Programme Director: Professor Annelies Moors
This research programme addresses the politics of culture in Muslim societies, including such sensitive topics as family law reform, women migrant domestic workers, and the body politics of representation. Intersecting and interacting with other forms of identification and political mobilization, such as those based on nationality, ethnicity, and class. Both the family and gender have been and still are crucial categories in such contestations and hence central in the sub-programmes. These all employ a similar approach. Starting with public debates, they deal with the junctures and disjuncture between these debates and the practical politics of everyday life. They also investigate how these debates have been mass-mediated, and the impact of particular forms and genres of mass-mediation on the issues debated. This includes an investigation of the processes of inclusion and exclusion that are at stake and an analysis of how patterns of authority are reproduced, modified, or transformed.
This sub-programme focuses on debates on family law reform. These debates indicate the political and cultural sensitivity of family-related issues in large parts of the Muslim world. ISIM has brought together an international group of scholars which has engaged in comparative research on the history of debates on family law (the participants involved, their argumentative styles, and the media and forums used), and has analysed the shifting relations between the state, religious functionaries, human rights NGOs, women activists, and the Islamists under conditions of globalization in the 1990s (published as a special issue of Islamic Law and Society in 2004). For the next five years the focus of this sub-programme will shift to an investigation of how these debates relate to legal practices and everyday life (a field in which a number of Ph.D. students work), dealing with new and controversial forms of marriage and divorce in the Middle East and beyond. In 2003 a conference titled "What Happened": Telling Stories about Law in Muslim Societies was held jointly with CEDEJ in Cairo. Furthermore,this programme will continue the research programme initiated by the former ISIM director, Prof. Muhammad Khalid Masud, on thesocial construction of sharia. In the course of the next three years, two topics will beaddressed in collaboration with Prof. Léon Buskens and colleagues abroad: the colonial construction of sharia and Islamic law and customs.
This sub-programme intends to trace the transnational migration patterns of women who are positioned differently with respect to religion, ethnicity, and nationality in order to analyse the relations between gendered family dynamics, transnational migration, and the production of new identities. Both the overt workings of "political religion" in public debates about migrant domestic work and the much more covert cultural-religious notions that are submerged in normative ideas about the family, labour, and domesticity are addressed as well as their impact on the intimate, personalized relations between employers and domestics where the public and the private merge. Moors was a founding partner in the collaborative SSRC-funded project on "Migrant domestic workers: becoming visible in the public sphere?" (working with colleagues in Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan, and the UAE); WOTRO has funded one postdoctoral position on the cultural politics of migrant domestic labour, starting in 2004.
This sub-programme focuses on the body politics of representation, departing from Muslim women's appearance/embodied practices. Broadening the notion of the public sphere to a moreall-encompassing "politics of presence" itallows for theinclusion of other forms of critical expression and non-verbal modes of communication, such as through bodily comportment, appearance, and dressing styles, including lifestyle and consumption. Both dressing styles and wearing gold relate to particular forms of Muslim cultural politics, albeit in different ways. Whereas debates about dress focus on textual interpretations and practices need to be located in the field of globalized fashion, access to gold is intimately linked to Muslim institutions such as the dower and inheritance. A major conference on Islam and fashion has been organized at the University of Amsterdam in 2005.
2021, co-editor, under review (full manuscript submitted), special issue on making hijra, Contemporary Islam (with Nadia Fadil and Karel Arnout)
2021. in press, co-editor, Global Dynamics of Debating and Concluding Shia Marriages, Pittsburg University Press (with Yafa Shanneik).
2020, co-editor., special issue on religious-only marriages in the global South, HAWWA, Journal of women in the Middle East and the Muslim world (with Rajnaara Akhtar and Mulki al-Sharmani).
2018, co-editor, special Issue Non-state registered marriages, Sociology of Islam 6, 3 (with Rajnaara Akhtar and Rebecca Probyn)
2018, co-editor, special Issue Informal Muslim Marriages: Regulations and Contestations, Oxford Journal of Law and Religion 7, 3 (with Rajnaara Akhtar and Rebecca Probyn)
2014, co-editor, special issue ‘Islamic sounds and the politics of listening’, Anthropological Quarterly, (with Jeanette Jouili)
2013, co-editor, Islamic fashion and anti-fashion. New perspectives form Europe and North America.London, New Delhi, New York, Sydney: Bloomington (with Emma Tarlo).
