Mohamed Mohamed

Mohamed Mohamed
Visiting Assistant Professor
Co-Director of Law and Society Program
Part-Time & Visiting Faculty
School: Columbian College of Arts and Sciences
Department: Sociology
Contact:
Mohamed’s work draws from the sociology of religion, political sociology, globalization theory and institutional change theory to examine how and under what circumstances might domestic religious actors influence global politics. In his dissertation, “Al-Azhar Re-Imagined: State Appropriation, Religious Capital, and Political Transnationalism, 1924-2024”, he examines the various ways in which Egypt’s official religious establishment, al-Azhar, has been interacting with transnational politics over the last century.
Ph.D., Sociology, George Mason University, 2024
M.A., Middle Eastern Studies, King’s College London, 2017
M.A., Islamic Studies, George Washington University, 2016
Mohamed, Mohamed. 2024. “Selling God: Al-Azhar, UAE and Transnational Transferability of Religious Capital.” British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies. 1–20. DOI: 10.1080/13530194.2024.
Mohamed, Mohamed. “In Search of Religious Legitimacy: Reconfiguring the Relationship with Al-Azhar”. In Egypt’s New Authoritarian Republic, Robert Springborg and Abdel-Fattah Mady (eds.). Lynne Rienner, (2025).