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School of Politics and International Relations

Professor Laleh Khalili, BSc (Texas), MIA (SIPA at Columbia), PhD (Columbia)

Laleh

Professor of International Politics

Email: l.khalili@qmul.ac.uk
Telephone: 020 7882 6878
Room Number: Arts One, 2.06
Twitter: @LalehKhalili
Office Hours: Tuesdays 12pm-1pm and 1pm-2pm

Profile

I made my way to a PhD in politics by way of an undergraduate degree in engineering and after working for some years as a management consultant in the US. I have been, throughout my scholarly career compelled with and curious about the workings of transnational movements: of colonial forms of power and violence, of resistance, of ideas and practices, of people, and now of capital and cargo. I have always woven through analyses of gender, racialisation, political violence and political economy in my research, and have been particularly fascinated by both the ongoing violence of empire and the afterlives of colonialism in contemporary politics.

I have examined the representations and practices of violence in my first two book, Heroes and Martyrs of Palestine: the Politics of National Commemoration (Cambridge 2007) and Time in the Shadows: Confinement in Counterinsurgency (Stanford 2013) as well as in a volume I co-edited with Jillian Schwedler, titled Policing and Prisons in the Middle East: Formations of Coercion (Hurst 2010). My book, Sinews of War and Trade (Verso 2020) examines the role of maritime infrastructures as conduits of movement of technologies, capital, people and cargo. I have also written article (in edited volumes, journals, museum catalogues and magazines) on a range of subjects from the politics of pleasure and gendered subjectivities to trade, finance, collective memory, and the role of happiness in counterinsurgencies, inter alia. I am currently working on a larger project on oil and hydrocarbons.

My work draws on archival and ethnographic methods and I have conducted interviews with bureaucrats, military officers, former prisoners, refugees, and guerrillas. My geographic area of interest is the Arab world, and I speak and read Arabic and Persian. I don’t study the area in isolation and am fascinated by the interconnections between internal politics and geopolitical asymmetries, and the region’s connections both eastward and westward. Before coming to Queen Mary, I taught at undergraduate, postgraduate and doctoral levels at SOAS for 15 years. My teaching has throughout drawn from my research and I have taught modules on political violence, struggles over infrastructures, gender, culture, politics of resistance, broad surveys on comparative and international politics of the Middle East, ethics of research, and a range of other subjects. I love supervising doctoral students and mentoring postdoctoral researchers and engaging with enthusiastic and intellectually curious early career scholars setting out to answer complex questions in critical and interesting ways.

Office hour joining link 

Research

Research Interests:

Infrastructures, political violence, war and counterinsurgencies, the politics of gender and masculinities, collective memory and nationalist commemorations, transnational movements of ideas and practices, the Middle East, Israel/Palestine

Examples of research funding:

2014 ESRC Major Grant (ES/L002833/1) – For “Military Mobilities and Mobilising Movements in the Middle East” (£633,870.79)

2013 British Academy/Leverhulme Small Grants – For “The Politics of Pleasure: Cycling on the Corniche, Swimming in the Sea” (£9,200)

2012 Palestine-American Research Center for “The Politics of Pleasure” ($7,500)

2007 British Academy – Research grant for second portion of “Time in the Shadows” (£7,500)

2007 Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation – Research Grant for “Time in the Shadows” ($22,000)

2005 British Academy – Research Grant for “Political Incarceration” (£6,700)

 

Publications

Books

2020, Sinews of War and Trade (Verso).

2013, Time in the Shadows: Confinement in Counterinsurgencies (Stanford University Press).

*Awarded the Susan Strange Best Book Award 2012 by the British International Studies Association; Winner of the 2014 Best Book award of the International Political Sociology section of the ISA; Selected as an “Outstanding Academic Title” of 2013 by Choice.

2007, Heroes and Martyrs of Palestine: The Politics of National Commemoration (Cambridge University Press). 

Edited Volumes

2010, Policing and Prisons in the Middle East: Formations of Coercion. Co-edited with Jillian Schwedler (Hurst & Co./Oxford University Press).

2008, Politics of the Modern Arab World: Critical Concepts, Volumes I through IV (Routledge).  Individual volumes are titled (I) State, Power and Political Economy; (II) Gender, Society, Culture; (III) Political and Social Movements; and (IV) International Politics and War.

Editorship of Special Journal Issues

2018, Turbulent Circulation: Building a Critical Engagement with Logistics.  Co-edited with Charmaine Chua, Martin Danyluk and Deb Cowen. Environment and Planning D: Space and Society.

2013, Water. Co-edited with Rutvica Andrijasevic. Feminist Review 103.

2008, War.  Co-edited with Pam Alldred and Amal Treacher. Feminist Review 88.

Articles in Refereed Journals

2022, “Crossings: Reflections on writing and thinking across” in American Historical Review, forthcoming.

