Curriculum Vitae - University Of Maryland



Curriculum Vita

MANSOOR MOADDEL

Professor of Sociology

University of Maryland - College Park

September 2019

1. PERSONAL INFORMATION

|Address: |Office: |

|7249 Windsor Lane |4139 Art/Sociology Building |

|Hyattsville, MD 20782 |Department of Sociology, University of |

|E-mail:Moaddel@umd.edu |Maryland, College Park, MD, 20742-1315 |

|(734) 657-1128 (mobile) |Office: 301-405-5687 |

| | |

Academic Position:

2014- Professor, Department of Sociology, University of Maryland, College Park

2008- Non-Resident Fellow, Institute for Studies of Religion, Baylor University

2005- Visiting Research Professor, Institute for Social Research, the University of Michigan

2005- Research Affiliate, Population Studies Center, Institute for Social Research, the University of Michigan

1996-2013 Professors, Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Criminology, Eastern Michigan University

1991-96 Associate Professor, Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Criminology, Eastern Michigan University

1987-91 Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Criminology, Eastern Michigan University

1986-87 Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology-Anthropology, Oberlin College

1983-86 Lecturer, Department of Sociology, University of Wisconsin-Madison

1985-86 Computer Consultant, Social Science Micro-Computing Laboratory, Social Science Data and Computing Center, University of Wisconsin

Formal Education:

Ph.D. University of Wisconsin, 1986

M.A. Western Michigan University, 1979

B.A. Shiraz University (Iran), 1976

2. RESEARCH, SCHOLARLY AND CREATIVE ACTIVITIES

Books Authored or Edited:

2020 Moaddel, Mansoor, Clash of Values in the Middle East and North Africa: Islamic Fundamentalism versus Liberal Nationalism, A Study of People and Their Issues, New York: Columbia University Press, forthcoming.

2017 Moaddel, Mansoor, and Michele Gelfand. The Arab Spring and Changes in Values and Political Actions in the Middle East: Explorations of Visions and Perspectives, Oxford University Press.

2013 Moaddel, Mansoor and Stuart Karabenick. Religious Fundamentalism in the Middle East: A Cross-National, Inter-Faith, and Inter-Ethnic Analysis. Brill.

2007 Moaddel, Mansoor, ed., Values and Perception of the Islamic and Middle Eastern Publics: Findings from Values Surveys. New York: Palgrave. Translated into Arabic, 2010.

2005 Moaddel, Mansoor, Islamic Modernism, Nationalism, and Fundamentalism: Episode and Discourse. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.

2002. Moaddel, Mansoor, and Kamran Talattof, Contemporary Debates in Islam: An Anthology of Modernist and Fundamentalist Thought, New York: Saint Martin's Press. Paperback edition: Modernist and Fundamentalist Debates in Islam: A Reader, Palgrave.

2002 Moaddel, Mansoor, Jordanian Exceptionalism: A Comparative Analysis of Religion and State Relationships in Egypt, Iran, Jordan, and Syria, New York: Palgrave.

1993 Moaddel, Mansoor, Class, Politics, and Ideology in the Iranian Revolution, New York: Columbia University Press. Translated into Persian by Muhammad Salar Kasra’ie, Tabaqih, Siyasat, va Idi’uloji dar Inqilab-i Iran, Tehran, Iran: Baz Press, 1382/2003.

Articles in Referred Journals and Book Chapters:

2018 Moaddel, Mansoor, and Stuart Karabenick, “Religious Fundamentalism in Eight Muslim-Majority Countries: Reconceptualization and Assessment,” Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 57, 4 (December): 676-706.

2018 Mneimneh, Zeina N., Julie de Jong, Kristen Cibelli Hibben, and Mansoor Moaddel, “Do I Look and Sound Religious? Interviewer Religious Appearance and Attitude Effects on Respondents’ Answers,” Journal of Survey Statistics and Methodology, doi: 10.1093/jssam/smy020, 1-19.

2018 “The Tenacity of the Arab Spring in People’s Perceptions: Trends in Values among Egyptians,” Working Paper Series. Economic Research Forum. Giza, Egypt, pp. 1-66.

2017 Moaddel, Mansoor, “Monolithic Religious Markets, Fragmented State Structures, and Islamic Fundamentalism among Iranian and in the Middle East and North Africa,” Revue Internationale des Etudes du Développement, Vol. 229 (June): 33-62.

2017 Thornton, Arland, Mansoor Moaddel, Kathryn M Yount, and Linda Young-DeMarco, “Modernization, World System, and Clash-of-Civilization Perspectives in Lay Views of the Development –Morality Nexus in the U.S. and Middle East,” in Mansoor Moaddel and Michele Gelfand, eds., Values, Political Action, and Change in the Middle East and the Arab Spring, New York: Oxford University Press, 101-132.

2017 Thornton, Arland, Linda Young-DeMarco, Shawn F. Dorius, Jeffrey Swindle, and Mansoor Moaddel. “Middle Eastern Beliefs about the Causal Linkages of Development to Freedom, Democracy, and Human Rights.” Sociology of Development, 3, 1: 70-94.

2017 Moaddel, Mansoor, “The Arab Spring and Egyptian Revolution Makers: Predictors of Participation,” in Mansoor Moaddel and Michele Gelfand, eds., Values, Political Action, and Change in the Middle East and the Arab Spring, New York: Oxford University Press, 205-247.

2017 Moaddel, Mansoor, “National Identity Versus National Pride in the Modalities of Liberal Territorial Nationalism and Islamic Nationalism in Muslim-Majority Countries,” in Mansoor Moaddel and Michele Gelfand, eds., Values, Political Action, and Change in the Middle East and the Arab Spring, New York: Oxford University Press, 61-100.

2017 Mansoor Moaddel and Julie de Jong, “Youth Perceptions and Values During the Arab Spring: Cross-National Variation and Trend” in Mansoor Moaddel and Michele Gelfand, eds., Values, Political Action, and Change in the Middle East and the Arab Spring, New York: Oxford University Press, 25-68.

2016 Moaddel, Mansoor, El Dilema Religioso, Vanguardia Dossier, 41 (July-September): 46-51; “The Saudi Religious Predicament,” Vanguardia Dossier (July-September): 121-124.

2016 Moaddel, Mansoor, “After Religion: Assessing Liberal Shift among Iranians in Post-Khomeini period.” Pp. 63-87 in Mahmood Monshipouri, ed., Inside the Islamic Republic: Social Change in Post-Khomeini Iran, London: Hurst Publishers and New York: Oxford University Press.

2016 Moaddel, Mansoor, Julie de Jong, Katie Kiraly, Julie Yelle, Wendy Chambers, Marilyn Maines, Joseph Danks, Amy Pate, Susannah Paletz, Walid Al-Khatib, “Jordanian values and Perceptions of social and political issues,” Center for Advanced Study of Language, University of Maryland.

