Khalid Medani
Academic title(s):
Associate Professor
Office:
Leacock 319
Degree(s):
PhD, University of California, Berkeley
Research areas:
Comparative Government and Politics
Areas of interest:
African Politics, Islam and Politics, Informal Economies, Middle East Politics, Ethnic and Civil Conflict, Comparative Politics, Political Economy of Development
Professional activities:
Current Book Project
Globalization, Informal Markets and Collective Action: The Development Islamic and Ethnic Politics in Egypt, Sudan and Somalia
Selected publications:
- 鈥淪tate Building in Reverse: The Neo-Liberal 鈥淩econstruction鈥 of Iraq. Middle East Report, Summer 2004.
- 鈥淔inancing Terrorism or Survival? Informal Finance, State Collapse and the US War on Terrorism.鈥 Middle East Report, Summer 2002.
- The Political Economy of an Islamist State: Sudan. Political Islam, eds. Joel Beinin and Joe Stork, eds. (University of California Press, 1997)
- Identity in Sudan鈥檚 Foreign Policy (with Francis M. Deng) Africa in the New International Order, eds. Edmond J. Keller and Donald Rothchild (Lynn Reiner Press, 1996).
- 鈥淪udan鈥檚 Human and Political Crisis,鈥 Current History, May, 1993.
- Funding Fundamentalism: Sudan, Review of African Political Economy, September-October, 1991.
Conferences:
- 鈥淚nformal Economies, Identities and Islamic Extremism,鈥 Sociology Lecture Series, Yale University, March 31, 2005.
- 鈥淭he Political Economy of Religious Fundamentalism: A Comparative Perspective,鈥 Paper delivered at the American Political Science Association, Chicago, September 3, 2004.
- 鈥淕lobalization and Islamic Militancy: Giving some context to the attacks of 9/11,鈥 paper delivered at the 45th Annual International Studies Convention. 鈥淗egemony and its Discontents,鈥 Montreal, March 17-20, 2004.
- 鈥淚nformal Markets and the Changing Face of Political Islam: the View from Cairo,鈥 paper delivered at the 99th Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, Philadelphia, PA, September 2-5, 2003.
- 鈥淯S Policy in Iraq: Prospects and Perils,鈥 Paper delivered to the Center for International Security and Cooperation (CISC), Stanford University, May 2003.
- 鈥淕lobalization, State Building and Collective Action: The Politic Economy of Remittance Inflows and Identity Politics in Northwest and Northeast Somalia,鈥 Annual Conference of the Joint Berkeley-Stanford Conference on African Studies, April, 2001
Group:
Associate Professor