2022, “Oceans of Finance and Commodification” in, Capitalism at Sea, special issue of Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East (ed. Nikolas Kosmatopoulos and Marwa El-Shakry) 42:1, pp. 135-139.

2021, “Carceral Seas” in Millennium: Journal of International Studies 49(3): 462-471.

2018, “Introduction: Turbulent Circulation: Building a Critical Engagement with Logistics” (co-authored with Charmaine Chua, Deborah Cowen and Martin Danyluk), in Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 36:4, pp. 617-629.

2018, “The infrastructural power of the military: The geoeconomic role of the US Army Corps of Engineers in the Arabian Peninsula” in European Journal of International Relations 24: 4, pp. 911-933.

2017, “Pacifying Urban Insurrections” in Historical Materialism 25:2, pp. 115-130.

2016, “Politics of Pleasure: Promenading on the Corniche and Beachgoing” in Society and Space 34:4, pp. 583-600.

2014, “Scholar, Pope, Soldier, Spy” in Humanity 5:3, pp. 417-434.

2014, “The Uses of Happiness in Counterinsurgencies” in Social Text 118, pp. 23-43.

2013,  “Thinking about Violence” in International Journal of Middle East Studies 45:4, pp. 791-794.

2011, “Gendered Practices of Counterinsurgency” in Review of International Studies 37:4, pp. 1471-1491.

2010, “The Location of Palestine in Global Counterinsurgencies” in International Journal of Middle East Studies 42:3, pp. 413-433.

2008, “Massacres and Battles: Commemorating Contentious Moments in the Refugee Camps of Lebanon” in American Behavioral Scientist: Mediterranean Contention 51:11 (edited by Charles Tilly, Roberto Franzosi and Maria Kousis), pp. 1562-1574. 

2007, “‘Standing with my Brother’: Hizbullah, Palestinians, and the Limits of Solidarity” in Comparative Studies in Society and History 49:2, pp. 1-28.

2007, “Heroic and Tragic Pasts: Mnemonic Narratives in the Palestinian Refugee Camps” in Critical Sociology 33:4, pp. 731-759.

2005, “Places of Mourning and Memory: Palestinian Commemoration in the Refugee Camps of Lebanon” in Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East 25:1, pp. 30-45.

2004, “Grassroots Commemorations: Remembering the Land in the Camps of Lebanon” in Journal of Palestine Studies 34:1, pp. 5-22. 

Chapters in Edited Volumes

2021, “Great Arab Ports” in Asef Bayat and Linda Herrera (eds.), Global Middle East: Into the 21st Century (University of California Press), 209-223.

2020, “Ein Blick auf die Nation: vom Schiff zur Küste” (“Looking to the Nation: From Ship to Shore”) in Katrin Klingan, Nanna Heidenreich and Rana Dasgupta (eds.), Gezeitendenken: Recherchen abseits des nationalstaaten-systems (Tidal Thinking: Research beyond the nation-state system) (Matthes & Seitz Berlin).

2020, “Adrift at Sea: Sailors Face COVID-19” in Jessie Kindig, Mark Krotov, and Marco Roth (eds.), There Is No Outside: Covid-19 Dispatches (Verso).

2015, Counterterrorism and Counterinsurgency in the US War on Terror” in Jens Hanssen and Amal Ghazal (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Middle East Studies (Oxford University Press, forthcoming in print, available online via Oxford Handbooks Online).

2014, “The Utility of Proxy Detention in Counterinsurgencies” in Jan Bachmann, Colleen Bell, Caroline Holmqvist (eds.), War, Police and Assemblages of Intervention (Routledge), pp. 92-108.

2012, “Al-Gindir wa Hurub Mukfaha Al-Tamarrud Al-Haditha” (Gender and Modern Counterinsurgencies) in Jean Said Makdisi et al (eds.), Al-Nasawiyya Al-Arabiyya: Rawiyya Al-Naqdiyya (Centre for Arab Unity Studies), pp. 473-482. 

2010, “The Ethics of Social Science Research” in Roger Heacock and Édouard Conte (eds.), Critical Research in the Social Sciences: A Transdisciplinary East-West Handbook (Ibrahim Abu-Lughod Centre for International Studies), pp. 65-82.

2010, “Palestine and the Politics of Invisibility” in Muhammad Ali Khalidi (ed.), Manifestations of Identity: The Lived Reality of Palestinian Refugees in Lebanon (Institute for Palestine Studies), pp. 125-145.

*Also in Arabic in Muhammad Ali Khalidi (ed.), Tajalliat al-huwiyya: Al-waqi’ al-mu’ash l’ilaji’in al-filastiniyyin fi lubnan (Muassassa dirasat filastiniyya), pp. 149-171.

2010, “Introduction” to Laleh Khalili and Jillian Schwedler (eds.) Policing and Prisons in the Middle East: Formations of Coercion (Hurst & Co./Columbia University Press), pp. 1-37.

