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Trained as an anthropologist and historian, Dr. Nakissa is a scholar of religion and law in Muslim societies. His research spans the premodern and modern periods, giving special attention to the Middle East and Southeast Asia regions.
Dr. Nakissa is the author of The Anthropology of Islamic Law: Education, Ethics, and Legal Interpretation at Egypt’s Al-Azhar (Oxford University Press, 2019). He has also published numerous articles in journals in the fields of Islamic studies, history, anthropology, religious studies, and cognitive science. Such journals include Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute; Journal of Global History; Journal of Cognition and Culture; Journal of the American Academy of Religion; Method & Theory in the Study of Religion; Religion Compass; Human Rights Review; Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde / Journal of the Humanities and Social Sciences of Southeast Asia; Arabica; Islamic Law and Society; (Harvard Law) Journal of Islamic Law; and Muslim World.
Dr. Nakissa’s research spans the premodern and modern periods. His writings on the premodern period address several core components of the Islamic tradition, including Islamic law, Islamic legal theory, Sufism, theology, and traditional religious education. Dr. Nakissa’s writings on the modern period address the Islamic tradition’s continuing influence in contemporary Muslim societies. These writings also examine how the Islamic tradition has been transformed through the impact of colonialism, human rights initiatives, and counterterrorism initiatives.
Dr. Nakissa’s previous and current research utilizes both humanistic historical and anthropological approaches. It draws on textual materials written in the Arabic, Indonesian/Malaysian, English, and French languages. It also draws on extensive ethnographic fieldwork in Egypt, Indonesia, and Malaysia. Additionally, a sizable portion of his current research combines humanistic approaches with cognitive science and related forms of statistical data.
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| Codes | Courses | Type | Credits | Study Program |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ISL 205 | Anthropology of Islam and Muslim Societies | Core | 3 credits | MA in Islamic Studies |
| ISL 232 | النشر في المجلات العلمية المحكمة | Core | 3 credits | MA in Islamic Studies |
| ISL 303 | Approaches and Methods in Islamic Studies | Core | 5 credits | PhD in Islamic Studies |
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- The Anthropology of Islamic Law: Education, Ethics, and Legal Interpretation at Egypt’s al-Azhar (Oxford University Press, 2019)
- “The Islamic Doctrine of Takfīr (Excommunication): Tracing its Historical Development in the Thought of Ibn Ḥanbal, Ibn Taymiyya, and Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd al-Wahhāb.” (Harvard) Journal of Islamic Law (In Press)
- “Islamic Universities in Egypt and Indonesia as Tools of Liberal Governance: How States Use them to Canonize Reformed Versions of Islam.” Oxford Journal of Law and Religion 12, 3 (2023): 423-454.
- “Comparing Moralities in the Abrahamic and Indic Religions using Cognitive Science: Kindness, Peace, and Love versus Justice, Violence, and Hate.” Religions 14, 2 (2023): 203.
- “Islam and the Cognitive Study of Colonialism: The Case of Religious and Educational Reform at Egypt’s Al-Azhar.”Journal of Global History 17, 3 (2022): 394–417.
- “Liberalism’s Distinctive Policy for Governing Muslim Populations: Human Rights, Religious Reform, and Counterterrorism from the Colonial Era until the Present.” History Compass 20, 9 (2022): e12748.
- “Reconceptualizing the Global Transformation of Islam in the Colonial Period: Early Islamic Reform in British-Ruled India and Egypt.” Arabica: Journal of Arabic and Islamic Studies 69,1-2 (2022): 146-230.
- “Cognitive and Quantitative Approaches to Islamic Studies: Integrating Psychological, Socioeconomic, and Digital Cultural Statistics.” Religion Compass 15, 12 (2021): e12424.
- “Rethinking Religious Cognition and Myth: A New Perspective on How Religions Balance Intuitiveness and Interest Provokingness/Memorability.” Journal of Cognition and Culture 21 (2021): 112–137.
- “Islamic Law and Ethics.” In The Oxford Handbook of Islamic Ethics. Edited by Mustafa Shah. New York: Oxford University Press (In Press).
- “Islam.” In The Seshat History of Moralizing Religion. Edited by Jennifer Larson, Jenny Reddish and Peter Turchin. Chaplin, CT: Beresta Books, 2024: 133-151
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