Nabil Al-Tikriti

Associate Professor of History & American Studies

  • Fredericksburg VA UNITED STATES

Dr. Al-Tikriti has firsthand experience with Middle Eastern affairs, as a researcher, humanitarian and election monitor.

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Biography

Nabil Al-Tikriti doesn’t just teach Middle Eastern history, he lives it.

Aboard the Bourbon Argos rescue ship in May 2015, the University of Mary Washington professor witnessed the desperation of refugees making the perilous Mediterranean crossing from North Africa to Greece and Italy. As a relief worker in Somalia, he saw how famine ravaged millions in the country during the ’90s. As an official observer, he viewed the emotional 2014 presidential election in Ukraine in the aftermath of the country’s violent revolution.

A native of New Orleans, Dr. Al-Tikriti has been a member of Médecins sans Frontières (MSF-Doctors Without Borders) since 1992. He’s traveled with the international humanitarian aid organization to Somalia, Iran, Albania, Turkey, Jordan, Syria, Iraq and Ethiopia, where he negotiated with community leaders, served as liaison with United Nations, nongovernmental organizations and local government personnel; dealt with personnel issues in a war zone, analyzed host government policies and leaders; and conducted an exploratory mission to determine potential MSF activity in Iraq. He joined an MSF team on a humanitarian mission to Syria in 2013 and served as a cultural facilitator on the organization’s ship that rescued thousands of immigrants in the Mediterranean. He served on the MSF-USA Board of Directors from 2011 to 2017, finishing his second term as the 2016-17 Vice President.

Dr. Al-Tikriti has served as a polling station supervisor or election monitor on numerous occasions since 1997, in Bosnia, Kosovo, Ukraine, Belarus, Kyrgyzstan, Georgia, Montenegro and Albania, for the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe.

A faculty member at UMW since 2004, the associate professor of history and American studies was awarded a 2018 Fulbright Scholar Fellowship to teach and conduct research in Azerbaijan; and a 2007 Jennings Randolph Fellowship at the U.S. Institute of Peace in Washington, D.C., where he researched the effects on Iraqi civil society of the 2003 Anglo-American invasion. He also was recipient of a 2000 Fulbright DDRA Fellowship and a 2011 National Endowment for the Humanities grant. He has delivered conference lectures and presentations in more than a dozen countries, including a keynote lecture on “The State of the Middle East Studies in the American Academy,” for the 5th Joint International Workshop in Tokyo, organized by Kyoto University and the Tokyo University of Foreign Studies."

Areas of Expertise

Humanitarian Affairs
Forced Migration (Refugees, Internally Displaced Persons)
The Modern Middle East
Cultural Patrimony
Modern Iraq
Islamic History
Conflict Studies
History of the Ottoman Empire
Genocide
Higher Education
Modern Turkey

Accomplishments

Al-Tikriti Joins Middle East Book Prize Committee

2018-02-19

Associate Professor of Middle Eastern History Nabil Al-Tikriti agreed to join the 2018 Middle East Studies Association (MESA) Book Prize Committee. For this service, the five committee members must review a total of approximately 125 books for three prizes: the Albert Hourani Book Award; the Nikki Keddie Book Award; and the The Fatima Mernissi Book Award.

Al-Tikriti Chairs MSF Panel in NYC General Assembly

2017-06-24

On June 24, 2017, in his final capacity as MSF/Doctors Without Border USA’s 2016-17 Vice President, Nabil Al-Tikriti chaired a panel which he had co-organized, titled "Navigating in a New Political Environment." The panel was aimed at NGO stakeholders and held at the annual MSF USA General Assembly in New York City, an annual gathering where MSF field staff debate pressing issues in contexts where they operate as well as elect new members to the MSF USA Board of Directors.

Al-Tikriti Monitors Montenegro Parliamentary Elections

2016-10-11

Nabil Al-Tikriti, associate professor of Middle Eastern history, served as an election monitor for the Montenegro parliamentary elections. Joining eight other Americans in the U.S. delegation, Al-Tikriti worked as an OSCE (Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe) STO (Short Term Observer) in several rural villages and a provincial capital in the mountains, Mojkovac. His observation partner was a Russian diplomat based in Slovenia.

