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Robert Bell
New York University
Occupation
Graduate Student (Doctoral)
Contact
Secondary Email: [email protected]
ABOUT
Robert Bell received his BA in Middle Eastern Studies from McGill University in 2013, and MA in Middle Eastern Studies from the City University of New York, Graduate Center in 2015. He is currently a doctoral candidate in the department of Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies, and History at New York University. Robert's research explores the historical development of U.S.-Iranian relations from 1911 to 1963, focusing specifically on the role of American financial and agricultural advisors shaping Iranian economic development policy during the period. In his spare time, Robert enjoys skiing in the Rocky Mountains, trying out new restaurants in New York City, and international travel.
Discipline
History
Sub Areas
19th-21st Centuries
Development
Foreign Relations
Iranian Studies
Middle East/Near East Studies
Transnationalism
Geographic Areas of Interest
Iran
Specialties
U.S.-Iranian Relations
19th-20th Century Middle East History
19th-20th Century Iranian History
Languages
Persian (advanced)
French (intermediate)
Education
MA | 2015 | Middle Eastern Studies | City University of New York, Graduate Center
BA | 2013 | Middle East Studies | McGill University
Abstracts
Competing Logics of Economic Development in the American Occupation of Iran, 1942-1945 Deconstructing Morgan Shuster’s Myths: A New Perspective on the 1911 American Financial Advisory Mission to Iran The 1953 Farmer’s Share Law: Iran’s Oil-Less Pivot to Rural Development A Pioneering Editor and the Angel of Sarbandan: Two Iranian Women's Rural Development Strategies during the 1950s and 1960s