2010, “Tangled Webs of Coercion: The Parastatal Carceral Complex at Abu Ghraib” in Laleh Khalili and Jillian Schwedler (eds.) Policing and Prisons in the Middle East: Formations of Coercion (Hurst & Co./Columbia University Press), pp. 77-96.

2008, “Incarceration and the state of exception: al-Ansar mass detention camp in Lebanon” in Ronit Lentin (ed.) Thinking Palestine (Zed Books), pp. 101-115.

2007, “The Gender of Nakba Memory” co-authored with Isabelle Humphries in Ahmad Sa’di and Lila Abu-Lughod (eds.), Nakba: Palestine, 1948 and the Claims of Memory (Columbia University Press), pp. 207-227.

2007, “Lieux de mémoire et de deuil: la commemoration palestinienne dans les camps de réfugiés au Liban” in Nadine Piacudou (ed.) Territoires palestiniens de mémoire (Karthala), pp. 191-218.

2005, “Palestinian Refugees in Lebanon and the Right of Return” in Ian Lustick and Ann Lesch (eds.), Exile and Return: Predicaments of Palestinians and Jews (Stanford University Press), pp. 19-40.

2005, “Virtual Nation: Palestinian Cyberculture in Lebanese Camps” in Rebecca Stein and Ted Swedenburg (eds.), Palestine/Israel and the Politics of Popular Culture (Duke University Press), pp. 126-149.

Essays in Art Books/Exhibition Catalogues

2021, “Shipping Oil” in Daniela Zyman (ed.), Oceans Rising (Sternberg Press), pp. 126-131.

2018, “Foreword” in Allan Sekula, Fish Story (Mack Books), pp. ii-ix.

2018, “Za’tar” in Daniel Fernández Pascual and Alon Schwabe (eds.), The Empire Remains Shop (Columbia University Press), pp. 38-42.

2017, “Carceral Seas” in Daniela Zyman and Cory Scozzari (eds.), Allan Sekula: Okeanos (Thyssen-Bornemisza Art Contemporary; Sternberg Press), pp. 50-59.

Non-Refereed Articles

2022, “We Blitzed It: On Inhabiting the Oil World”, London Review of Books 44:15 (4 August).

2022, “Response: On the Politics of Oceanic Knowledge Production”; forum on Sinews of War and Trade with Fahad Bishara, Sharad Chari, Mae Miller and Rafeef Ziadah, in Dialogues in Human Geography, 2(2), pp. 354-356.

2022, “Stupid Questions: Warlord Metaphysics” on the war to commerce pipeline, London Review of Books 44:4 (24 February).

2021, “How to Get Rich” on commodity traders, London Review of Books 43:18 (21 September).

2021, “Apocalyptic Infrastructures”, Noema Magazine, 23 March 2021.

2021, “Growing Pains: New Silk Roads” on the Belt and Road Initiative, London Review of Books 43:6 (18 March).

2021, “The Savor of Memory: Iranian Cookbooks” in Middle East Report Online, 9 February 2021.

2019, “A World Built on Oil and Sand” in Lapham Quarterly 12:2 (Spring).

2017, “The Roads to Power: The Infrastructure of Counterinsurgency” in World Policy Journal 34:1 (Spring), pp. 93-99.

2017, “Ruh al-‘Amal al-Jadida” (“The New Spirit of Work”) in Al Thawra al-Da’ima 7 (February), pp. 127-136.

2013, “Women in and after the Arab Uprisings.”  The text of Third Annual Sedighi Lecture, Institute of Social History. Amsterdam: International Institute of Social History.

2012, “Fighting Over Drones” in Middle East Report 264 (Fall), pp. 18-22.

2011, “Too Early to Tell: When Is a Revolution a Revolution?” in Revolution in the Arab World: The Long View. Occasional Paper published by Centre for Contemporary Arab Studies; Edmund Walsh School of Foreign Service; Georgetown University, pp. 3-8.

2010, “The New (and Old) Classics of Counterinsurgency” in Middle East Report 255 (Summer), pp. 14-23.

2008, “On Torture” in Middle East Report 249 (Winter), pp. 32-38.

2006, “The Refugees Who Give Refuge” in Electronic Journal of Middle East Studies, pp. 57-68.

2005, “Landscapes of Uncertainty: Palestinians in Lebanon” in Middle East Report (Autumn), pp. 34-39.

2003, “State of Social Science Research in Iran” in Lisa Anderson (ed.), State of Social Science Research in the Middle East (Social Science Research Council), 30 pages.

2002, “Ru’iya Taliba Iraniyya Munahida li-l-‘Ulima” (“An Iranian Student’s View of Protest against Globalization [in Lebanon]”) in al-Adab 50:5/6 (May/June), pp. 54-61.

Supervision

I would be very excited to supervise theoretically grounded doctoral theses on the Middle East (and more specifically the Mashriq or the Arabian Peninsula), gender, infrastructures, logistics, oil and hydrocarbons, maritime politics, empire and colonialism, and wars and counterinsurgencies.

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