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Education

University of Chicago

Ph.D.

Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations

2004

Dissertation Title: “Şehzade Korkud (ca. 1468-1513) and the Articulation of 16th Century Ottoman Religious Identity”

University of Chicago

M.A.

Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations

1996

Thesis Title: “Philology of al-Jahiz’s (d. 869) Prose Works”

Boğaziçi Üniversitesi

Certificates

Intermediate, Advanced Turkish Language & Literature

1995

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Affiliations

  • MSF/Doctors Without Borders USA: Member, Board of Directors, 2011-2017
  • American Association of University Professors : Member
  • American Civil Liberties Union : Member
  • American Historical Association : Member
  • Middle East Studies Association : Member

Media Appearances

Civilians in Mosul’s Battle of Annihilation

Middle East Report  print

2018-06-18

Abstract: "Understanding the course of events and identifying the participants in the battle of Mosul is a difficult task. What is certain is that all parties neglected the fate of civilians and were unable to provide proper emergency medical relief. An examination of the battle is crucial to understanding the evolution of international humanitarian law in conflict zones."

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Suffering and the Limits of Relief

Middle East Report  print

2018-06-18

Interview Abstract: “European policies on refugees and asylum seekers are increasingly restrictive. Borders are effectively being pushed off-shore, extending the problems of border management as far south as possible. Aurélie Ponthieu explains the effects of these measures, including crowded refugee centers on the Italian and Greek borders, deplorable conditions in Libyan detention centers and fewer rescues at sea. Ponthieu, the Coordinator of the Forced Migration Team in the analysis department of Médecins sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders), Belgium, was interviewed by Nabil Al-Tikriti.”

MER Issue #286

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Fauquier schools consider Turkish language courses

FauquierNow.com  online

2016-11-18

University of Mary Washington Associate Professor Nabil Al-Tikriti, whose children took the STARTALK program in Fauquier last summer, suggested a high school course would benefit students.

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Event Appearances

Global Security

Impact of a Global Humanitarian System on the Middle East and Other Crisis Areas  Virginia Tech’s School of Public and International Affairs, Alexandria, Virginia

2018-04-25

Fulbright Programs

Fulbright Scholar Liaison Workshop  Institute for International Education, Washington, DC

2018-02-20

Relief Work and Medical Humanitarianism

Relief Work, Medical Humanitarianism and Challenges of Medical NGOs  University of California-San Diego and Soka University in Los Angeles

2017-12-14

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Articles

Turkish Voters Upset Erdogan’s Competitive Authoritarianism

Middle East Research and Information Project

Nabil Al-Tikriti

2019

Turkish voters sent a strong message to its long-standing ruling party and its leader on March 31,2019 that the government’s authoritarian turn has not fully succeeded. In nationwide municipalelections, for the first time in a quarter century, the political movement largely associated with Turkey’sPresident Recep Tayyip Erdoǧan lost control over both the country’s economic and political capitals, as well as numerous other districts throughout the country

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Civilians in Mosul's Battle of Annihilation

Middle East Report

Nabil Al-Tikriti

2018

Understanding the course of events and identifying the participants in the battle of Mosul is a difficult task. What is certain is that all parties neglected the fate of civilians and were unable to provide proper emergency medical relief.

View more

Extending the Borders of Europe: An Interview with Aurélie Ponthieu

Middle East Report

Nabil Al-Tikriti

2018

European policies on refugees and asylum seekers are increasingly restrictive. Borders are effectively being pushed off-shore, extending the problems of border management as far south as possible. Aurélie Ponthieu explains the effects of these measures, including crowded refugee centers on the Italian and Greek borders, deplorable conditions in Libyan detention centers and fewer rescues at sea. Ponthieu, the coordinator of the Forced Migration Team in the analysis department of Médecins sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders), Belgium, was interviewed by Nabil Al-Tikriti.

View more

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