Intisar Rabb
Intisar Rabb | |
---|---|
Nationality | American |
Fields | Islamic studies |
Institutions | Harvard Law School |
Alma mater | BA from Georgetown University, a JD from Yale Law School, and an MA and PhD from Princeton University |
Intisar Rabb is a Professor of Law at Harvard Law School and a director of its Islamic Legal Studies Program.[1] Rabb also holds an appointment as a Professor of History at Harvard University and as a Susan S. and Kenneth L. Wallach Professor at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study.[1]
Career
Rabb previously served as an associate professor at NYU Department of Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies and at NYU Law School, as Visiting Associate Professor of Islamic Legal Studies at Harvard Law School, and as a member of the law faculty at Boston College Law School, where she has taught courses in criminal law, legislation and theories of statutory interpretation, and Islamic law.[1] She also served as a law clerk for Judge Thomas L. Ambro of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit.[1] She was named a 2010 Carnegie Scholar for research on issues of Islamic constitutionalism and contemporary law reform through processes of "internal critique" in the Muslim world, and a fellow at the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard for a project designed to add scholarly context to ongoing discussions of Islamic law in new media.[1] She has published on Islamic law in historical and modern contexts, including an edited volume, Law and Tradition in Classical Islamic Thought (with Michael Cook et al., Palgrave 2013), and numerous articles on Islamic constitutionalism, Islamic legal maxims, and on the early history of the Qur'an text.[1] She received a BA from Georgetown University, a JD from Yale Law School, and an MA and PhD from Princeton University. She has conducted research in Egypt, Iran, Syria, and elsewhere.[1]