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MERI Ranked as Iraq’s Leading & Among the Top 5% in MENA

The Think Tanks and Civil Societies Program (TTCSP) at the University of Pennsylvania’s Lauder Institute ranked the Middle East Research Institute (MERI) as the top think tank in Iraq in 2020 for the sixth consecutive year in its latest Global Go To Think Tank Index report.

As well as retaining its place as Iraq’s leading think tank, MERI was among the top 5% think tanks in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) countries.  MERI has gone up this year to No. 27 within 599 ranked think tanks.

These are no small achievements for MERI, considering the Covid-19 pandemic and extreme political, security and financial circumstances in Iraq, as well as the increasing competition among think tanks across MENA countries.

In the Index, the TTCSP examines the role policy institutes play in governments and civil societies around the world; maintains the largest and most comprehensive database of think tanks, policymakers, and policy-oriented civil society groups; and annually rank orders regional and international think tanks by a number of policy cross-sectoral criteria. TTCSP’s global index of think tanks is designed to identify and recognise centres of excellence in all the major areas of public policy research and in every region of the world, and this year marks the 15th year of the Institute’s continued efforts to acknowledge the important contributions of think tanks worldwide and emerging global trends of think tanks worldwide.

As part of this process, 11,175 think tanks were surveyed by 44,992 journalists, policymakers, public and private donors, and functional and regional area specialists.  These were invited to both nominate and rank public policy research centres of distinction for 2020. The Index ranking was decided by expert panels that were comprised of hundreds of members from a wide variety of backgrounds and disciplines. The ranking criteria included, among others: the quality, commitment and reputation of the think tank’s leadership and staff; the quality and reach of its publications; the academic performance and reputation of the organisation; the commitment to producing evidence-based research and analysis, and the impact of publications on policy actors.

The 2020 Global Go-To Think Tank Rankings was released on January 28, 2021 in New York, Washington D.C. and over 100 cities around the world. MERI is pleased with this outcome and wishes to thank all its current and former staff, and its associated network of supporters both locally and globally.

The full 2020 Global Go To Think Tank Index can be accessed here (the University of Pennsylvania’s website) and the full report (in PDF) can be downloaded here.

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About MERI:  The Middle East Research Institute is Iraq’s leading policy-research institute and think tank. It is an independent, entirely grant-funded not-for-profit organisation, based in Erbil, Kurdistan Region. Its mission is to contribute to the process of nation-building, state-building and democratisation via engagement, research, analysis and policy debates.

Over the past seven years, MERI conducted high impact and high quality research in areas of government reform, regional and international politics, IDPs and minority rights, Baghdad-Erbil relations. Some of the key highlights include the MERI Fora (Forums) which brought together policy- and decision-makers, academics and opinion-leaders to share visions and solutions for a range of core issues and challenges that are facing the Middle East today, particularly in Iraq and Kurdistan. A recent book was published, providing detailed policy recommendations with the aim of introducing radical changes in the governance system, ensuring strengthened institutional structures, and empowering leadership and decision-making processes. MERI’s paper titled ‘EU and Turkish Energy Interests in the Caspian and Middle East Region’, identifying energy-sector drivers at the regional level in the Middle East and Caspian Basin (ME&CB), examines their impact on EU–Turkey relations and classifies them based on whether they are likely to result in conflict, cooperation and/or convergence.

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