2016 Chambers, Wendy, Amy Pate, Julie Yelle, Katie Kiraly, Marilyn Maines, Joseph Danks,, Mansoor Moaddel, Julie de Jong, Walid Al-Khatib, “Precursors of Social Unrest and Political Instability in Jordan: Analyses based on “Jordanian Values and Perceptions of Social and Political Issues,” Center for Advanced Study of Language, University of Maryland.

2014 Elson, Sara Beth, Mansoor Moaddel & Alison Dingwall, “Sociocultural approaches to understand human interaction: a discussion of new theoretical frameworks, issues, and modern communication technology,” in Jill Egeth, Gary L. Klein, and Dylan Schmorrow, eds., Sociocultural Behavior Sensemaking: State of the Art in Understanding the Operational Environment. McLean, VA: The MITRE Corporation, 9-28. 

2013. Moaddel, Mansoor and Julie De Jong, Trends in Values among Saudi Youth: Findings from Values Surveys. Journal of the History of Childhood and Youth, 6, 1: 153-164.

2013 Moaddel, Mansoor, “Cultural Change as Issues Resolution: Predicting Change in the Middle East,” in Beret E. Strong, Lisare Brooks Babin, Michelle Ramsden Zbylut, and Linda Roan, Sociocultural Systems: The Next Step in Army Cultural Capability, U.S. Army Research Institute for the Behavioral and Social Sciences, Ft. Belvoir, VA, 87-112.

2012 Williams, Nathalie E., Arland Thornton, Dirgha J. Ghimire, Linda C. Young-DeMarco, and Mansoor Moaddel, “Nepali Migrants to the Gulf Cooperation Council Countries: Behaviors, Plans and Values.” In Mehran Kamrava and Zahra Babar, eds., Migrant Labor in the Persian Gulf, New York: Columbia University Press, 137-154.

2012 Moaddel, Mansoor, “Islam: Globalization and Its Intellectual Development,” in George Ritzer, ed., The Wiley-Blackwell Encyclopedia of Globalization, Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, 1204-1216.

2012 Arland Thornton, Georgina Binstock, Mohammad Jalal Abbasi-Shavazi, Dirgha Ghimire, Arjan Gjonca, Attila Melegh, Colter Mitchell, Mansoor Moaddel, Yu Xie, Li-shou Yang, Linda Young-DeMarco, and Kathryn M. Yount, “Knowledge and Beliefs about National Development and Developmental Hierarchies: the Viewpoints of Ordinary People in Thirteen Countries.” Social Science Research 41(5): 1053-1068.

2011 Moaddel, Mansoor, Julie de Jong, and Munqith Dagher, “Beyond Sectarianism in Iraq.” Context, 10, 3:66-67.

2010 Moaddel, Mansoor, “Religious Regimes and Prospects for Liberal Politics: Futures of Iran, Iraq, and Saudi Arabia,” Futures, 42, 6 (August): 532-44

2010 Arland Thornton, Alexandra Achen, Jennifer Barber. Georgina Binstock, Wade Garrison, Dirgha Ghimire, Wang Guangzhou, Ronald Inglehart, Rukmalie Jayakody, Yang Jiang, Julie de Jong, Katherine King, Ron Lesthaeghe, Sohair Mehanna, Colter Mitchell, Mansoor Moaddel, Mary Beth Ofstedal, Norbert Schwarz, Yu Xie, Li-shou Yang, Linda Young-DeMarco, Kathryn Yount, “Creating Questions and Protocols for an International Study of Ideas about Development and Family Life,” in M. Braun, B. Edwards, J. Harkness, T. Johnson, L. Lyberg, P. Mohler, B.E. Pennell, and T.W. Smith, eds., Survey Methods in Multinational, Multiregiona,l and Multicultural Contexts, John Wiley & Sons, 59-74.

2009 Moaddel, Mansoor, “The Iranian Revolution and its Nemesis: The Rise of Liberal Values among Iranians,” Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa, and the Middle East (February): 126-136

2008 Moaddel, Mansoor, Ronald Inglehart, and Mark Tessler, “Saddam Hussein and the Sunni Insurgency: Findings from Iraqi Values Surveys,” Political Science Quarterly 123, 4 (winter): 623-644.

2008 Moaddel, Mansoor, Mark Tessler, and Ronald Inglehart, “Foreign Occupation and National Pride: The Case of Iraq,” Public Opinion Quarterly (November): 1-29.

2008 Moaddel, Mansoor and Stuart Karabenick, “Religious Fundamentalism among Young Muslims in Egypt and Saudi Arabia,” Social Forces (June): 1675-1710.

2007 Moaddel, Mansoor, “The Islamic Regime’s Dilemma: The Limits to Domestic Tyranny and International Trickery,” Georgetown Journal of International Affairs (Summer/Fall): 1-7.

2007 Ajrouch, Kristine, and Mansoor Moaddel, "Social Structure versus Perception: A Cross-National Comparison of the Determinants of Self-Rated Health in Egypt, Iran, Jordan, and the US", in Mansoor Moaddel, ed., Values and Perceptions of the Islamic Publics: Findings from Values Surveys, New York: Palgrave, 181-208.

2006 Tessler, Mark, Mansoor Moaddel, and Ronald Inglehart, “Getting to Arab Democracy: What Kind of Democracy Do Iraqis Want?” Journal of Democracy 17, 1 (January): 38-50.

2006 Moaddel, Mansoor, and Hamid Latif, “Events and Value Change: The Impact of September 11, 2001 on the Worldviews of Egyptians and Moroccans,” Interdisciplinary Journal of Research on Religion, volume 2, article 5: 1-48.

2006 Moaddel, Mansoor, “Shi’a Islamic Societies,” in Mark Juergensmeyer, ed., The Oxford Handbook of Global Religions, New York: Oxford University Press, 447-456.

2006 Moaddel, Mansoor, "The Saudi Public Speaks: Religion, Gender, and Politics,” International Journal of Middle East Studies, 38: 79-108. Reprinted in Mona Siddiqui, ed., Islam, London: SAGE Publications, expected publication date June 2010.

2006 Inglehart, Ronald, Mansoor Moaddel, and Mark Tessler, “Xenophobia and In-Group Solidarity in Iraq: A Natural Experiment on the Impact of Insecurity,” Perspective on Politics, vol. 4, 3 (September): 495-505.

2004 Moaddel, Mansoor, "The Future of Islam After 9/11," Futures, 36: 961-977.

2003 Moaddel, Mansoor, "The Study of Islamic Culture and Politics: An Overview and Assessment," Annual Review of Sociology, 28: 359-86.

