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Mansoor Moaddel
University of Maryland, College Park
Occupation
Professor
Contact
Primary Phone: (734) 657-1128
Fax: 734-487-7010
4139 Parren J. Mitchell Art-Sociology Building
Department of Sociology University of Maryland
College Park MD 20742
United States
ABOUT
Dr. Moaddel studies religion, ideology, political conflict, revolution and social change. His work currently addresses the causes and consequences of human values. He has carried out values surveys in Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, and Turkey. His latest survey project focused on a cross-national comparative analysis of religious fundamentalism in Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, and Turkey. He is currently engaged in a comparative cross-national panel survey in Egypt, Tunisia, and Turkey in order to understand the dynamics of change in values and political engagements. His previous empirical research project was a comparative historical analysis of ideological production in the Islamic world in which he studied Islamic modernism in Egypt, India, and Iran between the late nineteenth century and early twentieth; liberal nationalism in Egypt, anti-clerical secularism in Iran, liberal Arabism and pan-Arab nationalism in Syria and Iraq in the first half of the twentieth century; and Islamic fundamentalism in Algeria, Egypt, Iran, Jordan, and Syria in the second half. Moaddel’s teaching interests are in the areas of values survey, sociology of ideology, sociology of religion, political conflict and revolution, terrorism and political violence, religion and politics in the Middle East and North Africa, and statistics.
Discipline
Sociology
Sub Areas
Colonialism
Iranian Studies
Islamic Studies
Nationalism
State Formation
19th-21st Centuries
Identity/Representation
Geographic Areas of Interest
Egypt
Iran
Jordan
Specialties
Comp Hist
Ideology
Values Survey
Languages
Arabic (elementary)
Persian (native)
Education
PhD | 1986 | Socio | U of Wisconsin
Abstracts
Iran: Anatomy of a Revolution Delayed The Secular Shift in Values in the Post-Arab Spring Trend in Values in Egypt, Tunisia, and Turkey: Findings from Three Waves of A Panel Survey