2012, editor, special issue ‘Popularizing Islam: Muslims and Materiality’, Material Religion 8,3.
2011, co-editor, The colonial and post-colonial governance of Islam. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press/IMISCOE (with Marcel Maussen and Veit Bader).
2009, co-editor, ‘Muslim women” in Europe: Secular normativities, embodied performances, multiple publics’ special issue of Social Anthropology 17, 4 (with Ruba Salih).
2008, co-editor, Narratives of Truth in Islamic Law . London: I.B. Taurus (with Baudouin Dupret and Barbara Drieskens).
2007, co-editor, special double issue 'Mulsim Fashions' of Fashion Theory 11, 2 & 3. (co-editor Emma Tarlo).
2006, (co-editor Birgit Meyer), Religion, the Media and the Public Sphere Indiana University Press
2004, 'Muslim cultural politics.' What's Islam got to do with it? Amsterdam: Vossius Press. Inaugural lecture.
2003, editor, 'Public Debates on Family Law Reform. Participants, Positions, and Styles of Argumentation in the 1990s', Islamic Law and Society 10, 1.
1995, Women, property and Islam. Palestinian experiences, 1920-1990. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
1995, co-editor, Discourse and Palestine: Power, Text and Context. Amsterdam: Het Spinhuis (with Toine van Teeffelen, Ilham Abu Ghazaleh and Sharif Kanaana).
1995, (co-editors: Inge Boer and Toine van Teeffelen), 'Changing stories: Postmodernism and the Arab-Islamic world', Orientations 3.
2021, in press. ‘Making Hijra’: Im/Mobility, Religion and the Everyday Among Women Converts to Islam in the Netherlands, Contemporary Islam (with Vanressa Vroon-najem)
2021, in press, Introduction: “Hijra as a distinct regime of mobility?” Contemporary Islam (with Nadia Fadil and Karel Arnaut).
2021, in press, Laboratory sigheh: The (dis)entanglements of temporary marriage and third party donation in Iran (with Tara Asgarilaleh)
2021. in press. 'Women and marriage in the Middle East.' Handbook on Women in the Middle East, edited by Suad Joseph and Zeina Zaatari. Routledge.
2020. 'On speaking, remaining silent and being heard: Framing research, positionality and publics in the jihadi field', Jihadi Audiovisuality and its Entanglements: Meanings, Aesthetics, Appropriations, edited by Christoph Günther and Simone Pfeifer. Edinburgh University Press (with Martijn de Koning and Aysha Navest)
2020. Foreign to Palestinian Society? ‘urfi Marriage, Moral Dangers and the Colonial Present, Hawwa, journal of women in the Middle East and the Islamic World (with Penny Johnson)
2020, Converts, Marriage, and the Dutch Nation-state: Contestations about Muslim Women’s Well-being’, Wellbeing of Transnational Muslim Families: Marriage, Law and Gender, edited by Marja Tillikainen, Mulki Al-Sharmani, and Sanna Mustasaari. London: Routledge. (with Vanessa Vroon-Najem)
2019, The trouble with transparency: Reconnecting ethics, integrity, epistemology and power. Ethnography 20, 2. https://doi.org/10.1177/1466138119844279
2019, Guidelines for anthropological research: Data management, ethics and integrity. Ethnography 20, 2. https://doi.org/10.1177/1466138119843312 (wtth Martijn de Koning, Birgit Meyer, and Peter Pels)
2019, 'No escape: the force of the security frame in academia and beyond', in Nadia Fadil, Martijn de Koning, and Francesco Ragazzi, eds., Narratives of De/Radicalisation. Critical Approaches from Belgium and the Netherlands. Bloomsbury. Pp. 245-259.
2018, 'Introduction: Contextualizing Islamic religious-only Marriages', Sociology of Islam 6, 3: 263-273 (with Rajnaara Akhtar and Rebecca Probyn).
2018, 'Concluding an ‘Illegal Islamic Marriage’ in the Netherlands: Controversy, Criminalization and Contestations', Sociology of Islam 6, 3: 274-296 (with Martijn de Koning and Vanessa Vroon-Najem).
