Annual Conference of the British Association for Islamic Studies

Monday 15th-Tuesday 16th May 2023

The Aga Khan University, Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations

10 Handyside Street, London, N1C 4DN

 

Conference Programme 

 Day 1: Monday 15 May

 

10.00 - 10.10: Words of Welcome (ACR)

 

Jonas Otterbeck (ISMC) and Fozia Bora (University of Leeds, Chair of the British Association for Islamic Studies)

 

10.10 - 11.20: Opening Keynote (ACR Lecture Theatre)

 

Professor Sarah Bowen Savant and the KITAB Project team (Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations)

'When will ChatGPT write my next book?’'  How AI and Digital Methods are Changing Islamic Studies'

 

11.20-11.30: BRAIS - De Gruyter Prize Announcement (ACR Lecture Theatre)

 

11.30 – 12.00: Refreshments (Atrium)

 

12.00-13.30: Panel Session 1 

 

Islamic Law: Constructing Meaning and Responding to Changing Contexts (Room 220)

Chair: Muhammad Mansur Ali (Cardiff University)

Elias Saba (Grinnell College) Evading the Canon: Al-Qarafi and His Furuq 

Hatice Kubra Memis (University of Exeter) Understanding of Beginning of Human Life in Classical Islamic Jurists 

Shahanaz Begum (University of Exeter) Meaning making in the formative period: Muḥammad b. Ḥasan al-Shaybānῑ and the role of language in law 

 

Muslim Minorities and the State (Room 221)

Chair: Jonas Otterbeck (Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations)

Anika Kabani (University of Oxford) The Exclusionary Sovereign: Terrorism, Asylum, and Ambiguity in the U.S. Humanitarian Immigration System 

Xiaokun Jiang (Utrecht University) Reshaping and Being Reshaped: The Active Adaption Strategy of Salafis in Xi’an, China 

Egdunas Racius (Vytautas Magnus University) Institutional churchification of Islam in Eastern Europe 

Daniel Vekony (Corvinus University of Budapest) State-sponsored illiberal academic knowledge production on Muslims and migration in Hungary 

    

Muslim Interfaith and Intercultural Encounters (ACR)

Chair: Jon Hoover (University of Nottingham)

Saeko Yazaki (University of Glasgow) Forming knowledge of the Other: Modern Japanese encounter with Islam 

Hina Khalid (University of Cambridge) Form Informs Us of the Formless: The Finite-Infinite Relation in the Thought of Muhammad Iqbal and Rabindranath Tagore 

Sainulabdeen Mohammed Thameem (University of Birmingham) Interfaith Relations in Medieval Sri Lanka in the Eyes of Ibn Battūta (1304-1368) 

 

Islamic Responses to the Economy: Dealing with the Nation State, Wealth and Capitalism (Room 219)

Chair: Haroon Sidat (Cardiff University)

Alena Kulinich (University of Oxford/Seoul National University) Debating wealth in 9th-century Baghdad: al-Muḥāsibī’s refutation of a wealthy learned man 

Ahmad Fathan Aniq (McGill University) The political backdrop to Indonesia’s enactment of Islamic economic law 

Sharaiz Chaudhry (University of Edinburgh) Islam and Capitalism: Towards developing an Islamic Liberation Theology to tackle economic inequality 

Muhammad Zulkifly (Durham University) Islamic liberation theology and the hegemony of capital 

  

Practicing Sufism: Spirituality, Rituals and Resistance in Modern Sufism (Room 216)

Chair: Gavin Picken (Hamad Bin Khalifa University)

Hafza Iqbal (Coventry University) Sufi Hybrids: an exploration of Sufism in contemporary Britain 

Ramisha Rafique (Nottingham Trent University) Exploring the spiritual journey of the British Muslim flâneuse: the inner-Sufi 

Khalid Alnassar (University of Glasgow) The Sufi Responses to the Salafi Refutational Arguments In Saudi Arabia 

 

13.30-14.30: Lunch (Room 110)

 

14.30-16.00: Panel Session 2 

    

Approaching the Qur’an: Historical and Contemporary Debates (Room 220)

Chair: Jaan Islam (University of Edinburgh)

Simon Loynes (University of Edinburgh) Revelation in the Qur'an 

Aysenur Cam (Princeton University) An Approach to Environmentalism through a Qur’anic Epistemology of Divine Names 

Younus Abdud Dayyan (University of Birmingham) The Contribution of Indian Scholars to Tafsīr in Non- Indian Language Arabic 

Sheam Khan (University of Leicester) and Nayef Al-Shamari (Qatar University) Synonymy (tarāduf) or congruence (taṭābuq) ? The problem of denying synonymy in the Qur’ān 

 

Islamic Knowledge in Sub Saharan Africa: Transmission, Authority and Epistemology (Room 219)

Chair: Ousmane Kane (Harvard University)

Hadiza Kere Abdulrahman (University of Lincoln) Lessons from the margins, an(other) way – Northern Nigeria’s Qur’anic Schools and pedagogical responses for alternative ways of knowing and being. 

