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Shahla Haeri
is the director of Women's
Studies Program and an Assistant Professor of cultural
Anthropology at Boston University. She has conducted research in
Iran, Pakistan, and India, and has written extensively on
religion, law and gender dynamics in the Muslim world. She is
the author of Law of Desire: Temporary Marriage, Mut’a, in Iran
(1989, 1993), and of No Shame for the Sun: Lives of Professional
Pakistani Women (Syracuse University Press in the US, and Oxford
University Press in Pakistan, 2002). She was involved in the
University of Chicago’s multi-year program on global
fundamentalism, Fundamentalism Project, which was funded by a
John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur grant, and she contributed an
article to the second volume: “Obedience versus Autonomy: Women
& Fundamentalism in Iran & Pakistan” (1993). She has been
awarded several postdoctoral fellowships, including one at the
Center for Middle Eastern Studies, Harvard University (1985-86),
Pembroke Center for Teaching and Research on Women, Brown
University (1986-87), Social Science Research Council (1987-88),
St. Anthony's College, Oxford University (1996), and a Fulbright
(1999-2000, 2002-2003).
Dr. Haeri has also made a short video documentary (46 min.)
titled Mrs. President: Women and Political Leadership in Iran,
which focusses on six women presidential contenders in Iran in
2001. This documentary is distributed in the United States and
Canada by the Films for the Humanities and Sciences (www.films.com,
2002).

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