2018, 'Introduction: Informal Muslim Marriages: Regulations and Contestations, Oxford Journal of Law and Religion 7, 3: 367-375 (with Rajnaara Akhtar and Rebecca Probyn)
2018, ‘Adopting a face-veil, concluding an Islamic marriage: autonomy, agency, and liberal secular rule’, in Marie-Claire Foblets, Michele Graziadei and Alison Dundes Renteln eds., Personal Autonomy in Plural Societies. A principle and ItsParadoxes. London and New York: Routledge, pp. 127-140.
2018, Book review of In the Name of Women's Rights: The Rise of Femonationalism. By Sara R. Farris. Duke University Press, 2017, Journal of the American Academy of Religion.
2017, ‘On autoethnography,’ Ethnography 18, 1: 387-389.
2016, ‘Chatting about marriage with female migrants to Syria: Agency beyond the victim versus activist paradigm’, Anthropology Today 32, 2: 22-25 (with Ayesha Navest and Martijn de Koning)
2015, ‘Dress’, in S. Brent-Plate, ed., Key Words in Material Religion London: Bloomsbury Academic..
2014, Face-veiling in the Netherlands: Public debates and women’s narratives. In Eva Brems, ed., Face-veiling in Europe. Cambridge University Press.
2013, 'Introduction: Islamic fashion and anti-fashion. New perspectives form Europe and North America', in Emma Tarlo and Annelies Moors, eds., Islamic fashion and anti-fashion. New perspectives form Europe and North America. London, New Delhi, New York, Sydney: Bloomington (with Emma Tarlo). Pp. 1-30.
2013, 'Fashion and its discontents. The aesthetics of covering in the Netherlands', in Emma Tarlo and Annelies Moors, eds., Islamic fashion and anti-fashion. New perspectives form Europe and North America. London, New Delhi, New York, Sydney: Bloomington (with Emma Tarlo). Pp. 241-60.
2013,'Discover the Beauty of Modesty': Islamic fashion online', in Reina Lewis, ed., Modest Fashion: Styling Bodies, Mediating Faith. I.B.Tauris, pp. 17-40.
2013, ‘Unregistered Islamic marriages: Anxieties about sexuality and Islam’, in Maurits Berger (ed.), The Application of Sharia in the West. Leiden University Press, pp. 141-164.
2013, ‘Wearing gold, owning gold. The multiple meanings of gold jewelry’, Etnofoor 25, 1: 79-91
2012, 'Popularizing Islam: Muslims and Materiality', Material Religion 8,3: 272-279.
2012, 'Formats, Fabrics, and Fashions: Muslim Headscarves Revisited', Material Religion 8, 3: 330-353 (with R.A. Unal)
2012, 'The affective power of the face-veil. Between disgust and fascination', in Birgit Meyer and Dick Houtman, eds., Things: Material Religion and the Topography of Divine Spaces. New York: Fortham University Press, Pp. 282-295.
2012, ‘Moving between Kerala and Dubai: Women domestic workers, state actors, and the misrecognition of problems’, in Barak Kalir and Malini Sur, eds., Transnational flows and permissive polities. Ethnographies of human mobilities in Asia, pp. 161-168 (with Bindhulakshmi Pattadath).
2012, ‘Los holandeses y el velo integral: la politica del malestar’, in Gema Martín Muñoz y Ramón Grosfoguel, eds., La islamofocia a debate. Madrid: Casa Arabe-IEAM, pp.219-245.
2011, ‘Mahr meanings, dower dealings: Reflections from Palestine’ in Rubya Mehdi and Jorgen Nielsen, eds., Embedding Mahr in the European Legal System. Copenhagen: Djøf Publishers. Pp. 21-33.
2011, 'NiqaBitch and Princess Hijab: Niqab activism, satire and street art', Feminist Review 98: 128-135.
2011, ‘Colonial traces? The (post-)colonial governance of Islamic dress: gender and the public presence of Islam’, in Maussen, Marcel, Veit Bader and Annelies Moors, eds., The colonial and post-colonial governance of Islam. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press/IMISCOE. Pp. 135-155.