2003 Moaddel, Mansoor, "2002 Keynote Address: September 11, Global Exigencies, and Sociology: A New Challenge," Michigan Sociological Review, 17 (Fall): 1-5.

2002 Moaddel, Mansoor, and Taghi Azadarmaki, "The Worldviews of Islamic Publics: The Cases of Egypt, Iran, and Jordan,” Comparative Sociology, 1, 3-4: 299-319. Reprinted in Ronald Inglehart, ed., Human Values and Social Change: Findings form Values Surveys, Leiden: Brill, 2003.

2002 Moaddel, Mansoor, "The Singularity of the Jordanian Religious Experience," International Journal of Society, Culture, and Politics, 15, 4 (summer): 527-68.

2002 Moaddel, Mansoor, "Discursive Pluralism and the Rise of Islamic Modernism in Egypt," Arab Studies Quarterly, 24, 1 (winter): 1-29.

2001 Moaddel, Mansoor, "Conditions for Ideological Production: The Origins of Islamic Modernism in India, Egypt, and Iran,” Theory and Society 30 (October): 669-731.

1998 Moaddel, Mansoor, "Religion and Women: Islamic Modernism versus Islamic Fundamentalism," Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 37, 1: 108-130.

1998 Moaddel, Mansoor, "Diversities and Discontinuities in the Islamic Response to Modernity," in Madeleine Cousineau, ed., Religion in a Changing World: Comparative Studies in Sociology, Westport, CT: Praeger, 159-166.

1996. Moaddel, Mansoor, "Anglo-Iranian Agreement 1919," "Anglo-Iranian Oil Company," "Bazargan," "Mosaddeq," "National Front," "The Reuter Concession," and "Reza Shah," Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East, New York: Macmillan.

1996 Moaddel, Mansoor, "The Social Bases and the Discursive Context of the Rise of Islamic Fundamentalism: The Cases of Iran and Syria," Sociological Inquiry (August): 330-355.

1994. Moaddel, Mansoor, "Political Conflict in the World Economy: A Cross-National Analysis of Modernization and World-System Theory," American Sociological Review (April): 276-303.

1994 Moaddel, Mansoor, "The Significance of Discourse in the Iranian Revolution: A Reply to Foran," Critique (spring): 65-72.

1993 Moaddel, Mansoor, "The Egyptian and Iranian Ulama at the Threshold of Modern Social Change: What Does and What Does not Account for the Difference," Arab Studies Quarterly (summer): 21-46.

1992 Moaddel, Mansoor, "Shi'i Political Discourse and Class Mobilization in the Tobacco Movement of 1890-92," Sociological Forum (September): 447-468 A slightly revised version of this paper appeared in John Foran (ed.) Social Movements in Iran: Historical Comparative, and Theoretical Perspectives, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1994: 1-20.

1992 Moaddel, Mansoor, "Ideology as Episodic Discourse: The Case of the Iranian Revolution," American Sociological Review (June): 353-379. Also reprinted in Stanford M. Lyman (ed.), Social Movements: Critiques, Concepts, Case Studies. New York: New York University Press, 1995: 234-290.

1991 Moaddel, Mansoor, "Class Struggle in Post-Revolutionary Iran," International Journal of Middle East Studies (August): 317-343.

1989 Moaddel, Mansoor, "State-Centered vs. Class-Centered Perspectives On International Politics: The Case of U.S. and British Participation in the 1953 Coup Against Premier Mosaddeq in Iran," Studies in Comparative International Development, 24: 1-21.

1989 Moaddel, Mansoor, "State Autonomy and Class Conflict in the Reformation (Comments on Wuthnow, ASR, December 1985)," American Sociological Review (June): 472-474.

1986 Moaddel, Mansoor, "Shi'i Ulama and the State in Iran," Theory and Society, 15: 519-556.

Book Reviews, Other Articles, Notes:

2011 Moaddel, Mansoor, “The Arab Spring and Reflections on Political Sociology.” States, Power, and Societies, 15, 3 (autumn): 4-6.

2011 Moaddel, Mansoor, Review of Foucault and the Iranian Revolution: Gender and the Seduction of Islamism by Janet Afary and Kevin B. Anderson ago: The University of Chicago Press, 2005, pp. xii, 346.

2009 Moaddel, Mansoor, Review of Beyond Sacred and Secular: Politics of Religion in Israel and Turkey by Sultan Tepe, Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2008, xiii, 413 pp. Reviewed for Contemporary Sociology, 38, 5 (September): 453-54.

2009 Moaddel, Mansoor, Review of Torture and the Twilight of Empire: From Algiers to Baghdad, by Marnia Lazreg. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2007. 354, pp. Reviewed for Contemporary Sociology 38, 1: 64-65.

2007 Moaddel, Mansoor, Review of Class and Labor in Iran: Did the Revolution Matter? By Farhad Nomani and Sohrab Behdad. Syracuse, N.Y.: Syracuse University Press, 2006. Pp. xiii+268. Reviewed for American Journal of Sociology, (November).

2007 Moaddel, Mansoor, “What the Iraqi Study Group Missed: The Iraqi People.” Footnotes, volume 35, 1 (January): 1, 4, 10.

2005. Moaddel, Mansoor, Review of “Quintan Wiktorowicz, Islamic Activism: A Social Movement Theory Approach,” Mobilization: An International Journal, 10, 1: 197-8.

2006 Moaddel, Mansoor, Review of “Marc Sageman’s Understanding Terror Networks.” Contemporary Sociology.

2004 Moaddel, Mansoor, “Prospects for Change in Saudi Arabia.” Footnotes, 32, 8 (November): 1, 8-9.

2003 Moaddel, Mansoor, "Public Opinion in Islamic Countries: Survey Results," Footnotes, 31, 1: 1, 7.

1995. Moaddel, Mansoor, "Western Intervention and Ideological Reaction in the Middle East: A Commentary on Bernard Lewis' 'Islam and Liberal Democracy'," CIRA Bulletin (fall): 21-24.

Contracts and Grants:

$437,000 The National Science Foundation, August 1, 2019 – May 31, 2021. Project Title: A Panel Study of the Dynamics of Change in Egypt, Tunisia, and Turkey: A Project to Carry out Wave 3.

$18,000 Global Religion Research Initiative of the Center for the Study of Religion and Society at the University of Notre Dame ($12,000), Jack Shand Grant Program and Society for Scientific Study of Religion ($5,000), University of Maryland-College Park ($1,000): July 1, 2019 – June 30, 2020. Project Title: Conceptualizing and Measuring Jewish Fundamentalism in Israel.

