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MEIS Podcast / Faculty Profiles, Cortney Hughes Rinker & Ahmet Selim Tekelioglu

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MEIS Podcast
Faculty Profiles, Cortney Hughes Rinker & Ahmet Selim Tekelioglu
{{langos=='en'?('15/06/2021' | todate):('15/06/2021' | artodate)}} - Issue 8.2
Hosted by Bassam Haddad

Bassam Haddad speaks with GMU Associate Professor Cortney Hughes Rinker and Maydan's Content Editor Ahmet Selim Tekelioglu about their research, teaching, and activities.

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Guests

Ahmet Selim Tekelioglu
Ahmet Selim Tekelioglu

His research focuses on American religious landscape, politics of ethno-religious identities, and more.

Ahmet Selim Tekelioglu joined Ali Vural Ak Center for Global Islamic Studies in 2016 as the Content Editor for the Center’s academic blog, Maydan. Tekelioglu holds a PhD in Political Science from Boston University and a Masters in International Relations from Middle East Technical University in Ankara, Turkey. His research focuses on American religious landscape, politics of ethno-religious identities, Muslim minorities in the West, and international relations theories. His doctoral work focused on contemporary debates about American Muslim identity and transnational belonging among American Muslim communities in Boston, San Francisco Bay Area and Los Angeles. From 2013 to 2015 Ahmet Selim directed the Los Angeles leg of the Public Ethics and Citizenship in Plural Societies Project with Contending Modernities program at Notre Dame University. He previously held research and teaching appointments with Institute on Religion, Culture and World Affairs (CURA) and Frederick S Pardee Center for the Study of Longer-Range Future at Boston University, Boston University Department of Political Science, Institute for Human Sciences in Vienna, Austria, SETA Foundation and Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, D.C.

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Cortney Hughes Rinker
Cortney Hughes Rinker

Research interests are in medical anthropology, Islam, aging and end-of-life care, and more.

Cortney Hughes Rinker is Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology and the Director of the Global Affairs program at George Mason University. She earned her Ph.D. in Anthropology from the University of California, Irvine with emphases in Feminist Studies and Medicine, Science, and Technology Studies. Her teaching and research interests are in medical anthropology, Islam, aging and end-of-life care, public policy, reproduction, Middle East Studies, development, science and technology, and applied anthropology. She conducted long-term research (2005-2009) on reproductive healthcare among working-class women in Rabat, Morocco, which turned into her book Islam, Development, and Urban Women’s Reproductive Practices (Routledge, 2013). This research focused on the ways the country’s new development policies impact how childbearing and childrearing practices are promoted to women and how women incorporate these practices into their ideas of citizenship. AnthroWorks, a popular academic blog, selected her dissertation on this subject as one of the Top 40 North American Dissertations in Cultural Anthropology for 2010.

Before joining George Mason, Cortney was a postdoctoral fellow at the Arlington Innovation Center for Health Research at Virginia Tech where she worked in conjunction with a healthcare organization in southwest Virginia developing projects to improve end-of-life care and psychiatric services in a rural Appalachian town. 

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