2011, '"Islamic Fashion" in Europe: Religious conviction, aesthetic style, and creative consumption', in Rafael Reyes-Ruiz, eds., Encounters: Engaging Otherness. London: I.B.Tauris (reprint of article published in the journal Encounters in 2009).
2011, ‘From Travelogue to Ethnography and Back Again? Hilma Granqvist’s Writings and Photographs’, Revue science and video3. http://scienceandvideo.mmsh.univ-aix.fr/numeros/3/Pages/Moors.aspx (publication in online journal of an article published in 2006)
2011, Al-a’ras wa l-harb, tartabiyat al-zawaj wa ihtifalatuhu khilal al-intifadatayn al-filastiniyatayn, (Arabic translation of ‘Weddings and war. Marriage arrangements and celebrations during two intifadas’ published in 2009 in AMEWS, with Penny Johnson), pp 15-33, http://sv3.drupalgardens.com/sites/sv3.drupalgardens.com/files/jmews-arabic-complete.pdf
2010, In conversation. Material Religion 6, 1: 112-114.
2010, ‘Presenting People: The Politics of Picture Postcards of Palestine/Israel’, in Jordana Mendelson and David Prochaska, eds., Postcards: Ephemeral Histories of Modernity, Penn State University Press. Pp. 93-105.
2010, ‘Muslim dress and the head scarf debate’, Berg Encyclopedia of World Dress and Fashion, Vol VIII. Pp. 439-442
2010, ‘Fear of small numbers? Debating face-veiling in the Netherlands’ in Abdoolkarim Vakil and Salman Sayyid, eds., Thinking Through Islamophobia, London: Hurst and New York: Columbia University Press. Pp. 157-164.
2009, ‘Migrant domestic workers: a new public presence in the Middle East?’, in Seteney Shami, ed., Publics, Politics and Participation: Locating the Public Sphere in the Middle East and North Africa. New York: SSRC Books. Pp. 177-202 (with Ray Jureidini, Ferhunde Özbay, and Rima Sabban).
2009, “The Dutch and the Face Veil: The Politics of Discomfort”, Social Anthropology 17, 4: 392-407.
2009, ‘Muslim women” in Europe: Secular normativities, embodied performances, multiple publics’ Social Anthropology 17, 4: 375-8 (with Ruba Salih).
2009, ‘”Islamic fashion” in Europe: Religious conviction, aesthetic style, and creative consumption’, Encounters 1, 1: 175-201.
2009, ‘Weddings and war. Marriage arrangements and celebrations during two intifadas. JMEWS 5, 3: 11-34 (with Penny Johnson and Lamis Abu Nahleh).
2008, ‘Registering a token dower: The multiple meanings of a legal practice’ in Baudouin Dupret, Barbara Drieskens and Annelies Moors, eds., Narratives of Truth in Islamic Law. London: IB Taurus, pp. 85-104.
2008, ‘Gender and irregular migration: Migrant domestic workers in the Middle East’, in Marlou Schrover, Joanne van der Leun, Leo Lucassen and Chris Quispel (eds), Gender and illegality. Amsterdam IMISCOE/AUP. Pp. 149-170 (co-author Marina de Regt).
2007, 'Introduction', Fashion Theory 11, 2/3: 133-143 (with Emma Tarlo).
2007, 'Fashionable Muslims: Notions of Self, Religion and Society in San'a', Fashion Theory 11, 2/3: 319-347.
2007, '"Burka" in Parliament and on the Catwalk', ISIM-Review 19: 5.
2007, 'De islamfixatie', in Huub Evers en Carmelita Serkei, red., Naar een interculturele journalistiek. Beschouwingen over media en multiculturele samenleving . Amsterdam/Utrecht: Aksant/Mira Media. Pp. 74-83.
2007, ' Paid domestic labor. Central Arab States , Egypt and Yemen ', EWIC volume IV : 220-223.
2006, 'From Travelogue to Ethnography and Back Again? Hilma Granqvist's Writing and Photographs',in, Mieke Bal, Bregje van Eekelen and Patricia Spyer, eds., Inge Boer. Uncertain territories. Boundaries in cultural analysis . Amsterdam and New York : Rodopi. Pp. 219-239.
