Afrah Almatwari is an academic researcher, Middle East analyst, and professional Arabic-English translator specializing in contemporary Iraqi socio-political dynamics, governance structures, and human rights frameworks. Currently reading for an MRes in Politics at Birkbeck, University of London.
Her research evaluates the complex intersections of formal statutory law, parallel non-state structures, and localized conflict resolution mechanisms.
She produces objective, tribunal-ready country-of-origin assessments for UK legal proceedings, with expertise evaluating gender-specific security risks, state protection capabilities, and tribal clientelism across federal Iraq and the Kurdistan Region (KRI).
I provide an objective, realistic analysis of how daily life and legal systems function in Iraq and the broader MENA region.
My work evaluates how family law and domestic violence protections operate in practice, assessing the structural dynamics of state –individual relationships on a case-by-case basis. I closely examine how statutory laws interact with local factors on the ground, including tribal governance, customary law, sectarian networks, and the presence of armed non-state actors.
With the firsthand local knowledge I have and cumulative theoretical academic knowledge, I bring a strong regional context to my assessments, evaluating how cross-border political trends and regional migration patterns impact individual safety.
Experienced in independent expert country consulting within the UK legal framework, including authoring comprehensive, evidence-based country-of-origin reports for First-tier Tribunal asylum appeals. Backed by four years of research experience as a Research Assistant at the London School of Economics (LSE) Middle East Centre investigating regional institutional machinery and political systems in Iraq post 2003.
Climate Change and Women’s Resilience in Iraq: Rural Women of Al-Hawizeh Marsh (Collaborative Research Project funded by the British Council and published by LSE - Middle East Centre), 2025. Available at: https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/mec/2026/03/11/al-hawizeh-marsh-women-struggling-amid-marsh-eradication/
Gender and Conflict: Helen Benedict’s Sand Queen: Female Combatants in the Iraq War, Public Humanities, Cambridge University Press, 2025 . Available at: https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/54A94F737096C2BAF8A7FAA07806AF41/S2977017324000422a.pdf/helen_benedicts_sand_queen_female_combatants_in_the_iraq_war.pdf
What Can Literature Teach Us About the Iraq Invasion? A Case Study of Ian McEwan’s ‘Saturday’, LSE Middle East Centre Blog, 2023. Available at : https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/mec/2023/05/17/what-can-literature-teach-us-about-the-iraq-invasion-a-case-study-of-ian-mcewans-saturday/