The Council for British Research in the Levant (CBRL) is a learned society working to advance public education on the Levant through promoting and disseminating research in the humanities, social sciences and related subjects. It works in Jordan, Palestine, Israel, Lebanon, Syria and Cyprus, with a mission to advance knowledge and understanding of the peoples and cultures of the Levant. It runs two local institutes in the Levant: the Kenyon Institute in East Jerusalem and the Amman Institute in Jordan. CBRL produces and disseminates original, rigorous and independent scholarship in the humanities, social sciences and related fields, whilst investing in the most promising emerging scholars and scholarship in the UK and the Levant. It also facilitates UK-Levantine academic collaborations and partnerships, both individual and institutional, and contributes to shaping debate and understanding through informed public outreach and education.
CBRL is part of a network of British International Research Institutes (BIRI) affiliated with the British Academy, formerly referred to as the British Schools, Institutes and Societies Abroad (BASIS). The BIRI operates across Europe, Africa and the Middle East. Whilst valuing its independence, CBRL receives managed grants from these British academies, as well as fundraising and receiving donations from members, and its own revenue from consulting and projects.
As a UK charity, with a history of over 100 years, CBRL was founded and began working in the Levant at a time when the mandated territories of Palestine, and what was then known as TransJordan, were under British control. It now seeks to address the history of British colonialism in the Levant as equal scholars in the realms of social science and humanities, and facilitate equal knowledge exchange and development between people in the region and in the UK.
For more information about CBRL’s history and its work, please see here.