2006, 'Representing Family Law Debates in Palestine : Gender and the Politics of Presence', in Birgit Meyer and Annelies Moors, eds., Media, Religion and the Public Sphere , Indiana University Press. Pp. 115-32.
2006, (with Birgit Meyer), 'Media, Religion and the Public Sphere: Introduction', in Birgit Meyer and Annelies Moors, eds., Media, Religion and the Public Sphere . Indiana University Press. Pp. 1-29.
2005, 'Submission', ISIM Review 15: 8-9.
2005, 'Framing "The Refugee Question": the National Geographic Magazine 1948- 1967' , in Stephanie Latte-Abdullah, ed., Images aux frontières. Représentations et constructions sociales et politiques . Palestine , Jordanie, 1948-2000. Beyrouth : IFPO. Pp. 43-59.
2004, 'Women, Gender,and Inheritance: Arab States'. Encyclopedia of Women in Islamic Countries , volume 2. Leiden : Brill. Pp.
2004, 'Islam and Fashion in the Streets of San`a, Yemen ', Etnofoor 16, 2: 41-56.
2003 (with Linda Herrera), 'Banning the face-veil: The Boundaries of Liberal Education', ISIM-Newsletter 13: 16-17.
2003, 'Sources and methods: Palestine , Israel and Jordan , 1900- 2000' , Encyclopedia of Women in Islamic Countries , volume I. Leiden: Brill. Pp. 217-221.
2003, 'From "Women's Lib." to "Palestinian Women": The Politics of PicturePostcards in Palestine/Israel', in David Crouch and Nina Lubbren, eds., Visual Culture and Tourism , Oxford and New York :Berg Publishers. Pp. 23-39.
2003, 'Public Debates onFamily Law Reform. Participants, Positions, and Styles of Argumentation in the 1990s', Islamic Law and Society 10, 1: 1-11.
2003, 'Migrant domestic labour: transnationalism, identity politics and family relations', Comparative Studies in Society and History 45, 2: 386-395.
2003, 'Women's gold: shifting styles in embodying family relations', in Beshara Doumani, ed., Family History in Middle Eastern Studies. Household, Property, and Gender . New York : SUNY Press. Pp. 101-119.
2003, 'Gendered globalization: the multiple meanings of gold', Nour (in Arabic). Pp. 58-64.
2002, 'Silver Jewellery from Oman and Yemen ', in Ethnic Jewellery from Africa, Asia andPacific Islands . Amsterdam and Singapore : The Pepin Press. Pp. 47-72.
2001, 'Visions of Palestine, Visualizing Women inPalestine : Hilma Granqvist's Published Photographs', in Catalogue to exhibit of Hilma Granqvist's photographs, Bethlehem .
2001, 'Presenting Palestine's Population: Premonitions of the Nakba', MIT-EJMES electronic journal 1, 1: 14-26.
2000, 'Embodying the Nation: Maha Saca's Post-Intifada Postcards, Ethnic and Racial Studies 23, 5: 871-887.
1999, 'Debating Islamic Family Law: Legal Texts and Social Practices', in Marlee Meriwether and Judith Tucker, eds., The Social History of Women and Gender in the Modern Middle East . Boulder : Westview Press. Pp. 141-177.
1998, 'Wearing Gold' in Patricia Spyer, ed., Borderfetishisms . London: Routledge. Pp. 208-223.
1997, 'Een aanzienlijke som geld of slechts een symbolisch bedrag', Geld en goed. Jaarboek voor vrouwengeschiedenis 17: 99-114.
1997, 'Over vrouwen en bezit: juridische documenten en mondelinge verhalen', in S.W.E. Rutten, red., Recht van de Islam 14, Maastricht: RIMO. Pp. 39-49.
1996,'On Appearance and Disappearance. Representations of Women in Palestine During the British Mandate', Thamyris 3, 2: 279-310.
1996, 'Gender Relations and Inheritance. Person, Power and Property', in Deniz Kandiyoti, ed., Gendering the Middle East . Emerging Perspectives, London and New York : IB Taurus Publishers, pp. 69-84.
1995, 'Introduction', in A. Moors, T. van Teeffelen, I. Abu Ghazaleh and S. Kanaana, (eds.), Discourse and Palestine: Power, Text and Context . Amsterdam : Het Spinhuis. Pp. 1-7 (with co-editors).