Ezgi Guner (University of Edinburgh) Politics of memory and the contested legacy of Abu Bakr Effendi 

Haroon Leon Forde (Birkbeck/SOAS) The fate of Islamic education in Sudan under the Anglo-Egyptian Condominium 1900-14 

Gafar Ibrahim (Nyala University, Centre for Darfur Heritage) Safeguarding Islamic manuscripts of the Darfur region of Sudan: An epistemological diplomatic analysis 

  

Decolonising the Study of Islam: Institutional Visions, Practices, and Challenges (Room 221)

Chair: Dr Siti Sarah Muwahidah (University of Edinburgh) 

Noorhaidi Hasan (Indonesia International Islamic University) Decentring Islamic Studies: Seeking an Academic Direction for Indonesian International Islamic University 

Siti Sarah Muwahidah (University of Edinburgh) A ‘Decentring’ Approach to Studying the Globalised Muslim World

Kholoud Al-Ajarma (University of Edinburgh) Studying and Teaching Islam as Insider/Outsider in The Netherlands: Embracing Multiple Entanglements 

 

The Dynamics and Evolution of Islam in Finland (Room 216)

Chair: Alyaa Ebiarry (University of Durham)

Aytan Bashirova (University of Helsinki) ‘What physicists cannot explain is already in the Qur’an’. Building bridges in search of reaffirmation of Muslimness. 

Riina Sinisalo (University of Helsinki) Dimensions of Muslim place-making in Helsinki 

Rahma Hersi (University of Eastern Finland) Finnish Somali Women’s Path to Higher Education- What are the religious /cultural obstacles they face in their Path? 

Saila Kujanpää (University of Helsinki) Institutionalizing Islamic education in Finland: the case of IRE teacher education 

 

What is Islamic Studies? European and North American Approaches to a Contested Field (ACR)

Chair: Philip Wood (ISMC)

Yasmin Ilkhani (Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations) 

Philip Wood (Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations) 

Sana Iqbal (Institute of for Ismaili Studies) 

  

16.00-16.30: Refreshments (Atrium)

 

16.30-18.00: Panel Session 3 

 

Theology, Philosophy and Nature: On Traditionalist, Arab and “foreign” Science in Early and Classical Kalām (ACR)

Chair: James Weaver (University of Zurich)

Omar Anchassi (University of Bern) Against Ptolemy? Cosmography in Early Kalām 

Ignacio Sánchez (University of Warwick) The Parrot’s Speech and the Muʿtazila: The Ikhwān al-Ṣafāʾ’s Critique of the Mutakallimūn in The Case of Animals versus Man 

James Weaver (University of Zurich) A clash of Cosmologies: Prophetic and “Foreign” Science in the Hands of some Theological Historians 

 

Indonesian Muslims and the West: Diaspora, Residence, and the Reinvention of Identity (Room 216)

Chair: Kholoud Al-Ajarma (University of Edinburgh)

Zacky Umam (SOAS, University of London) Nahdlatul Ulama’s New Internationalism and Its Challenges 

Yanwar Pribadi (Indonesian International Islamic University) The Dutch Chapter of the Nahdlatul Ulama: Indonesian Muslims in Constructing Religious Identity in the West 

Zezen Mutaqin (Indonesian International Islamic University) Islamophobia and Indonesian Muslim Diaspora: Negotiation and Reinvention of Identity in the United States 

 

The future of teaching in the Islamicate Digital Humanities: a Round Table Discussion (Room 220)

Chair: Mathew Barber (AKU-ISMC)

Over the last decade the field of Digital Humanities (DH) has grown enormously, especially in Islamic Studies. Areas such as historiography, manuscript studies and social and political science have been shaped by this transformation. The need to prepare future scholars to critically engage with digital research and use digital methodologies is felt acutely within various humanistic disciplines.

DH is rapidly becoming a part of the university curriculum and many institutions now organise their own dedicated courses. With much of teaching and research now being through digital means, it is time to reflect on DH teaching within our field. This is especially important as we face the rise of AI tools such as ChatGPT, which potentially threaten traditional approaches to evaluating student performance.

In this roundtable discussion we bring together specialists who are presently involved in delivering DH courses for an open and productive conversation about this exciting moment in teaching. We hope to bring the audience into this discussion, and hear from the varied experiences of BRAIS attendees.

