I post my academic work, including downloadable PDFs, in Zenodo’s repositories. It is also available via my ORCID profile. It is not available on academia.edu
(nor should yours be).
Nationality and Citizenship
- Identifying with Nationality: Europeans, Ottomans, and Egyptians in Alexandria, Columbia Studies in International and Global History (Columbia University Press, 2017). Reviews: American Historical Review, English Historical Review, International Journal of Middle East Studies, Journal of Interdisciplinary History, Journal of Modern History, Journal of World History, Mashriq & Mahjar, Review of Middle East Studies.
- “Papers for Going, Papers for Staying: Identification and Subject Formation in the Eastern Mediterranean,” in Liat Kozma, Avner Wishnitzer, and Cyrus Schayegh, eds., A Global Middle East: Mobility, Materiality and Culture in the Modern Age, 1880-1940 (I.B. Taurus, 2014), 177-200.
- “When did Egyptians stop being Ottomans? An Imperial Citizenship Case Study,” in Willem Maas, ed. Multilevel Citizenship (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2013), 89-109.
Legal History
- “Extraterritorial Prosecution, the late Capitulations, and the new International Lawyers,” in Henk de Smaele, Houssine Alloul, and Edhem Eldem, eds. To Kill a Sultan: A Transnational History of the Attempt on Abdülhamid II, 1905 (Palgrave Macmillan, 2018), 163-92. [email me if you need a copy]
- “What Ottoman nationality was and was not,” Journal of Ottoman and Turkish Studies Association 3.2 (2016): 277-98.
- “International Lawyers without Public International Law: The Case of Late Ottoman Egypt,” Journal of the History of International Law 18.1 (2016): 98-119.
- “Statelessness in the History of International Law,” European Journal of International Law 25.1 (2014): 321-327.
Social History
- “Unlocking Islamic Names,” Studying the Near and Middle East at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, 1935-2018, ed. Sabine Schmidtke (Piscataway, NJ: Gorgias Press, 2018), 276-83.
- “Cosmopolitan Cursing in Late Nineteenth Century Alexandria,” in Derryl MacLean and Sikeena Karmali Ahmed, eds., Cosmopolitanisms in Muslim Contexts: Perspectives from the Past, “Exploring Muslim Contexts” series (Edinburgh University Press, 2012), 92-104.
- “Grieving cosmopolitanism in Middle East studies,” History Compass 6/5 (2008): 1346-67.
Non-academic
On the blog section of this site, I also post copies of non-academic pieces, such as op eds I’ve written for my local paper, the Tallahassee Democrat. For better or worse, I also use Mastodon.