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David B. Roberts

Non-Resident Fellow, AGSI; Associate Professor, King’s College London

David B. Roberts is a non-resident fellow at the Arab Gulf States Institute and a reader in International Security and Middle East Studies at King’s College London, where he serves as head of Professional Education and Enterprise in the School of Security Studies and leads the King’s Institute for Applied Security Studies. He is the founder and commissioning editor of Cambridge University Press’s Elements in Middle East Politics book series. Prior to joining King’s, he directed the Gulf office of the Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security Studies. His 2023 monograph Security Politics in the Gulf Monarchies: Continuity Amid Change was published by Columbia University Press.

Analysis

CLEAR ALL

Iran War: Gulf Unity, Economic Shocks, and Regime Scenarios

After a massive U.S.-Israeli campaign against Iran, AGSI explores scenarios for the future of Iran and implications for broader Gulf security.

16 min read

A plume of smoke rises after a strike in Tehran, Iran, March 1. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi)

A Tentative Trust: What the Barzan-EDGE Deal Reveals About Gulf Reconciliation

As Gulf states pursue economic diversification and knowledge economies less dependent on resource extraction, the logic of competition may be becoming less compelling and the benefits of coordination more apparent.

David B. Roberts

6 min read

Visitors walk past the EDGE Group display during Dubai Air Show in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, November 21, 2019. (REUTERS/Christopher Pike)

Israel Strikes Hamas in Qatar

AGSI outlines the wide implications of Israel’s attack targeting Hamas in Doha for the Gulf and U.S. policy in the region.

11 min read

A damaged building, following an Israeli attack on Hamas leaders in Doha, Qatar, September 9. (REUTERS/Ibraheem Abu Mustafa)

The End of Hamas in Doha?

Where Hamas operates from matters less than the broader absence of any coherent vision – from Israel, the Palestinians, or the international community – for future Arab leadership in Gaza.

David B. Roberts

12 min read

Bassem Naim, an official in Hamas' political wing, speaks in Istanbul, Turkey, Thursday, Dec. 5. (AP Photo/Francisco Seco)

Becoming “Neutral”: Addressing the Increasing Stakes of Qatar’s Hamas Mediation

To adapt to the post-October 7 environment, Qatar may need to abandon some long-standing policies and reemerge as a truly neutral broker and mediator.

David B. Roberts

11 min read

Qatar’s Shura Council Elections: Incrementally Strengthening Local Politics

The new Shura Council is neither a democratic wand changing Qatar’s political culture nor a pointless exercise. Instead, it is a small evolutionary step in the state’s governance in a more democratic direction.

David B. Roberts

12 min read