  

Navigating Power and Otherness: Identity, Exclusion and Gender (Room 219)

Chair: Sharaiz Chaudhry (University of Edinburgh)

Laura Sani (Ayaan Institute) Multicultural perspectives in a monocultural environment:  Female British Muslims navigating their religiosity in Bulgaria  

Enrico Maria la Forgia (University of Padua) Islam as a reaction to exclusion: the re-discovery of Muslim identity among Arab immigrants' descendants in Marseille  

Qudsia Mirza (University of East London) Partition, Justice and Abducted Women: Memorialisation in Pakistan  

Lujain Getlawi (University of Edinburgh) Navigating Libyan Isms: Libyan women, Secularism and Islamism 

 

Islamic Art & Architecture Across Time and Space (Room 110)

Chair: Hilary Kalmbach (University of Sussex)

Hamza El Fasiki (Craft Draft) The Tale of at-Tasṭīr—Moroccan Geometric Arts: Authenticity, Colonial Interference and Hybridity 

Azadeh Sarjoughian (University of Birmingham) A “local” view on exotic (un)veiled women's bodies in contemporary art from the Middle East 

Mohamed Gamal Abdelmonem (Nottingham Trent University) The British Mosque: The conceptualisation of the authenticity, modernity and socio-spatial practices of mosque architecture 

 

Salafism, politics, and ‘authenticity’ across Muslim-majority and Muslim-minority contexts (Room 221)

Chair: Guy Eyre (Lancaster University/University of Edinburgh)

Iman Dawood (University of Cambridge) From “Salafi” to “Muslim”: The Politicization of British Salafism 

Guy Eyre (Lancaster University/University of Edinburgh) Salafism, authenticity, and national belonging in Morocco 

Azhar Majothi (University of Nottingham) The Return of the “Phantom” Wahhabi 

Alessandra Bonci (Laval University) Ilmi Salafi Women in Tunisia after the Revolution: What Kind of Quietism? 

 

18.00-19.00: Reception hosted by the Aga Khan University's Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations (Atrium)

 

18.30-19.30: Special Panel: Advice for Postgraduate and Early Career Researchers in Islamic Studies (ACR)

BRAIS is committed to supporting Postgraduate and Early Career Researchers as part of its focus on Equality, Diversity and Inclusion in Islamic Studies. In doing so, BRAIS aims to create an academic community that is both open and inclusive for those who are not yet established in their fields. We hope that this panel will be the beginning of many more initiatives to support the development of the next generation of scholars across the many sub-disciplines of Islamic studies.

Chair: Alyaa Ebbiary (Durham University/BRAIS EDI Officer)

Walaa Quisay (University of Edinburgh) Applying for postdoctoral fellowships

Sophie Gilliat-Ray (Cardiff University) Funding proposals and managing large research projects

Usaama Al-Azami (University of Oxford) Publishing as an Early Career Researcher

Louise Hutton (Edinburgh University Press) Advice from a Commissioning Editor

 

Day 2: Tuesday 16 May

 

10.00-11.30: Panel Session 4 

 

Islamic Law in Theory and Practice: Modern Challenges and Approaches (ACR)

Chair: Muhammad Mansur Ali (Cardiff University)

Arwa Abahussain (Cardiff University) The Hermeneutics of Khaled Abou El Fadl's Concept of Renewal 

Mariam Sheibani (Cambridge Muslim College) Licentiousness by Another Name? Secret Marriages Between Invalidity and Immorality 

Umar Shareef (Georgetown University) The Marriage Crisis in Egypt: Restricting Verbal Divorce to the Courts 

Yomna Helmy (University of Cambridge) Maqāṣid Discourse from Islamic Modernism to Theorising Authoritarianism 

 

Mosque architecture & the changing paradigms of design, culture and perception (Room 216)

Chair: Mohamed Gamal Abdelmonem (Nottingham Trent University)

Majdi Faleh (Nottingham Trent University) This is Home Now: Contemporary British Mosques in Leicester, Manchester and Birmingham 

Noha Hussein (Nottingham Trent University) Rereading The Dome of The Rock’s Earliest Quranic Inscriptions in the light of the Objectives Theory 

Dijana Alic (University of new South Wales) Melbourne Grand Mosque: Building communities and faith 

Nourelhoda Mazen (Nottingham Trent University) A Theoretical Foundation of Ornamentation in Mosque Architecture: A Historical Enquiry of Terminologies 

 

Traditional Concepts, Contemporary Classrooms - Drawing from Islamic Educational Theory to meet the needs of young Muslims (Room 219)

Chair: Farah Ahmed (University of Cambridge)

