Author Biographies
Ziad Abu-Rish is an assistant professor in the History Department and founding director of the Middle East and North Africa Studies program at Ohio University. He is co-editor of Arab Studies Journal and Jadaliyya e-zine, and co-director of the Middle East Studies Pedagogy Initiative (MESPI) and the Lebanon Dissertation Summer Institute.
Zeinab Abul-Magd is a Professor of Middle Eastern History at Oberlin College. She is the author of Militarizing the Nation: The Army, Business, and Revolution in Egypt and Imagined Empires: A History of Revolt in Egypt. She earned her PhD in economic history at Georgetown University and B.A. in Political Science at Cairo University. Max Ajl is an associated researcher with the Tunisian Observatory for Food Sovereignty and the Environment. His articles have appeared in the Journal of Peasant Studies and Review of African Political Economy. He writes on national liberation and post-colonial development in the Arab region. Nida Alahmad is Lecturer at the University of Edinburgh’s Politics and International Relations department. She is currently completing a book manuscript with the tentative title State Matters: theorizing the state and its experts through the Iraqi experience. Samia Al-Botmeh is an assistant professor in economics at Birzeit University. Her areas of interest include gender economics and political economy of development with a special focus on Palestine. Kristen Alff is an Assistant Professor of History and International Studies at North Carolina State University. Her work focuses on business history, the history of capitalism, gender, and agrarian history of the Levant between the late Ottoman and early Mandate periods. Kristen’s manuscript in progress is a global history of capital and property in Palestine. Joel Beinin is the Donald J. McLachlan Professor of History and Professor of Middle East History, Emeritus at Stanford University. He has written and co-edited twelve books, most recently, Workers and Thieves: Labor Movements and Popular Uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt (Stanford University Press, 2016). In 2001-02 he served as president of the Middle East Studies Association of North America. Bassam Haddad is Director of the Middle East and Islamic Studies Program and Associate Professor at the Schar School of Policy and Government at George Mason University. He is the author of Business Networks in Syria: The Political Economy of Authoritarian Resilience (Stanford University Press, 2011), and co-editor/founder of Jadaliyya Ezine. Bassam received MESA's Jere L. Bacharach Service Award in 2017 for his service to the profession and as Executive Director of the Arab Studies Institute. He is the founder of the Middle East Studies Pedagogy Project, MESPI.org. Muriam Haleh Davis is an Assistant Professor in the Department of History at UCSC. Her current book project investigates how colonial ideas of Islam underpinned the construction of economic planning initiatives in Algeria - from the liberal capitalist system envisioned by French planners, to the socialist policies introduced by the independent Algerian state. She has articles in The Journal of Modern History and The Journal of European Integration and she recently co-edited an edited volume entitled North Africa and the Making of Europe: Governance, Institutions and Culture that was published by Bloomsbury in 2018. |
Adam Hanieh is a Reader in Development Studies at SOAS, University of London. His research focuses on the political economy of class and state formation, with a geographical emphasis on the Middle East. He is the author of three books, most recently Money, Markets, and Monarchies: The Gulf Cooperation Council and Political Economy of the Contemporary Middle East (Cambridge University Press, 2018), which has been awarded the 2019 International Political Economy Group (IPEG) Book Prize of the British International Studies Association and the 2019 Middle East Political Economy Project Book Prize by the Arab Studies Institute.
Aaron G. Jakes is assistant professor of history at The New School, where he teaches on the modern Middle East and South Asia, comparative studies of colonialism and imperialism, global environmental history, and the historical geography of capitalism. He is the author of Egypt’s Occupation: Colonial Economism and the Crises of Capitalism (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2020). Shana Marshall is Associate Director of the Institute for Middle East Studies at George Washington University. She earned her PhD in International Relations and Comparative Politics of the Middle East at the University of Maryland-College Park in 2012. Her research focuses on the political economy of militaries in Egypt, Jordan, and the UAE, and has appeared in The Middle East Report (MERIP), The International Journal of Middle East Studies, Jadaliyya, and the Carnegie Middle East Center. Timothy Mitchell is the Ransford Professor of Middle Eastern Studies at Columbia University. He teaches and writes about the politics of the Arab world, the making of economic ideas and other forms of expert knowledge, and the history and politics of energy. His books include Colonising Egypt; Rule of Experts: Egypt, Technopolitics, Modernity; and Carbon Democracy: Political Power in the Age of Oil. Sherene Seikaly is Associate Professor of History at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Seikaly's Men of Capital: Scarcity and Economy in Mandate Palestine (Stanford University Press, 2016) explores how Palestinian capitalists and British colonial officials used economy to shape territory, nationalism, the home, and the body. Her next book project, From Baltimore to Beirut: On the Question of Palestine follows the trajectory of a peripatetic medical doctor to place Palestine in a global history of race, capital, slavery, and dispossession. She is the co-editor of Journal of Palestine Studies and co-founder and co-editor of Jadaliyya e-zine. Ahmad Shokr is an Assistant Professor of History at Swarthmore. His writings on historical and contemporary political issues have appeared in Arab Studies Journal, Middle East Report, Jadaliyya, Critical Historical Studies, and Economic and Political Weekly. He is also a contributor to several volumes, including Dispatches from the Arab Spring: Understanding the New Middle East (University of Minnesota Press, 2013) and The Journey to Tahrir: Revolution, Protest, and Social Change in Egypt (Verso, 2012). |