Pardis Mahdavi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pardis Mahdavi
NationalityAmerican
OccupationJournalist and professor
Academic background
Alma materOccidental College (BA)
Columbia University (Ph.D)
Academic work
InstitutionsPomona College
University of Denver

Pardis Mahdavi is an American scholar and the Dean of Social Sciences at Arizona State University. Previously she was Acting Dean of Josef Korbel School of International Studies at the University of Denver. Prior to that, she served as Dean of Women, and Chair and professor of anthropology at Pomona College. Mahdavi received her BA in diplomacy and world affairs from Occidental College; an MA in anthropology from Columbia University; an MIA (Master of International Affairs) from Columbia University; and a PhD in sociomedical sciences and anthropology from Columbia University. She has been a fellow at the American Council of Learned Societies, the Social Science Research Council, the Woodrow Wilson Center, and Google Ideas. Appointed by Governor Hickenlooper and re-appointed by Governor Jared Polis, Mahdavi served on the Colorado Commission on Higher Education for two years.

Mahdavi's research covers in labor, migration, gender, sexuality, human rights, youth culture, transnational feminism and public health, specializing in the context of shifting political and global structures. Her global area of expertise is the Middle East, and she has published many books and articles focusing on the area.[1] She is also a frequent contributor to the Huffington Post and has published numerous groundbreaking works focusing on different issues affecting the Middle East.

Influential publications[]

Mahdavi's first book, Passionate Uprisings: Iran's Sexual Revolution was published by the Stanford University Press in 2008 and has been a foundation in the discourse on Iran's changing sexual landscape. The book is a personal narrative based on Mahdavi's own experiences in Iran, as well as first person testimony of young Iranians participating in this modern sexual revolution. The work focuses on the intersection of youth, sexuality, politics and leisure, and highlights how the youth are changing social mores and in effect destabilizing the fundamentalist government.[2]

Her second book is titled Gridlock: Labor, Migration, and Human Trafficking in Dubai and was published in May 2011 by Stanford University Press. Mahdavi investigates Dubai as it has long been accused of being an epicenter of human trafficking. Her investigation provides research suggesting that Dubai is more complicated than the stereotypes suggest, and is more a city of migrants who are not all trapped, tricked and taken advantage of. Her research contrasts first person testimonies of migrants living in Dubai with interviews with U.S. politicians to show the disconnect between reality in Dubai and the discourse surrounding the nation.[3]

Career[]

Teaching career[]

Associate Professor and Chair of Anthropology 2011–2017

Assistant Professor of Anthropology, Pomona College 2006–2017

Visiting Assistant Professor of Public Health, New York University, Summer 2007

Teaching Assistant, , 2006

Teaching Assistant, Barnard College, 2005

Research Assistant, , 2005

Visiting Scholar, Tehran University, 2004

Instructor, School of International Affairs, Columbia University, 2003

Practicum Coordinator, , 2002

Publications[]

From Trafficking to Terror (Routledge, 2014)

Gridlock: Labor, Migration, and Human Trafficking in Dubai (Stanford University Press, 2011)

Passionate Uprisings: The Intersection of Sexuality and Politics in Post-Revolutionary Iran (Stanford University Press, 2008)

"Youth, Sexuality and Politics in Post-Revolutionary Iran," in Handbook on Sexuality, Health and Human Rights (P. Aggleton and R. Parker, eds., Routledge, 2010)

"Who Will Catch Me if I Fall? Health and the Infrastructure of Risk for Urban Iranians" in Contemporary Iran (A. Gheissari, ed., Oxford University Press, 2009)

“Girls Just Wanna Have Fun,” Anthropology News, October 2008

“Passionate Uprisings: the Intersection of Sexuality and Politics in Post-Revolutionary Iran,” Culture, Health and Sexuality, Fall 2007

“Fashion and the Meaning of Tehrani Style,” Anthropology News, March 2007

“Iran’s Cyber-Sexual Revolution,” ISIM Review (Institute for the Study of Islam in the Modern World), Spring 2007

“Women, Gender and Sexualities: Modern Sex Education Manuals: Iran” and “Women, Gender and Sexualities: Practices: Iran,” in Encyclopedia of Women in Islamic Cultures (S. Joseph and A. Najmabadi, eds., Harvard Press, 2005)

Honors[]

Pomona College, Wig Distinguished Professor Award for Excellence in Teaching, 2012, 2017

National Development and Research Institute, Behavioral Science Training Fellowship, 2004–present

Woodrow Wilson Foundation, Fellowship in Women’s Health, 2005—present

Institute for Social and Economic Research Policy, Fellowship, 2005–present

Society for Medical Anthropology/Society for Applied Anthropology, Del Jones Award for outstanding research to underserved populations, 2006

American Public Health Association, Outstanding Student Award in recognition of innovative and outstanding new scholarship in the field of public health, 2005

Asia Society's top leaders in Asia, 2008

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Pardis Mahdavi". Wilson Center. September 23, 2011. Retrieved April 30, 2014.
  2. ^ "Passionate Uprisings: Iran's Sexual Revolution". Amazon. February 21, 2011.
  3. ^ "Passionate Uprisings: Iran's Sexual Revolution". Amazon. February 21, 2011.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""