$356,794 The National Science Foundation, September 2015-August 2017; Project Title: Changes in Political Engagement and Belief Formation in Egypt and Turkey

$14,256 Max Planck Institute, Göttingen, Germany, December 15, 2015-December 14, 2017; Project Title: Religion, Secularism and National Identity in Turkey.

$310,000 Center for Advanced Study of Language (CASL) & Department of Defense, University of Maryland, August 2015-June 2016; Project Title: Events, Political Engagement, and Values Among Jordanians.

$637,492 MITRE Corporation, with Beth-Ellen Pennell (Co-PI), Survey Research Operation, Institute for Social Research, the University, of Michigan, July 2012-December 2013; Project Title: The Birth Place of the Arab Spring: Value Orientations and Political Actions in Tunisia.

$2,838,047 Office of Naval Research, with Arland Thornton (Co-PI) June, 2009-November 2013 and expansion grant, 2013-2016. Project Title: Cross-National Analysis of Religious Fundamentalism in the Middle East. Countries covered: Egypt, Iraq, Lebanon, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, and Turkey.

$79,000 Jack Shand Research Awards; Georg-August Universität Göttingen, Göttingen, Germany; The University of Michigan; and Eastern Michigan University; Project Title: Trend in Values, Religious Fundamentalism, and Developmental Idealism in Turkey, September 2008-August 2013.

$84,954 Air Force Office of Scientific Research & Life Sciences and Human Effectiveness European Office of Aerospace Research and Development, May 16-18, 2010; Project Title: Workshop on Theoretical and Methodological Issues in the Study of Values in Islamic Countries.

$34,595 Georgetown University ($34,596), July 1, 2009 – June 30, 2011, with Arland Thornton (PI), Dirgha Ghimire (Co-PI), Mansoor Moaddel (Co-PI), Nathalie Williams (Co-PI); Project Title: Migrants to the Gulf Cooperation Council Countries: Values, Behaviors, and Plans.

$45,000 The Rodney Stark Foundation, the World Values Survey Association, and Eastern Michigan University; Project Title: Ethnicity, Sectarianism, and People’s Values: Lebanon after the Cedar Revolution (January 2008-January 2009).

$196,667 The National Science Foundation, A Collaborative Project between Mansoor Moaddel (PI), Eastern Michigan University, and Ronald Inglehart and Mark Tessler (Co-PIs), Institute for Social Research, the University of Michigan; Project Title: Iraqi Perception of the Past, Present, and Future: II, October 2005-September 2007.

$120,438 The National Science Foundation, A Collaborative Project between Mansoor Moaddel (PI), Eastern Michigan University, and Ronald Inglehart and Mark Tessler (Co-PIs), Institute for Social Research, the University of Michigan; Project Title: Iraqi Perception of the Past, Present, and Future: I, October 2004-September 2006.

$75,000 United States Institute of Peace ($45,000), Mellon Foundation ($10,000), and Eastern Michigan University ($30,000); Project Title: Youth, Emotional Energy, and Political Violence: The Cases of Egypt and Saudi Arabia, September 2003-Septempber 2005.

$99,485 The National Science Foundation, Project Title: "Understanding the Worldviews of the Saudi Public," April 2003-August 2004.

$42,000 The National Science Foundation ($30,000) and Bank of Sweden Tercentenary Foundation ($12,000); Project Title: "Workshop/Conference on Understanding the Worldviews of the Islamic Publics: Theoretical and Methodological Issues," August 2002-August 2003.

$94,500 The National Science Foundation, Small Grant for Exploratory Research; Project Title: A Post-Crisis Analysis of the Attitudes and Value Orientations of the Islamic Publics in Egypt, Iran, and Morocco.

$182,000 The National Science Foundation ($122,000) and The Ford Foundation ($60,000); Project Title: In Search of A Sociopolitical Community: The Cases of Egypt, Iran, and Jordan.

$38,500 Bank of Sweden Tercentenary Foundation ($20,000), Eastern Michigan University ($11,500), University of Michigan ($7,000), 2000-2001; Project Title: Social Transition and Value Orientations: The Case of Iran.

$24,500 The Rockefeller Foundation, 2000-2001, Project Title: Conference on Religion, Gender Roles, Democratization, and Market Transition: An Analysis of Pilot Surveys of Changing Worldviews of Islamic Publics, Methodological and Substantive Issues, The University of Tehran, Tehran, Iran (July 12-15, 2000).

$148,000 The National Science Foundation, collaborative proposals: SBR-9820062 to Mansoor Moaddel and SBR-9820060 to Ronald Inglehart (University of Michigan), 1999-2000; Project Title: Collaborative Research on Changing Worldviews of Islamic Publics in Egypt, Iran, and Jordan: A Pilot Project. Overseas Collaborators: Saad ed-Din Ibrahim, Ibn Khaldun Center for Development Study, Cairo, Egypt; Abdul Hamid Safwat, Suez Canal University, Egypt; Taghi Azadarmaki and Hamid Abdullahyan, University of Tehran, Iran; and Mustafa Hamarneh and Tony Sabbagh, University of Jordan, Amman, Jordan.

$37,000 United States Institute of Peace, 1997-1998; Project Title: Islamic Movements in Algeria and Jordan.

$62,000 The National Science Foundation, 1996-1999; Project Title: Islamic Movements in Algeria and Jordan.

$18,200 United States Information Agency-American Center of Oriental Research Fellowship; Project Title: Understanding Jordanian Exceptionalism, 1997.

$63,000 The National Science Foundation 1993 -1995; Project Title: Episode and Discourse: Islamic Modernism, Liberal-Nationalism, and Fundamentalism in the Middle East.

$17,223 Michigan Humanities Council and Eastern Michigan University), 1989-90; Project Title: Lectures on Islamic fundamentalism in the Middle East.

$27,500 National Endowment for the Humanities), January-December 1989, Project Title: A Comparative Project on Islamic Fundamentalism in the Middle East.

Fellowships, Prizes and Awards:

Awards

Winner of the 2008 Scholarship Recognition Award from Eastern Michigan University for “Religious Fundamentalism among Young Muslims in Egypt and Saudi Arabia,” Social Forces (June, 2008): 1675-1710 (co-authored with Stuart Karabenick).

Co-Winner of the 2007 Distinguished Book Award from the Sociology of Religion Section of the American Sociological Association for Islamic Modernism, Nationalism, and Fundamentalism: Episode and Discourse (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005).

Winner of the 2007 Scholarly Achievement Award from The North Central Sociological Association (USA) for Islamic Modernism, Nationalism, and Fundamentalism: Episode and Discourse (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005).

Winner of 2002 Best Article Award from the Sociology of Religion Section of the American Sociological Association for "Conditions for Ideological Production: The Origins of Islamic Modernism in India, Egypt, and Iran," Theory and Society (October, 2001): 669-731.

