IR Student · Kurdistan Region
Studying the intersections of global diplomacy, regional governance, and international affairs.
Committed to understanding the world through a balanced, scholarly lens — from Duhok to the global stage.
Analyzing international dynamics through academic frameworks, exploring how states, organizations, and peoples interact across borders.
Studying diplomacy, foreign policy, and multilateral negotiations — understanding how nations communicate and collaborate on the world stage.
Exploring local political structures in Kurdistan and the broader Middle East, examining governance, development, and civic engagement.
From global security frameworks to regional development, these are the areas where I focus my academic and personal research.
How nations communicate, form alliances, and resolve disputes through diplomatic channels and multilateral institutions.
Monitoring and analyzing significant international events, shifts in global power, and emerging trends in world affairs.
Understanding the complex regional landscape of the Middle East — its history, political structures, and development trajectories.
Exploring the political, economic, and social landscape of the Kurdistan Region of Iraq from a scholarly perspective.
The United Nations, EU, Arab League, and other multilateral bodies that shape international norms and global governance.
Applying realism, liberalism, constructivism, and other IR theories to understand and interpret global political phenomena.
The study of international relations is not merely an academic exercise — it is a responsibility to understand the world so that we may engage with it thoughtfully.
— Bawar Salah Saeed
An examination of how international organizations facilitate dialogue and provide frameworks for addressing disagreements between states through established protocols.
Read Article →How regional cooperation initiatives shape administrative and policy decisions at the local and national levels across the broader Middle East area.
Read Article →Exploring how constructivist IR theory helps explain the role of identity, norms, and social interaction in shaping foreign policy behavior.
Read Article →