Middle East, Africa & Central Asia
Istanbul, photographed by Isaac Ohringer
Cairo Chronicles IV: The Desert Dichotomy
Living in Cairo during her year abroad, Staff Writer Daisy Wright has seen first-hand how the Egyptian state is attempting to reclaim the desert through the construction of dystopian satellite cities. In this column she explores what that means for the future of Egyptian society.
Cairo Chronicles III: Reflections on Ramadan
With the open eyes of someone living in a majority Muslim country for the first time in her life, Daisy Wright reflects on the way the holy month of Ramadan changes the city which she lives in.
Cairo Chronicles II: Egypt’s Environmentalism
In the second instalment of her column, written on her Year Abroad, Daisy Wright gives her take on the debate about environmentalism in the Egyptian context.
Cairo Chronicles I: Controlled Chaos
Year Abroad student Daisy Wright explores the intricacies of getting to know a new home in the first instalment of her column.
Tins to Tapestry, Dates to Designer: How Cairo’s local green initiatives are providing a green lung amidst the thick black smog of the most polluted city in the world
Amy Lewis dissects the local sustainable initiatives cropping up across Cairo’s urban landscape.
Searching for Selfhood: Caught Between Cultures, Identities and Worlds
Fairuz Ghareeb reflects on their experiences as an Egyptian international student at the University of Cambridge, and how the shift of leaving Egypt for the ‘West’ has led them to question the very foundations of their identity.