Graduate with Honors, Western Michigan University, 1978

Valedictorian, Shiraz University, 1976

Essay Contest Award, Population Center, Shiraz University, fall 1974

Visiting Scholars Fellowship, Georgetown University, Doha, Qatar, 2012/13

Fellowships

Faculty Research Fellowship (one-half release), Eastern Michigan University,

Project Title: Religious Fundamentalism in the Middle East, fall 2011.

Faculty Research Fellowship (one-half release), Eastern Michigan University, 2000-2001

Project Title: Analysis of Pilot Surveys in Egypt, Iran, and Jordan.

Spring-Summer Research Award ($6,000), Eastern Michigan University, spring 1996.

Project Title: Determinants of Income Inequality: A Cross-National Analysis.

Faculty Research Fellowship (one semester release), Eastern Michigan University, winter 1999, Project Title: A Comparative Project on Ideological Formation.

Faculty Research Fellowship (one semester release), Eastern Michigan University, fall 1997, Project Title: Islam and Liberal Democracy.

Faculty Research Fellowship (one semester release), Eastern Michigan University, fall 1995, Project Title: Islamic Movements in Algeria, Jordan, and Indonesia.

Faculty Research Fellowship (one semester release), Eastern Michigan University, fall 1993, Project Title: Episode and Discourse: Ideology and Social Change in the Middle East.

Faculty Research Fellowship (one semester release), Eastern Michigan University, fall 1991, Project Title: Ideology and Social Change in the Middle East.

Summer Grant Award ($1,200), Eastern Michigan University, summer 1990, Project Title: Development of Procedures and Models for Quantitative Analysis of International Data Set.

Faculty Research Fellowship (one semester release), Eastern Michigan University, fall 1988, Project Title: Preliminary work on Islamic Fundamentalism in the Middle East.

Research Grant ($1,000), Eastern Michigan University, summer 1988, Project Title: Outcomes of the Iranian Revolution.

Travel Grant ($500), Oberlin College, spring 1987, Project Title: Religion and Politics in Egypt.

Scholarship, Oslo International Summer School, Oslo, Norway, summer 1979.

Talks, Abstracts and Other Professional Papers Presented:

Moaddel, Mansoor, “Reconceptualizing and Predicting Religious Fundamentalism: A Study of Eight Muslim-Majority Countries.” Paper presented at the annual conference of the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion, Las Vegas, NV, October 24-28, 2018.

Moaddel, Mansoor, “Clash of Values in the Middle East and North Africa: Islamic fundamentalism versus Liberal Nationalism.” Paper presented at the annual conference of European Consortium for Political Research, Hamburg, Germany, August 22-25, 2018.

Moaddel, Mansoor, “The veil in the Middle East and North Africa: Finding from cross-national values surveys.” Paper presented at Economic Research Forum Workshop, Beirut, Lebanon, August 24, 2016

Moaddel, Mansoor, “Reflections on Two Revolutions: Constitutional Revolutions of 1906 and the Iranian Revolution of 1079.” Paper presented at the biannual meeting of the International Society of Iranian Studies, Vienna, Austria, August 5, 2016.

Moaddel, Mansoor, and Stuart Karabenick, “Cross-National Analysis of Religious Fundamentalism in the Middle East. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Sociological Association, Chicago, 2015.

Moaddel, Mansoor, “Modalities of Collective Sovereignty in Muslim-Majority Countries: Findings from Comparative Historical Research and Cross National Values Surveys.” Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Sociological Association, Chicago, 2015

Moaddel, Mansoor, “The Arab Spring and Egyptian Revolution Makers: Predictors of Participation.” Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Sociological Association, New York, NY, 2013.

Moaddel, Mansoor, “Modalities of Political Sovereignty: Territorial Nationalism versus Religious Nationalism in Post-Khomeini Iran.” Paper presented in a workshop on Social Change in Post-Khomeini Iran, Georgetown Center for International and Regional Studies, Doha, Qatar, March 16-17, 2013.

Moaddel, Mansoor, “Smart Sanction or Democratization versus Crippling Sanctions or War by other Means.” Paper presented in a conference on War By Other Means: Sanctions on Iran, Georgetown Center for International and Regional Studies, Doha, Qatar, March 12, 2013.

Moaddel, Mansoor, “Anatomy of A Revolution Delayed: An Analysis of the Green Movement in Iran.” Paper presented in the annual meeting of the Middle East Studies Association of North America, 2011.

Thornton, A. , Achen, S., Barber, J., Binstock, G., Garrison, W., Ghimire, D., Guangzhou, W., Inglehart, R., Jayakody, R., Jiang, Y., de Jong, J., King, K., Lesthaeghe, R., Mehanna, S., Mitchell, C., Moaddel, M., Ofstedal, M. B., Schwarz, N., Xie, Y., Yang, L.-S., Young-DeMarco, L., & Yount, K. (2008). Process and Method for Creating Questions and Protocols for an International Study of Developmental Idealism, Developmental Thinking, and Family Life. Paper prepared for the International Conference on Survey Methods in Multinational, Multiregional and Multicultural Contexts. Berlin, Germany, June 2008

Moaddel, Mansoor, Presenter and Organizer (with Ann Shola Orloff and Meyer Kestnbaum) of a Section of Political Sociology Invited Session. “A Political Sociology of Terrorism?” The 2007 annual meeting of the American Sociological Association, New York.

Moaddel, Mansoor, Organizer of a Session on “Muslim Societies,” at the 2006 annual meeting of the American Sociological Association, Montreal, Canada.

Moaddel, Mansoor, “Historicizing Muslim Exceptionalism.” A paper presented at the 2005 annual meeting of the American Sociological Association, Philadelphia, PA.

Moaddel, Mansoor, “Determinants of Attitudes toward Democracy: The Cases of Iran and Saudi Arabia.” A paper presented at the World Value Survey Association Conference, Budapest, Hungary, September 2-5, 2004.

Moaddel, Mansoor, “Does Being Religious Mean Anything in Islamic Countries: From Self-rated Health to Attitudes toward Democracy.” A paper presented at 2004 annual meeting of the American Sociological Association, San Francisco, CA.

Moaddel, Mansoor, “The Worldview of the Islamic Publics versus Americans: Points of Convergence and Divergence.” Poster presentation at the 2003 annual meeting of American Sociological Association, Atlanta, Georgia.

Moaddel, Mansoor, "Socioeconomic Status and Self-Rated Health: The Cases of Egypt, Jordan, and Iran" (with Kristine Ajrouch). A paper presented in the 2002 annual meeting of the American Sociological Association, Chicago, IL.

