While these engagements have produced insights into the limits of liberalisation and the ways in which different parts of the state apparatus contended for power within this shifting order, this workshop aims to explore other facets that this frame conceals. It aims to attract scholars from Europe, North America and the Middle East with the goals of: attending to the ways in which subaltern constituencies understood, resisted and were otherwise impacted by the economic and political transformations of the Sadat era; exploring transnational drivers and ramifications of these transformations, as they played out through channels such as labour migration and protest networks; and considering oft-neglected connections between the economic and political restructuring of this period and shifts in such areas of social life as crime control, cultural production, gender relations and pious practice.