The official blog for the Fulbright College of Arts & Sciences

Political Science Professor Shirin Saeidi Named Director of Middle East Studies

by | Sep 13, 2022 | Announcements, Features, Research

Shirin Saeidi

Shirin Saeidi has been named director of the King Fahd Center for Middle East Studies in the U of A’s Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences.

Saeidi joined the U of A as an assistant professor of political science with a joint appointment in Middle East studies in 2018 and is the first female leader of Middle East Studies Program since the center’s founding in the early 1990s.

“Having Dr. Saeidi direct our Middle East Studies Program is an incredible opportunity for our college, students, community and beyond,” said Kathryn Sloan, interim dean of Fulbright College. “She brings a wealth of experience to the director role through her extensive 10-plus years of field work in Iran and her focus on gender, activism, citizenship, Islamism and the role of women in authoritarian countries.”

Saeidi’s teaching and research also focus on international relations, comparative politics, qualitative methodology, theory, deviance, conflict and state formation, citizenship and nationalism, Islamism, women’s studies, sexuality and gender studies, and religion with special focus on the Middle East region.

Her bookWomen and the Islamic Republic: How Gendered Citizenship Conditions the Iranian Statewas published by Cambridge University Press in January 2022, and Saeidi has also published numerous peer-reviewed articles, book chapters and book reviews.

“My work draws on archival and ethnographic methods, and I have also conducted interviews with non-elites, former and current prisoners, military and state officials, as well as guerrilla fighters,” said Saeidi, who is fluent in Persian. “My research commitments have taken me to Iran, and my geographic area of interest is freedom.”

Saeidi said she is also looking forward to working with students in the Middle East Studies Program and supervising “ambitious graduate students interested in reimagining everything, from the nation-state container to abolition of the prison industrial complex, and even the hierarchical international system.”

Saeidi was also recently appointed to the U of A’s Chancellor’s Commission on Women, serves as faculty in residence and participates in the Adopt a Professor Program.

Additionally, she serves as assistant editor of the Citizenship Studies Journal, as a reviewer for several academic journals and monographs, and was previously a technical adviser to the United Nations Women’s Program. She is also a member of the Middle East Studies Association, the International Studies Association and the Feminist Political Economy of the Middle East and North Africa.

Saeidi holds a B.A. in government and politics from the University of Maryland and a Ph.D. in politics and international studies from Cambridge University. She was also a post-doctoral fellow at the Centre for Global Cooperation Research and the University of Duisburg-Essen in Germany.

Learn more about Saeidi’s research and field work in this Short Talks from the Hill podcast.

About the King Fahd Center for Middle East Studies: The King Fahd Center for Middle East Studies is an academic and research unit in the Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Arkansas, dedicated to the study of the modern Middle East and the geo-cultural area in which Islamic civilization prospered and continues to shape world history. The interdisciplinary and interdepartmental area studies center offers diverse cultural, intellectual, and educational opportunities for the campus community and promotes research and teaching in interdisciplinary Middle East studies. The center offers an undergraduate major in Middle East Studies, a minor, and supports graduate studies in related departments.

About the University of Arkansas: As Arkansas’ flagship institution, the U of A provides an internationally competitive education in more than 200 academic programs. Founded in 1871, the U of A contributes more than $2.2 billion to Arkansas’ economy through the teaching of new knowledge and skills, entrepreneurship and job development, discovery through research and creative activity while also providing training for professional disciplines. The Carnegie Foundation classifies the U of A among the few U.S. colleges and universities with the highest level of research activity. U.S. News & World Report ranks the U of A among the top public universities in the nation. See how the U of A works to build a better world at Arkansas Research News.

 

This story also appeared in the University of Arkansas News publication.