Moaddel, Mansoor, "Changing Worldviews of Islamic Public: The Findings of the Pilot Surveys in Egypt, Iran, and Syria." A paper presented in the 2000 annual meeting of the American Sociological Association, Washington, D. C.

Moaddel, Mansoor, "Swanson's Religion and Regime: Historical Development and Theoretical Refinement," A paper presented in the 2000 annual meeting of the Association for Sociology of Religion, Washington, D. C.

Moaddel, Mansoor, Understanding Jordanian Exceptionalism. A paper presented in the 1999 annual meeting of the American Sociological Association, Chicago, IL.

Moaddel, Mansoor, Social Transformation, Intellectual Pluralism, and Ideological Production: Islamic Modernism in India, Egypt, and Iran. A paper presented in the 1998 annual meeting of the American Sociological Association, San Francisco, CA.

Moaddel, Mansoor, Ideological Production. A paper presented at the 1997 annual meeting of the American Sociological Association, Toronto, Canada.

Moaddel, Mansoor, Religion and Women: Modernism versus Fundamentalism. A paper presented at the 1996 annual meeting of the American Sociological Association, New York, NY.

Moaddel, Mansoor, Determinants of Ideological Production: Islamic Modernism, Liberal-Nationalism, and Fundamentalism in the Middle East. A paper presented at the 1994 annual meeting of the American Sociological Association in Los Angeles, CA.

Moaddel, Mansoor, The Social Bases and Discursive Context of the Rise of Islamic Fundamentalism: The Cases of Iran and Syria. A paper presented at 1994 the annual meeting of the American Sociological Association in Los Angeles, CA.

Moaddel, Mansoor, Ideological Context of the Politics of Religion in Contemporary Iran. A paper presented at the 1993 annual meeting of Middle East Studies Associate of North America, College Research Triangle Park, North Carolina.

Moaddel, Mansoor, Social Structure and Religious Movement in Egypt and Iran. A paper presented at the 1992 annual meeting of the American Sociological Association.

Moaddel, Mansoor, The Egyptian and Iranian Ulama at the Threshold of Modern Social Change: What Does and What Does not Account for the Difference. A paper presented at the 1991 annual meeting of MESA, Washington, D. C.

Moaddel, Mansoor, Ideology and Revolution: The Case of Iran. Paper presented at the 1991 annual meeting of the American Sociological Association, Cincinnati, OH.

Moaddel, Mansoor, The Embeddedness of Ideology in Class Practice: The Political Role of Shi'ism in 19th Century Iran. A paper presented at the 1989 annual meeting of Middle East Studies Association of North America, Toronto, Canada.

Moaddel, Mansoor, Class Struggle in Post-Revolutionary Iran and the Rise of a Third-World Fascist State. Paper presented at the 1989 annual meeting of the Center for Iranian Research and Analysis, Columbia University, New York, NY.

Moaddel, Mansoor, Defining International Sociology. A paper presented at the 1989 Michigan Sociological Association Conference. Aquinas College, Grand Rapids, MI.

Moaddel, Mansoor, Dependence, Vulnerability and Political Conflict: Some Cross National Evidence (with Scott Werker). Paper presented at the 1987 annual meeting of the American Sociological Association, Chicago, IL.

Moaddel, Mansoor, Comparative Analysis of Islamic Fundamentalism. A luncheon roundtable discussion, 1987 annual meeting of the American Sociological Association, Chicago, IL.

Moaddel, Mansoor, Class Politics and Shi'i Ideology in Nineteenth-Century Iran. Paper presented at the 1988 annual Meeting of the Center for the Iranian Research & Analysis, Chicago, IL.

Working Papers and Work in Progress

Moaddel, Mansoor, Jean Kors, Johan Gärde, “The Making of Sectarian Solidarity: The Case of Lebanon,” under review.

Moaddel, Mansoor, Julie de Jong, and Lind Young-DeMarco, “Islamic Fashion: Veiling Preference in Eight Muslim-Majority Country.”

Invited Talks:

“Tunisia an Oasis of Peace and Religious Tolerance: Findings from a Panel Survey,” The Bureau of Intelligence and Research, U.S. Department of State (December 22015); “Islamic Nationalism & Fundamentalism: Extremist Ideology and Muslim Violence in the Middle East.” Talk given at a conference on “Social Unrest in the Middle East,” sponsored by CASTL and START Center, Marriott Hotel & Conference Center, University of Maryland, College Park (September, 2015); “Islamic Fundamentalism, Religious Nationalism, and Trends in Values in the Middle East: Findings from Values Survey.” The Bureau of Intelligence and Research, U.S. Department of State (February, 2015); “Cultural Change as Issues Resolutions,” U.S. Army Research Institute for the Behavioral and Social Sciences, Consortium Research Fellows Program, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas (January, 2012); “Trends in Values among Egyptians, Iranians, Iraqis, and Saudis: Findings from Values Surveys,” New York University-Abu Dhabi (November 2011); “Historicizing Muslim Exceptionalism,” Institute for Studies of Religion, Baylor University (April 2008); Conference on Religion and Development, Vrije University Amsterdam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands (June 2007); Arab Institute for Research and Strategic Studies, Amman, Jordan (April 2007); “Symposium on Islamic Politics and Cultures, Department of Sociology, Indiana University (September 2006); “Religion and Democratic Culture Symposium,” Institute for International Policy, University of Washington, Seattle (October 2006); Complutense University, El Escorial, Spain (Summer 2003); McGill University, Montreal, Canada (Spring 2003); Department of Sociology, University of Wisconsin-Madison (Spring 2003); Department of Sociology, University of Arizona (Winter 2003); Department of Sociology, Loyola University Chicago (Fall 2002); Cairo Conference, Cairo, Egypt (Winter 2003); American University in Cairo, Egypt (2002), Harvard University (Fall 2003).

