Editorial

Volume 1|Issue 1| Sep 2020 |Editorial

Abstract

In response to requests from many professors and researchers in the Arab world and beyond, the Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies, in cooperation with the Doha Institute for Graduate Studies, decided to add a new journal to their portfolio of specialized academic periodicals: Hikama: Journal of Public Administration and Public Policy. Specialists in public administration and public policy have long faced a shortage of peer-reviewed Arabic scholarly outlets, a situation rooted in the persistent neglect of these fields in order to preserve the gap between the social and political sciences on one hand, and the administrative and policy practices applied in states on the other. Meanwhile, the study of administration has become confined almost exclusively to business management. In reality, however, managing state and public institutions and formulating public policies in areas such as the economy, health, education, and the environment are scientific disciplines in their own right. Decision-makers understand this and rely on specialized experts and trained staff from schools of administration and other fields, yet they avoid encouraging research in public administration and public policy. This disregard for scientific research is not limited to these two fields; it reflects the general condition of the social sciences as a whole.

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General Director of the Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies (ACRPS) and Chair of the Board of Trustees of the Doha Institute for Graduate Studies (DI). Bishara is a leading Arab researcher and intellectual with numerous books and academic publications on political thought, social theory and philosophy. He was named by Le Nouveau Magazine Littéraire as one of the world's most influential thinkers. His publications in Arabic include Civil Society: A Critical Study (1996); From the Jewishness of the State to Sharon (2004); On The Arab Question: An Introduction to an Arab Democratic Manifesto (2007); To Be an Arab in Our Times (2009); On Revolution and Susceptibility to Revolution (2012); Religion and Secularism in Historical Context (in 3 vols., 2013, 2015); The Army and Political Power in the Arab Context: Theoretical Problems (2017); The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Daesh): A General Framework and Critical Contribution to Understanding the Phenomenon (2018); What is Populism? (2019) and Democratic Transition and its Problems: Theoretical Lessons from Arab Experiences (2020). Some of these works have become key references within their respective field. His latest publication titled The Question of the State: Philosophy, Theory, and Context (2023).

 Bishara's English publications include Palestine: Matters of Truth and Justice (Hurst, 2022); On Salafism: Concepts and Contexts (Stanford University Press, 2022); Sectarianism without Sects (Oxford University Press, 2021), among other writings. His trilogy on the Arab revolutions, published by I.B. Tauris, consists of Understanding Revolutions: Opening Acts in Tunisia (2021); Egypt: Revolution, Failed Transition and Counter-Revolution (2022); and Syria 2011-2013: Revolution and Tyranny before the Mayhem (2023), in which he provides a theoretical analysis in addition to a rich, comprehensive and lucid assessment of the revolutions in three Arab countries: Tunisia, Egypt and Syria.

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