Becky, Abeer Al-Absi, and Paul Harvey. Sustaining Yemeni Capacities for Social Assistance: Lessons From a Decade of War. Institute of Development Studies, April 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/basic.2024.006.

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Yemen has sometimes been held up as an impressive example of how existing social protection systems and capacities can be maintained and supported even during a prolonged war. While providing support to meet immediate life-saving needs is the humanitarian priority in Yemen, aid organisations also want to ensure that recurrent emergency operations are delivered in a way that will support, and not undermine, national reconstruction and rehabilitation for a post-conflict Yemen. Through a literature review and interviews with Yemeni and international stakeholders conducted in 2022 and 2023, this study has interrogated that narrative, examining the evidence on what capacities are being supported, and what that means for the effective provision of assistance through a protracted crisis. It is important to acknowledge the enormous challenges all actors in Yemen must confront in trying to find ways to help people survive in the face of conflict and other shocks. Widespread conflict, insecurity, and contested governance have made providing assistance extremely hard. The huge scale of need has also necessitated one of the biggest aid operations in the world, creating incentives for control and diversion. In the face of these challenges, focusing on the two main social assistance operations in Yemen – the World Food Programme’s General Food Assistance Programme and the World Bank’s Unconditional Cash Transfer Programme (implemented by the United Nations Children’s Fund and the Social Fund for Development, with the Social Welfare Fund) – this study has found impressive achievements in getting assistance to people, and in maintaining and strengthening Yemeni organisational and individual capacities. However, while some capacities have been maintained and built, others have been relatively neglected (in particular, valuable capacities for community engagement and accountability, which are vital for achieving more inclusive and conflict-sensitive approaches), whereas others (around the highly politicised issues of targeting and transfer value) have been difficult to tackle. The study found that partnerships with Yemeni non-governmental organisations are narrowly subcontractual and limited to managing distribution, with only a small proportion of funding directly reaching national organisations. Overall, the process of providing external support for ‘capacity strengthening’ of national actors is somewhat opaque. More coordinated strategic efforts to support local capacities, informed by shared analysis and learning from past endeavours, could help improve future social assistance interventions.
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Price, Roz. Climate Change Risks and Opportunities in Yemen. Institute of Development Studies, May 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/k4d.2022.096.

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This rapid review provides insight into the effects of climate change in the Republic of Yemen (Yemen), with particular attention on key sectors of concern, including food security, water, energy and health. Many contextual and background factors are relevant when discussing climate-related impacts and potential priorities in Yemen. Limited studies and tools that provide climate data for Yemen exist, and there is a clear lack of recent and reliable climate data and statistics for past and future climates in Yemen, both at the national and more local levels (downscaled). Country-level information in this report is drawn mostly from information reported in Yemen’s UNFCCC reporting (Republic of Yemen, 2013, 2015) and other sources, which tend to be donor climate change country profiles, such as a USAID (2017) climate change risk profile for Yemen and a Climate Service Center Germany (GERICS) (2015) climate fact sheet on Yemen. Many of these are based on projections from older sources. Studies more commonly tend to look at water scarcity or food insecurity issues in relation to Yemen, with climate change mentioned as a factor (one of many) but not the main focus. Regional information is taken from the latest Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Sixth Assessment Report (AR6) report in relation to the Arabian Peninsula (and hence Yemen). Academic sources as well as donor, research institutes and intergovernmental organisations sources are also included. It was outside the scope of this report to review literature in the Arabic language.
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Harvey, Paul, Becky Carter, and Abeer Al-Absi. How Can Aid Actors Support Yemeni Capacities for Social Assistance? Institute of Development Studies, May 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/basic.2024.011.

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Much of Yemen’s population needs basic assistance to avoid famine. As well as providing food and cash-based support during a decade of war, international aid actors have sustained and strengthened the capacities of local organisations involved. Yet these efforts have overlooked some capacities – particularly valuable skills for community engagement and accountability, seen as vital for inclusion and conflict sensitivity. As conflict in Yemen continues and aid budgets come under further pressure, this Policy Briefing offers a series of recommendations to improve the effectiveness of donor and aid agency support for local capacities for social assistance.
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Al-Bukaiti, Mohamed H. Yemen's Fight Against Terrorism. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, March 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada424190.

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Koomar, Saalim, Caitlin Moss Coflan, and Tom Kaye. Using EdTech in Settings of Fragility, Conflict and Violence: A Curated Resource List. EdTech Hub, June 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.53832/edtechhub.0042.

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This curated list of resources collates interventions that effectively deploy education technology in settings of fragility, conflict and violence (FCV). The World Bank (2020) states that by 2030 FCV settings will be home to up to two thirds of the world’s extreme poor; these settings have become increasingly complex over the past decade, with the COVID-19 pandemic threatening to exacerbate existing challenges. This list explores effective uses of EdTech in FCV settings. It particularly emphasises interventions and evidence relevant to the Yemeni context and distance learning during the COVID-19 crisis. These resources were selected with the intention to include practical recommendations on technology-enabled interventions which could support a proposed national distance learning system in Yemen.
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Jaffar, Fatma. Speaking Up: The role of women in building peace in Yemen. Oxfam International, March 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.21201/2023.621481.

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This paper brings the voices of Yemeni women forward. Women were active in the 2011 protests, influencing political developments at key junctures. However, subsequent armed conflicts militarized the political environment and pushed forward a more limited religious agenda that saw more and more women systematically marginalized in the process. This paper outlines these major trends and offers some key recommendations to the government and wider international community to better support women’s participation in peace negotiations and involvement in the Yemeni political arena.
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Alles, Larissa. Missiles and Food: Yemen’s man-made food security crisis. Oxfam, December 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.21201/2017.1299.

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Yaseen, Taha, and Debbie Hillier. Yemen's Shattered Food Economy and its Desperate Toll on Women. Oxfam, February 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.21201/2019.4054.

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Elsabbagh, Dalia, Sikandra Kurdi, and Manfred Wiebelt. Impact of falling remittances amid COVID-19 on Yemen’s war-torn economy. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.2499/9780896294226_07.

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Alles, Larissa. Yemen: Catastrophic cholera crisis. Oxfam, August 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.21201/2017.0360.

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