1995, 'Dealing with the Past, Creating a Presence: PicturePostcards of Palestine,' in A. Moors, T. van Teeffelen, I. Abu Ghazaleh and S. Kanaana (eds.), Discourse and Palestine: Power, Text and Context . Amsterdam : Het Spinhuis. Pp. 11-26 (with S. Wachlin ).
1995, 'Introduction. Changing stories: Postmodernism and the Arab-Islamic world', Orientations 3: 9-15 (with co-editor).
1995, 'Crossing Boundaries, Telling Stories: Palestinian Women Working in Israel and Poststructuralist Theory', Orientations 3: 17-36.
1994, 'Women and Dower Property in Twentieth-Century Palestine : The Case of Jabal Nablus ', Islamic Law and Society 1, 3: 301-331.
1994, 'Natie, klasse en sekse: een antropologische visie op het werk van Sahar Khalifa', in R. van Leeuwen en E. de Moor, red., De Arabische roman. Identiteit en sociale werkelijkheid. Muiderberg: Coutinho. Pp.95-106.
1991, 'Gender, Property and Power: Mahr and Marriage in a Palestinian Village ', in Davis , K., M. Leijenaar and J.Oldersma (eds.), The Gender of Power . London : Sage. Pp. 111-129.
1991, 'Womenand the Orient. A Note on Difference.' in Nencel, L. andP.Pels,(eds.), Constructing Knowledge. Authority and Critique in Social Sciences . London: Sage. Pp. 114-122.
1991, 'Vrouwen en geld: historische bronnen over de mahr' in Paul Aarts, red., Geld, goed en godsdienst in het Midden-Oosten . Muiderberg: Coutin-ho. Pp. 101-118.
1990, 'Gender Hierarchy in a Palestinian Village : The Case of Al-Balad.' In K. Glavanis and P. Glavanis, (Eds.), The Rural Midd-le East : Peasant Lives and Modes of Production . London : Zed Press. Pp. 195-210.
Workshop ' Negotiating in private, transforming the public: The dynamics of migrant domestic labour in Asia and the Middle East', ISIM/ASSR,9 september 2005 (with Marina de Regt).
International workshop, 'Muslim Fashions, Fashionable Muslims', ISIM-ASSR workshop, 13-15 April 2005.
Seminar 'migrant domestic workers to the Middle East', 21-23 December 2004, organized at Jokyakarta, Indonesia (with dr. Irwan Abdullah, Gadjah Mada University)
Session on "Muslim Cultural Politics in Europe and in the Middle East' organized at EASA conference in Vienna 10 September 2004 (with Ruba Salih).
Workshop 'What Happened' Telling Storiesabout Law in Muslim Societies', Cairo(with IFAO, CEDEJ, and NVIC), 24-26 October 2003.
Conference 'The anthropology of Islamic law', Leiden (with Leon Buskens, University Utrecht/Leiden), 13-15 March 2003.
Seminar 'Family Law and Activism', Berlin (with Lynn Welchman, SOAS, and Anna Wurth, AKMI), dd. 7-9 July 2002.
Conference Session'Migrant Domestic Labour from/in/to the Middle East, WOCMES, Mainz 10-13 September, 2002 (with Blandine Destremeau, CNRS/Urbama).
Conference Media, Religion and the Public Sphere, University of Amsterdam, 6-8December 2001 (with Birgit Meyer, Research Centre Religion and Society).
Workshop Women's Rights, Islam,Islamic Feminism: Making Connections, Kontakt der Kontinenten, 9-11 November 2001 (with Martin van Bruinessen, ISIM)
Conference 'DomesticService and Mobility: Labor, Livelihoods and Livestyles', CLARA/IISH/ISIM workshop Amsterdam 7-9 February, 2001 (with Ratna Saptari, IISH)
Marina de Regt: Pioneers or Pawns. Women Health Workers and the Politics of Development in Yemen, defended University of Amsterdam, March 2003 (with Sjaak van der Geest)
Nahda Shhada: The politics of family law reform and everyday life in Gaza, ISS, defended August 2005 (with Bas de Gaay-Fortman)
Anouk de Koning: Global Dreams. Space, Class and Gender in Middle Class Cairo, defended University of Amsterdam, September 2005
Mareike Winkelmann: From Behind the Curtain. A Study of a Girls’ Madrasa in India, defended University of Amsterdam, December 2005
Samuli Schielke: Snacks and Saints. Mawlid Festivals and the Politics of Festivity, Piety and Modernity in Contemporary Egypt, defended University of Amsterdam, 29 March 2006 (cum laude)
Huong Nghiem: Privatization and Clothing Production in Vietnam, defended University of Amsterdam, 10 October 2006 (with Marcel van der Linden).
