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Lindsey, Ursula – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2013
In Tunisian and Egyptian universities, scholars face a growing Islamist resolve to remake their countries on the basis of religious principles. Both Tunisia and Egypt face questions that could affect higher education across the Middle East and North Africa: Can their new Islamist governments spread conservative religious values and also create…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Arabs, Foreign Countries, Modern History
Schmidt, Peter – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2011
In lawsuits pending in federal courts in Boston and Chicago, Americans harmed by terrorist attacks linked to the Islamic Republic of Iran are asserting claim to artifacts they believe belong to that nation, in their quest to win more than $4-billion in damages. The institutions that hold the artifacts, which include Harvard University and the…
Descriptors: Global Education, Terrorism, Universities, Federal Courts
Lindsey, Ursula – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Since at least the early 1990s, Arab governments have made women's participation in higher education a priority. Across the region, young women fill the crowded lecture halls and bustling courtyards of universities. On many campuses, they outnumber men. But women's increased participation in higher education does not necessarily translate into…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Arabs, Females, Higher Education
Lindow, Megan – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
This article features the International Peace University South Africa in Cape Town. The university, which was established in 2004, resulted from the merger of two local "madrassas", or religious colleges, yet seeks to prepare its students for success in the secular world. Its Islamic roots are not in the Middle East, but in East Asia.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Universities, Islam, Church Related Colleges
Goldstein, Evan R., Comp. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
This article describes how Bruce Hoffman and Marc Sageman, two prominent scholars of terrorism, square off over whether Al Qaeda remains the primary global terrorist threat. The dispute began in the pages of "Foreign Affairs," where Hoffman, a professor in the security-studies program at Georgetown University, wrote a withering review of…
Descriptors: Current Events, Terrorism, Foreign Countries, World Affairs
Krieger, Zvika – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
An Egyptian court ruled this month that the American University in Cairo could not bar a woman who wears the traditional niqab headdress from entering its library--the latest episode in the struggle between religion and secularism on Egypt's university campuses. The American University has outlawed the niqab--which covers the entire head except…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Islam, Culture Conflict, Universities
Labi, Aisha – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Before the Islamic Revolution of 1979, Iranian graduate students and academics frequently studied or worked in the United States. That year, for example, the 51,300 Iranian students in the United States were the single largest group of foreign students in the country. Many, if not most, Iranian professors received their doctorates from American…
Descriptors: Foreign Students, Graduate Students, Access to Education, Foreign Countries
Grasgreen, Allie – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
This article reports on the imprisonment of a Muslim former student on charges related to terrorism that has struck a chord among academics and public intellectuals. Syed Fahad Hashmi, a 28-year-old naturalized U.S. citizen born in Pakistan, is being held in solitary confinement at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Manhattan, on multiple…
Descriptors: Muslims, Political Science, Terrorism, Foreign Countries
Lindow, Megan – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
Of all the Islamic universities in Sudan, none has a more controversial, and complicated history than the country's International University of Africa. The university traces its political roots to a 1989 military coup that brought to power an Islamist regime with ideological ambitions for the region. The institution began as the International…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Muslims, Islam, Universities
Lindow, Megan – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
This article reports on new universities for Muslims, many supported by groups in the Middle East, which are spreading through the sub-Saharan region. The Islamic University in Uganda is a prime example of a new kind of institution that has slowly been spreading its way across the continent. Embracing both conservative Muslim values and modern…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Muslims, Universities, Islam
Labi, Aisha – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2006
The British government has published a long-anticipated report containing guidelines designed to help higher-education institutions combat Islamic extremism. The report entitled "Promoting Good Campus Relations: Working With Staff and Students to Build Community Cohesion and Tackle Violent Extremism in the Name of Islam at Universities and…
Descriptors: Guidelines, Islam, Foreign Countries, Higher Education
Hoover, Eric – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2002
Describes how, at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, incoming freshmen read and discussed a book about the Koran, despite attempts by a Christian group to halt the seminars. (EV)
Descriptors: Activism, Christianity, College Freshmen, Higher Education
Wilson, Robin – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2002
Discusses how the job market for scholars of Islamic history, culture, and languages has never been better. (EV)
Descriptors: Demand Occupations, Employment Opportunities, Higher Education, Islam
Leatherman, Courtney – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2000
Reports on a tenure controversy within the Indiana University department of Near Eastern Languages and Cultures that has involved possible death threats, a hunger strike, and controversy over the department's continued existence. For now the professor, an expert on Islamic philosophy, remains at the institution, other faculty have left, and…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Cultural Awareness, Decision Making, Departments
Useem, Andrea – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1999
Private Islamic universities are increasing in East Africa, where higher education is increasingly privatized and diversified. The progressive scholars behind the trend are seeking opportunities for dynamic encounters between Islam and modern secular disciplines. The model is the 11-year-old Islamic University in Uganda, which is now attempting to…
Descriptors: Church Related Colleges, College Curriculum, Curriculum Design, Educational Trends
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