Reviewing Activities, Editorial Boards, and Panel Memberships:

Editorial Board Member, Religion (2018- )

Special Issue Guest Editor, Religion (2018 )

Editorial Advisory Board Member, Critical Research on Religion (2012- )

Editorial Board Member, Contemporary Sociology (2006-8)

Editorial Board Member, Interdisciplinary Journal of Research on Religion (2004- )

Scientific Advisory Board Member, the World Values Survey (2008-2009)

Reviewer for American Journal of Sociology, American Sociological Review, Comparative Study in Society and History, International Journal of Middle East Studies, International Studies Quarterly, Journal of Conflict Resolution, Political Studies Journal, Population and Development Review, Sociological Forum, Sociological Quarterly, and Studies in Comparative International Development

3. SERVICE

Professional:

i. Council Member, Association for Sociology of Religion (2009- )

ii. Advisory Board Member, Terror Free Tomorrow (2006-8)

iii. Council Member, Sociology of Religion Section, American Sociological Association (1995-1997)

iv. Member of the Advisory Panel, United States Institute of Peace

v. Member of the Advisory Panel, Sociology Program, the National Science Foundation (1994-96)

vi. A Participant in a National Science Foundation Workshop on "Religion, Democratization, and Market Transition," Sponsored by the NSF Sociology Program, December 6-7, 1993

vii. Council Member of Association for Sociology of Religion (2009- ),

viii. Member of the Advisory Panel, United States Institute of Peace, Member of the Advisory Panel, Sociology Program, the National Science Foundation (1994-96)

ix. Reviewer for American Sociological Review, American Journal of Sociology, Public Opinion Quarterly, Sociological Inquiry, Comparative Study in Society and History, International Journal of Middle East Studies, International Studies Quarterly, Journal of Conflict Resolution, Policy Studies Journal, Population and Development Review, Sociological Forum, Sociological Quarterly, and Studies in Comparative International Development.

x. Evaluated proposals for the National Science Foundation and many other foundations in Canada, Europe, Israel, and Qatar.

Community, State, National:

Linking Scholarly Activities to Public Policy

a. Presentation to and participation in several meetings on “the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant” organized by Multi-Layered Strategic Assessment, Department of Defense, Summer-Fall, 2014.

b. Briefing on the Arab Spring and Its Probable Futures. Presented to Congressman Adam Smith, ranking member of the House Armed Services Committee, and his professional staff member Timothy R. McClees, December 15, 2011.

c. Briefing on the Arab Spring and Its Probable Futures. Presented to professional staff members Robie Samanta-Roy and Mike Noblet of the Senate Armed Services Committee, December 15, 2011

d. The National Science Foundation Press Release 11-184 – Video. 

Reflection on the tenth anniversary of the terrorist attack on American soil on September 11, 2001. For the video of “Full interview with Mansoor Moaddel describing his research on popular sentiments in the Mid East,” see

news/news_videos.jsp?cntn_id=121605&media_id=71109&org=NSF

e. Briefing On Iraq Based On Findings From Iraqis Values Survey. Presented to Congressman William D. Delahunt from Massachusetts, a member of House Committee on Foreign Affairs and Chairman of the Subcommittee on International Organizations, Human Rights, and Oversight, July 25, 2007

f. Presentation at the United States Institute of Peace. “Trend in Iraqi Political Values,” April 3, 2007.

g. Data were used on the Senate Floor. In September 2006, Senator Carl Levin stated “An April 2006 survey of Iraqi public opinion conducted by the University of Michigan and reported in U.S. News leads to the opposite conclusion. This survey found that almost 92 percent of Iraqis oppose the presence of coalition troops in Iraq. Even more disturbing than that is the fact that this number was an increase from the 74 percent of Iraqi people who opposed the presence of coalition troops in Iraq in 2004. So that in the 2 years from 2004 to 2006, the percentage of Iraqi people who oppose the presence of coalition troops in their country increased from 74 percent to 92 percent. And almost 85 percent of that 92 percent--almost 85 percent of Iraqis--are ``strongly opposed to the presence of coalition troops.''

h. ASA Centennial Reception on Capitol Hill. Poster Presentation on the findings from values survey in Iraq and youth surveys in Egypt and Saudi Arabia on October 25, 2005

i. Presentation at the United States Institute of Peace. “Religious Fundamentalism, Violence, Sources of Epistemic Authorities, and Developmental Idealism among Youth in Saudi Arabia and Egypt: Findings from Youth Surveys” September 21, 2005.

j. The Iraqi Public Speaks: Religion, Politics, Gender, and Coalition Forces. Organized by The White House Office of Science and Technology Policy and The National Science and Technology Council Sub-Committee on National Security Research and Development, Inter-Agency Working Group on Regional Stability and Nation Building, Co-Chaired by the Department of Defense and the Department of State, June 27, 2005

k. Presentation to Staff Members of Committee on International Relations. US House of Representative, “The Worldviews of the Iraqi Public,” January 16, 2005.

l. Congressional Briefing. “The Entourage of Saudi Arabia: The Worldviews of the Saudi Public,” May 17, 2004.

m. Poster Presentation on Capitol Hill. "The Worldview of the Islamic Publics versus Americans: Points of Convergence and Divergence," June 17, 2003. For a report on this event, visit the website of American Sociological Association: .

n. Congressional Briefing. "The Impact of 9/11 on Egyptian Worldviews" June 18, 2002. For a PowerPoint text of the briefing, visit the website of Consortium of Social Science Association: . See also the National Science Foundation website: .

Building and Expanding Scientific Infrastructure for Study of the Human Values and Mass Belief Systems in the Middle East

a. The Production and Distribution of Empirical Data among Students and Faculty.

Considerable micro survey data are collected in different Middle Eastern countries. To give more prominence to the study of human values in the region, a new website for Middle Eastern Values Study () has been created and periodically updated. This website includes the survey data and documentation, the list of the projects, the countries covered by the surveys, sources of funding, the researchers involved, and a list of publications. The data available at the website have been used extensively by faculty and students across the country and beyond.

b. Over seventy books and articles in English based findings from Middle Eastern values surveys have thus far been published (for a partial list of these publications, see ).

c. Articles using the MEVS data have appeared in some of the top journals in the social sciences, including:

|American Sociological Review | |

|Comparative Sociology | |

|Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa, | |

|& the Middle East | |

|Democracy and Society | |

|Footnotes | |

|Futures | |

|Georgetown Journal of International Affairs | |

|Interdisciplinary Journal of Research on Religion | |

|International Journal of Comparative Sociology | |

| | |

|International Journal of Middle East Studies | |

|International Journal of Sociology | |

|International Studies Perspective | |

|Journal of Democracy | |

|Journal or Economic Perspectives | |

|Perspectives on Politics | |

|Political Science Quarterly | |

|Public Opinion Quarterly | |

|Social Forces | |

|Sociological Spectrum | |

|Sociology | |

|Sociology textbook by Rodney Stark | |

| | |

Workshops and Conferences in the Middle East

a. Interviewers Training Workshop, Istanbul, Turkey, November 2010

Researchers and field supervisors from eight Middle Eastern countries, including Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Lebanon, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Syria, and Turkey participated in a three-day workshop to address issues related to proper interviewing technique, probing, and standardization of interviewing across the eight countries. This workshop was funded from the Office of Naval Research.

b. Visions and Perspectives in the Study of Human Values, Cairo, Egypt, 2010

The 2010 Cairo conference was supported by a grant from European Office of Aerospace Research and Development, and Air Force Office of Scientific Research, United States Air Force Research Laboratory. About thirty researchers from the United States and the Muslim-majority countries participated and presented original papers in this conference.