Miriyam Aouragh: Palestine in Cyberspace, defended University of Amsterdam, 7 April 2008 (with Peter van der Veer).
Nadia Sonneveld: Khul` in Egypt: Legal reform, Public Debate and Everyday Life, defended University of Amsterdam, 16 April 2009 (with Leon Buskens).
Shifra Kish: Translating Deafness and/in a Bedouin Community in Israel. ASSR fellowship, with Anita Hardon, 2002-2006, defended University of Amsterdam, 17 December 2012.
Arzu Unal: Wardrobes of Turkish-Dutch Women. The Multiple Meanings and Aesthetics of Muslim Dress, defended University of Amsterdam, 5 July 2013.
Vanessa Vroon-Najem: Sisters in Islam. Women's conversion and the politics of belonging: A Dutch case study, 2011-2014, defended University of Amsterdam, 9 April 2014.
Willemijn Krebbikx, Making sex, moving difference: An ethnography of sexuality and diversity in Dutch schools, defended University of Amsterdam, 26 January 2018 (with Amade M'Charek and Rachel Spronk).
Ilka-Susanna Eickhof: Pretty Interventions: Foreign Funding, Cultural Politics and Cultural Productions in Cairo in the Frame of the so-called Arab Spring, 7 June 2019 (with Ramy Ali)
Dina Zbeidy: Marriage and displacement among Palestinian and Syrian refugees in Jordan, defended University of Amsterdam, 1 May 2020 (with Julie McBrien)
Yuniyanti Chuzaifah: Indonesian Domestic Workers in the Gulf Loubna al-Mourabet: Entering into marriage, celebrating a wedding: Moroccan-Dutch couples (with Julie McBrien)- Fouzia Outmany: Muslim activism and gender in the Netherlands after 1989 (with Martijn de Koning), Rahma Bavelaar: Coptic-Mulsim marriages in Egypt (with Julie McBrien) Annerienke Fioole: -Publicity, discretion, and secrecy through becoming a Moroccan couple (with Julie McBrien) Ibtisam Sadegh: Mixed marriages in Ceuta (with Julie McBrien)- Jaafar Alloul, ‘There is no friction here’: A study of Maghrebi-Muslim minority mobilities in between the EU and Dubai (with Nadia Fadil and Karel Arnaut, KULeuven) Mirjam Shatanawi, Making and unmaking Islam: legacies of colonialism in museums in the Netherlands (with Marieke Bloembergen) Iris Kolman, Non-marriage in Tunis (with Julie McBrien) Burcu Kalpaklıoğlu Yalçın, Islam and marriage in Turkey |
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Vazira Fazila-Yacoobali Zamindar: Idols of the Past:The construction of World Heritage and Islamic Intolerance. ISIM fellowship, 2002-2005.
Marina de Regt: Gendered Transnationalism: Women Migrants and Domestic Labour in Yemen . WOTRO fellowship at ASSR, 2003-2006.
Dorothea Schulz: Islamic Revival, Mass-Mediated Religiosity and the Moral Negotiation of Gender Relations in Urban Mali , 2005
Nahda Shhada : Transformations in Iraqi Family Law: Public Debatesand Everyday Practices. WOTRO fellowship at ISIM, 2006.
Jeannette Jouili : The Ethics of Islamic Arts: Normativity, Creativity and 'Fun' in the Muslim Diasporas in the West, ISIM fellowship 2006-7.
Jessica Carlisle : After the Enactment of the 2004 Moroccan family law: Public Debates, Legal Practices and Women's Strategies, WOTRO fellowship at ISIM, April 2007- August 2008.