Difference between revisions of "Fred Halliday"

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[[Image:Fred Halliday.jpg|right|thumb|Fred Halliday]]
 
[[Image:Fred Halliday.jpg|right|thumb|Fred Halliday]]
'''Fred Halliday''' is ICREA research professor at the Barcelona Institute for International Studies (IBEI). He was formerly professor of international relations at the London School of Economics and is a well known Middle East analyst in the British media.<ref>open Democracy, [http://www.opendemocracy.net/author/Fred_Halliday.jsp Fred Halliday], (accessed 27 June 2008)</ref> Formerly affiliated with the British left, Halliday later became associated with a number of establishment think-tanks, and generally presents a centre left analysis of world events.
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'''Fred Halliday''' (born 22 Febuary 1946) is ICREA research professor at the Barcelona Institute for International Studies (IBEI). He was formerly professor of international relations at the London School of Economics and is a well known Middle East analyst in the British media.<ref>open Democracy, [https://web.archive.org/web/20051125071106/http://www.opendemocracy.net/author/Fred_Halliday.jsp Fred Halliday].  Retrieved from the Internet Archive of 25 November 2005 on 21 March 2016.</ref> Formerly affiliated with the British left, Halliday later became associated with a number of establishment think-tanks, and generally presents a centre left analysis of world events.  
  
 
== Affiliations ==
 
== Affiliations ==
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[[Category:terrorologist|Halliday, Fred]]
 
[[Category:terrorologist|Halliday, Fred]]
[[Category:Middle East Watch]]
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[[Category:Terrorism Spin|Halliday, Fred]]
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[[Category:Pro-war left|Halliday, Fred]]
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[[Category:Decent left|Halliday, Fred]]

Latest revision as of 08:17, 21 March 2016

Fred Halliday

Fred Halliday (born 22 Febuary 1946) is ICREA research professor at the Barcelona Institute for International Studies (IBEI). He was formerly professor of international relations at the London School of Economics and is a well known Middle East analyst in the British media.[1] Formerly affiliated with the British left, Halliday later became associated with a number of establishment think-tanks, and generally presents a centre left analysis of world events.

Affiliations

Notes

  1. open Democracy, Fred Halliday. Retrieved from the Internet Archive of 25 November 2005 on 21 March 2016.