Bernard Haykel

Appointed July 2007, Bernard Haykel is professor of Near Eastern Studies and the director of the Institute for Transregional Study of the Contemporary Middle East, North Africa and Central Asia at Princeton University.[1][2] He has been described as "the foremost secular authority on the Islamic State’s ideology" by journalist Graeme C.A. Wood.[3]

Haykel, of "partially" Lebanese ancestry, grew up in Lebanon and in the United States.[3] He was awarded a Fulbright Fellowship in Yemen in 1992-1993. He obtained a bachelor's degree in International Politics at Georgetown University, MA, M Phil and, in 1998, Ph.D. in Islamic and Middle-Eastern Studies from the University of Oxford. After working as a post-doctoral research fellow at Oxford University in Islamic Studies, he joined New York University in 1998 as associate professor before taking up his post at Princeton.[2] He became a Guggenheim Fellow in 2010.[4]

In addition to English, Haykel is fluent in Arabic and French and has taught advanced level Arabic at Georgetown, Oxford and Princeton.[5]

Books

References

  1. "Bernard Haykel". Princeton University. Retrieved 17 February 2015.
  2. 1 2 "Declaration of Prof. Bernard Haykel" (PDF). Retrieved 29 November 2015.
  3. 1 2 Wood, Graeme (March 2015). "What ISIS Really Wants". The Atlantic. Retrieved 17 February 2015.
  4. "Bernard Haykel", Guggenheim Fellows (John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation), retrieved 2015-08-20.
  5. "Declaration of Prof. Bernard Haykel" (PDF). Retrieved 29 November 2015.
  6. Waterbury, John (September 2015). "Saudi Arabia in Transition: Insights on Social, Political, Economic and Religious Change (book review)". Foreign Affairs. Retrieved 2 December 2015.
  7. Reinhart, A. Kevin (December 2005), "Reviewed Work: Revival and Reform in Islam: the Legacy of Muhammad al-Shawkānī by Bernard Haykel", Middle East Studies Association Bulletin 39 (2): 226–228, JSTOR 23063033.
  8. Choudary, Maqsood (October 2004), "Revival and Reform in Islam: the Legacy of Muhammad al-Shawkani; Bernard Haykel", Digest of Middle East Studies 13 (2): 78–79, doi:10.1111/j.1949-3606.2004.tb00866.x

External links


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