Gerges is currently a professor of Middle East Politics and International Relations at the London School of Economics and Political Science.[1] He holds the Emirates Chair of the Contemporary Middle East at the LSE, and he was the inaugural Director of the LSE's Middle East Centre from 2010 to 2013.[2]
Gerges's book What Really Went Wrong: The West and the Failure of Democracy in the Middle East was published by Yale University Press in May 2024.[3] The book considers how Middle Eastern history might have been different if American leaders after the end of the Second World War had encouraged independent Middle Eastern leaders and peoples instead of supporting potentates, autocrats, and strongmen.[4]
Biography
Fawaz A. Gerges, a U.S. citizen, was born into a Greek Orthodox family in 1959 in Beirut, Lebanon. During the Lebanese Civil War, his hometown was damaged by the fighting, forcing his family to flee to Syria and take refuge in Christian monasteries. Gerges stayed in Syria for a year before moving to the United States.[5]
Gerges is the author of numerous books and publications, including: Making the Arab World: Nasser, Qutb, and the Clash That Shaped the Middle East (2018), Journey of the Jihadist: Inside Muslim Militancy (2007), and The Far Enemy: Why Jihad Went Global (2009).
The Washington Post selected The Far Enemy as one of the best 15 books published in the field. Journey of the Jihadist was on the best-selling list of Barnes & Noble and Foreign Affairs magazine for several months.
Writing in Foreign Affairs, Shadi Hamid called Making the Arab World "a fascinating and deeply researched revisionist history—one that sheds light on the forces still roiling in Egypt under the surface calm of Sisi's rule. . . . Gerges' reexamination of a crucial period in Egyptian history usefully illustrates how all ideologies—even the ones that seem most fixed and unyielding—are in fact fluid and contingent on events."[7]
On the ten-year anniversary of 9/11, Oxford University Press released Gerges's book, The Rise and Fall of Al Qaeda (2011).[8]Obama and the Middle East[9] (May 2012) was published by Pelgrave Macmillan one year later.
At the occasion of the 10-year anniversary of the Arab Spring protests, Gerges warned that the root causes for social unrest in the Arab World were still simmering, adding that "the status quo is untenable, and the next explosion will be catastrophic."[10]
Personal
Gerges is married to Professor Nora Colton, an economist and Director of the University College of London's Global Business School For Health.[11] The couple have four children.
Gerges was born during a Lebanese civil war in 1958 and was part of the 1975 war generation. According to him, "My generation was wiped out—killed, mutilated and polluted by sectarian-tribal conflict between 1975 and 1990, or forced into exile."[12] Although Gerges immigrated to the United States to escape the conflict, his younger brother, Bassam, was killed during the war in 1990. Gerges has lived most of his life in the United States and now resides in London.
Gerges, Fawaz A. (2016). ISIS: A History. Princeton University Press. ISBN9780691170008.
Gerges, Fawaz A. (2015). Contentious Politics in the Middle East: Popular Resistance and Marginalized Activism beyond the Arab Uprisings. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN9781137537218