c. Methodological and Theoretical Issues in the Study of Values, Cairo, Egypt, 2003

At this conference, more than 30 social scientists from eight Muslim-majority countries (Algeria, Egypt, Indonesia, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyz Republic, Pakistan, and Turkey), the United States, and three European states (France, Sweden, and Spain) participated. Representatives from the NSF, the White House science advisor’s office (Office of Science and Technology Policy), and other government agencies also attended the conference. (For a report, see Joane Nagel and Patricia White, “Social Science Is Focus of Cairo Conference: Surveying Worldviews of Islamic Publics,” Footnote, April 2003; or visit .) The NSF, the World Values Survey Association, and Bank of Sweden Tercentenary Foundation funded this meeting.

d. Conference on Religion, Gender Roles, Democratization, and Market Transition

Pilot Surveys of Changing Worldviews of the Islamic Publics, Methodological and Substantive Issues, The University of Tehran, Tehran, Iran, July 8-12, 2000. Sponsored by the Rockefeller Foundation

e. Workshop on the Study of Values in Islamic Countries: The Cases of Egypt, Iran, and Jordan

This was the first workshop organized for the development of survey instrument and formulation of sampling frame for the study of values in Egypt, Iran, and Jordan. It was held at Center for Strategic Studies, the University of Jordan, and July, 1999. Sponsored by the National Science Foundation.

Dissemination of Findings in the Media

Empirically informed analysis of current events in popular media are distributed by Project Syndicate in eight languages worldwide, including Arabic, Chinese, Czech, English, French, German, Russian, and Spanish.

a. Moaddel, Mansoor, “What do Arabs Want?” A commentary distributed by Project Syndicate in eight languages (English, Spanish, Russian, French, German, Czech, Arabic & Chinese), , January 2012.

b. Moaddel, Mansoor, “Iran: Anatomy of a Revolution Delayed,” A commentary distributed by Project Syndicate in eight languages (English, Spanish, Russian, French, German, Czech, Arabic & Chinese), , July 2009.

c. Findings from Iraqis surveys cited by David Brooks, “Closing of a Nation,” New York Times (September 24, 2006), U.S. News and World Report magazine (), U.S. News and World Report website (), and in “New Survey: Iraqis Pessimistic, Cynical About Invasion,” In the White House and Around Town Section, The White House Bulletin. Bulletin New Network, Inc., August 17, 2006.

d. Results of Iraqi survey cited by Richard Morin, “Unwelcome Neighbors,” Washington Post, July 3, 2005, page B05, and “Perfect 10s and the Odds of a Pink Nursery,” Washington Post, August 2, 2006, page A02.

e. Moaddel, Mansoor, “The Democratic Hope of Iraqis,” A commentary distributed by Project Syndicate in eight languages (English, Spanish, Russian, French, German, Czech, Arabic, and Chinese), , September 2006, and appeared in Taipei Times, September 25, 2006, p. 9; Bangkok Post, September 21, 2006; The Daily Star (Lebanon), September 22, 2006; Jordan Times, September 24, 2006; La Mirada (Chile), September de 2006.

f. Moaddel, Mansoor, “The Iraqi Public Speaks,” A commentary distributed by Project Syndicate in eight languages (English, Spanish, Russian, French, German, Czech, Arabic, and Chinese), , April 2005, and appeared in Taipei Times (Taiwan, April 19, 2005), Daily Times (Pakistan, May 19, 2005), The Jordan Times (Jordan, April 20, 2005), The Daily Star (Lebanon, May 18, 2005), The Independent (Bangladesh, April 29, 2005).

g. Moaddel, Mansoor, Interview with Adam Holm for Politiken, the largest Danish daily, September 19, 2004.

h. Moaddel, Mansoor, “Are the Saudis Fanatics?” A commentary distributed by Project Syndicate in eight languages (English, Spanish, Russian, French, German, Czech, Arabic, and Chinese), , August 2004, and appeared in Reforma (Mexico), The Independent (Bangladesh), Den (Ukraine), Danas (Serbia), Ziua (Romania), Taipei Times (Taiwan), Daily Times (Pakistan), Islam Daily, Iran Daily (Iran), and AsiaNews between August 25 and circa September 2, 2004.

i. Moaddel’s NSF-funded project on “A Post-Crisis Analysis of the Attitudes and Value Orientations of the Islamic Publics in Egypt, Iran, and Morocco” is cited among the ten research projects meant to keep Americans safer in “A Special Report,” The Chronicle, April 11, 2003. http: weekly/v49/i3/31a01802.htm.

j. Moaddel, Mansoor, “Las mujeres invisibles del Islam,” Dia a dia, Fundación General de la Universidad Complutense, Año VIII, № 28, El Escorial (Spain), 7 de agosto de 2003, pp. 1, 3.

k. Moaddel, Mansoor, “EMU prof studies Mideast attitudes,” The Ann Arbor News, June 10, 2002, pp. B1,B3.

l. Moaddel, Mansoor, “The Iranian State under the Pahlavis and the Shi’i Revolutionary Discourse,” Iran Daily, translated by Ahmad Gul-Muhammadi, 26 Bahman, 1381 (2002), p. 8; “The Shah Overlooked the Influence of Religion,” Iran Daily, 27 Bahman, 1381, p. 8; and “Pahlavi Feminism and Religious Resistance, Iran Daily, 28 Bahman, 1381, p. 8 (in Persian)

m. “More Research on America’s Response,” Monitor on Psychology, September 2002, p. 31

A partial list of the newspapers and other publications where my commentaries have appears are as follows:

|Al-Ghad |Monitor on Psychology |

|Al-Riyadh (Saudi Arabia) |Newsweek |

|Al-Sharq al-Owsat |Politiken, the largest Danish daily, |

|AsiaNews |Qantara (Arabic) |

|Bangkok Post |Reforma (Mexico) |

|Daily Star (Lebanon) |Sme (Slovakia) |

|Daily Times (Pakistan) |Strait Times |

|Danas (Serbia) |Taipei Times (Taiwan) |

|Den (Ukraine) |Tariq al-Shaab (Arabic) |

|Dendanskeforening (Denmark) |The Ann Arbor News |

|Dia a dia, Universidad Complutense (Spain) |The Chronicle |

|Die Presse (Austria) |The Daily Star (Lebanon), |

|El Nacional |The Independent (Bangladesh) |

|Hong Kong Economic Journal (Hong Kong) |The Korea Herald (South Korea) |

|Iran Daily (Persian and English, Iran) |The New York Times |

|Islam Daily |U.S. News and World Report |

|Jordan Times |Washington Post |

|Le Matin (Morocco) |Ziua (Romania |

|La Mirada (Chile) | |

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