- Europe
- Middle East and North Africa
- Egypt
- GCC
- Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories
- Lebanon
- Syria
- UK Foreign and Security Policy
- Global Security
- Countering Terrorism and Violent Extremism
Associated with RUSI International
Biography
Specialising in geopolitics, security studies & political economy, in the wider Arab world / MENA region, Europe and Southeast Asia, Professor H.A. Hellyer has more than 20 years of experience in governmental, corporate advisory, and academic environments. A senior associate fellow at the Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security Studies in London, he simultaneously serves as senior fellow in Geopolitics and Security at the Center for American Progress in Washington, DC. In recognition of his scholarly and public impact, he was elected as Fellow (FRHistS) of the Royal Historical Society, Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, and Honoree member of the Diversity in National Security Network. Designated as Deputy Convenor of the UK Government’s Taskforce on tackling radicalisation, he was appointed as the first Economic & Social Research Council Fellow in the Foreign & Commonwealth Office.
Previously a nonresident Fellow in Foreign Policy at the Brookings Institution in DC, and scholar in the Middle East Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, he served as the first Arab world-based Senior Practice Consultant at the Gallup Organisation, where he analysed public opinion data worldwide. Formerly Senior Fellow at the Atlantic Council’s Centre for the Middle East, he was also appointed as fellow at the Institute for Strategic and International Studies in Malaysia. His insights on current events are regularly sought by the international media networks such as CNN and the BBC, with op-eds for publications like the Washington Post, Foreign Policy, the New York Times, the Guardian, Politico, the Financial Times, and the New Straits Times.
Professor Hellyer has also held academic attachments at noted institutions including the University of Warwick (UK), where he was the research equivalent of an associate professor; the American University in Cairo as a visiting professor of law; the JFK School of Government at Harvard University as research associate; Cambridge University as a visiting fellow at the Faculty of Asian and Middle Eastern Studies; and as adjunct professor, at full professorial rank, at the University of Technology in Malaysia. His publications in his specialist subject areas include 9 books, more than 20 book chapters, journal articles and monographs to various academic presses.
With a degree in law from the University of Sheffield’s School of Law, and an advanced degree in international political economy at the University of Sheffield’s Department of Politics, Professor Hellyer completed a multidisciplinary PhD in the social sciences at the University of Warwick, as a UK Economic and Social Research Council scholar. He can be reached viatwitter.com/hahellyer orhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/hahellyer/
Awards
Diversity in National Security Network Honorees (2024): The Network is a bipartisan coalition of national security and foreign policy practitioners, based in Washington DC, particularly known for its annual lists identifying, promoting and recognising voices in the national security sector from minority ethnic backgrounds.
Fellow of the Royal Historical Society (2023): Founded in 1868, the RHS advances scholarly studies of history, promoting historical research in the United Kingdom and worldwide, representing historians of all kinds. Prominent members, indicating recognising scholarly authority in historical research, include William Dalrymple, David Olusoga, and Eric Hobsbawm.
Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts (2020): Founded in 1754, the Royal Society of Arts’ mission is to find cross practical solutions to social challenges through innovation, research, and collaboration. Prominent members, indicating broad societal impact, include Stephen Hawking, Nelson Mandela, and His Majesty, King Charles III.
RISSC-Georgetown University 500 (2017-onwards): A ‘who’s who’ of 500 prominent scholars, politicians, religious affairs officials, business elites, and cultural figures.
In the News
View all In the News- United Nations
![AlJazeera]()
If the UN were abolished, many of the illusions of shared international norms would collapse. Diplomacy would shift decisively towards bilateral and regional arrangements, making global engagement openly transactional. In truth, much of, if not all, diplomacy already operates that way – (US President Donald) Trump’s transactional approach merely stripped away the pretence of a rules-based order. Still, the UN’s framework, however flawed, provides a reference point for international law and moral pressure in crises and conflicts. Without it, even that limited leverage would vanish, and vulnerable populations would bear the brunt. Many UN-backed treaties that attempt to uphold international norms would lose force or relevance. In fact, we are already seeing this erosion – the UN’s existence no longer guarantees the protection of those norms. Abolishing it would simply accelerate the breakdown, with regional blocs like the European Union or the African Union trying to fill the void, though none could replicate the UN’s global scope or legitimacy."
Professor H. A. Hellyer
RUSI Senior Associate Fellow, RUSI International
- Egypt
![The Observer]()
The accords are at the bedrock of regional security architecture,” said HA Hellyer of the Royal United Services Institute and the Center for American Progress. “If that goes, it's bad news for the Egyptian state, but also for many others regionally." ... “The Israelis have asserted total freedom of action in Gaza and the region generally, with a push for an Israeli regional paramountcy. They define the rules, they enforce the rules and they are not held accountable. That is not a bug in the system – it’s a feature, and the [Trump] deal doesn’t change that."
Professor H. A. Hellyer
RUSI Senior Associate Fellow, RUSI International
- Israel and Gaza
![CNN]()
If you want to ensure that there is disarmament of Hamas, which I think is in everyone's best interests, if you want to ensure that there is reconstruction of Gaza, and you want to ensure that there is an external stabilization force that will be willing to deploy to Gaza, then all of that requires there to be a political horizon. You need to be able to say to the stabilization force and to the Palestinians more generally, that at the end of this there is recognition of your right to self-determination."
Professor H. A. Hellyer
RUSI Senior Associate Fellow, RUSI International





