Dr. Mohammad Fadel
Mohammed Fadel was born in Egypt. After 3 years in Egypt,
Dr. Fadel came to the United States and began his studies.
Dr. Fadel attained his bachelors with high Honors from the
University of Virginia in Government and Foreign Affairs
in 1988. He then worked on his PhD in Near Eastern Languages
and Cultures at the University of Chicago (Illinois), where
he completed a dissertation focusing on Islamic legal processes
during medieval times, completing his doctorate in 1995.
While in the Virginia School of law, Dr. Fadel was member
and Articles Development Editor of the Virginia Law Review
along with being a John M. Olin Fellow in Law and Economics.
He has been a member of the Order of the Coif, a national
honor society for law school graduates. Currently, Dr. Fadel
is a General Practice Associate in the New York office of
the law firm Sullivan & Cromwell. He previously worked
with the United States Court of Appeals Fourth Circuit,
and the United States District Court. He has taught Arabic
at the University of Virginia, Notre Dame University (Indiana),
and Middlebury College in Vermont. He is a past president
of the Association for Arab-American Understanding and a
member of Muslim Voices for Peace.
He has published a variety of papers in various Journals
including the Journal of Near Eastern Studies, The Journal
of Islamic Law, the International Journal of Middle East
Studies, and the Bulletin of Middle East Medievalists. Among
topics covered in his publications are Islam and Democracy,
Islamic Scholastic Theology, and Analogical Reasoning in
Islamic Jurisprudence.