Fauzia Ahmed
Education
- Ph.D., Social Policy, Brandeis University
- S.M., Health Policy and Management, Harvard University
- A.B., Biology, Harvard University
Fauzia E. Ahmed received her Ph.D. from Brandeis University in 2003. She worked in the Harvard School of Public Health as a David E. Bell Fellow (Center for Population and Development Studies) from 2003-2004, and was a Visiting Scientist (Women's Health Initiative Program at the Department of Global Health) from 2012-2014. Early community-based experiences with the African American population, in health and education, enhanced her subsequent work with Non-Govermental Organizations (NGOs) and with the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) in India, Indonesia, Thailand, and her native Bangladesh. Her academic interests focus on gender and development ranging from masculinity and Islam to gender, labor and globalization. In addition to teaching introductory courses, she teaches courses on the sociology of globalization and feminism, Islam and development.
Teaching and/or Research Interests
Gender and development, masculinity, Islam, labor and globalization
Selected Publications
- Ahmed, F.E. 2015. "Gender, Governance, and Labor: The Globalized Commodity Chain and the Bangladeshi Garment Industry." South Asia Institute (SAI), Harvard University. SAI Working Paper Series.
- Ahmed, F.E. 2014. "Peace in the Household: Gender, Agency, and Villagers' Measures of Marital Quality in Bangladesh." Special Issue on Gender and Economics in Muslim Communities. Feminist Economics. 20(4)L 187-211.
- Ahmed, F.E. 2013. "The Culture of Poverty: Creating a Market at the Bottom of the Pyramid." Perspectives on Global Development and Technology. 12(4): 489-513.
- Ahmed, F.E. 2013. "The Compassionate Courtroom: Feminist Governance, Discourse, and Islam in a Shalish (Indigenous Court) on Domestic Violence in Rural Bangladesh." Feminist Formations. 25(1): 157-183.
- Ahmed, F.E. 2011. "Empire, Subalternity, and Itjihad: Two Muslim Women's 兔子先生hip Models in the Post 9/11 US." The Muslim World. 101(4): 494-510. [Reprinted 2012, translated into Persian. Farzaneh Journal of Women's Studies 19: 87-112.]