Dina El Odessy (University of Oxford) and Farah Ahmed (University of Oxford) A systematic review of holistic Islamic education conceptual frameworks 

Safaruk Chowdhury (Cambridge Muslim College) Assembling a Holistic Conceptual Framework for Education in Muslim Contexts based on an Islamic Worldview 

Claire Alkouatli (Cambridge Muslim College) In Search of a Tawhid Methodology: Towards Constructing Paradigms for Islamic Educational Research 

Farah Ahmed (University of Cambridge) Facilitating international teacher-research exchange in Islamic educational contexts through an online platform 

 

Being Muslim in Britain: Personal and Institutional Responses (Room 220)

Chair: Shamim Miah (University of Huddersfield)

Sophie Gilliat-Ray (Cardiff University) The Sisters, the Imam, and his Wife: new perspectives on Muslim women in Britain 

Riyaz Timol (Cardiff University) British Imams between Institutionalisation and Autonomy: A Conceptual Typology of Roles 

Rabiha Hannan (University of Leeds) Muslim women, Islamic texts and Muslim discourses: The struggle for authenticity in the modern world 

 

The Multiplicity of Muslim Belief: Negotiating Sectarian and Ideological Differences (Room 221)

Chair: Usaama Al-Azami (University of Oxford)

Mashal Saif (Clemson University) Between a Textual Archive and Oral History: Pakistani Shi'a 'Ulama's views on Politics and Sectarianism 

Julia Katarina, (Islamic College of Advanced Studies) Arkan al-Islam: Pillar of Faith and Practice in Seven Denominations 

Zhicheng Ye (SOAS, University of London) The Imams and their legendary disciples: figures, lineage and interactions between early Sufis and Shiites 

Aseel Azab (Brown University) ‘Do what you can to keep the recitation of the Good Word Alive ’: Formation of Salafi Selves & Subjectivity in Contemporary Egypt 

 

11.30-12.00: Refreshments (Atrium)

 

12.00-13.30: Panel Session 5 

 

Towards Contemporary Theological Hadith and Sira Studies (ACR)

Chair: Besnik Sinani (Tübingen University)

Ruggero Vimercati Sanseverino (Tübingen University) The Hadith as transmitted testimony: Perspectives of a theological approach to hadith 

Besnik Sinani (Tübingen University) The Theology of the Modern Understandings of the Sira: Hadith Sources, Reform, Tradition and Postcoloniality 

Hossam Ouf (Tübingen University) Controversial Hadiths (mushkil al-ḥadīth) Revisited: The Hermeneutics of a Theological Understanding of Hadith 

 

The ‘Muslim Question’: Micropolitics of Normalizing Islam and Muslims (Room 219)

Chair: Alexander Henley (Institute of Ismaili Studies)

Matt Sheedy (University of Bonn) Six or Eleven Theses on ‘Islamic’ and ‘Christian’ Terrorism in America 

Martijn de Koning (Radboud University Nijmegen) Responsible Muslims and Normalizing Islam: Dutch Muslims and the Politics of Responsibility 

Alexander Henley (Institute of Ismaili Studies) Normalization through Religious Representation: A Lebanese Druze Response to the ‘Muslim Question’ 

Aaron Hughes (University of Rochester) Respondent

 

Intercultural Entanglements: Unstaged Muslim-Jewish Encounters in Europe (Part 1) (Room 216)

Chair: Alyaa Ebiarry (University of Durham)

Yulia Egorova (University of Durham) ’This is What I Like about This Religion’: Solidarity and Ethics in Inter-community Dialogue 

Arndt Emmerich (University of Heidelberg) In Search of Conviviality - Jewish-Muslim encounters in Frankfurt’s Bahnhofsviertel 

Sami Everett (University of Southampton/Parkes Institute) Curating commonality: the French Museum of Immigration exhibition on Jewish and Muslim migration from North Africa to France 

Ben Gidley (Birkbeck, University of London) Eating (with) the other? Muslims, Jews and shared food in urban Europe 

 

The Importance of the Word: Manuscripts and Literature in the Islamic Past and Present (Room 221)

Chair: Walid Ghali (Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations)

David Vishanoff (University of Oklahoma) The Afterlife of an Ascetic Pseudo-Scripture: Methods and Motives for Mapping Complex Families of Manuscripts

Fozia Bora (University of Leeds) Beyond “genre”: literary variety and text preservation in Ibn Khallikān’s biographical dictionary

Gianluca Parolin (The Aga Khan University) From Fiqh Orthodoxy to Fictional Doxa: The Case for (Islamic) Law & Literature

  

The Path of the Mystic: Sufi Religious Thought (Room 220)

Chair: Saeko Yazaki (University of Glasgow)

Arief Arman (SOAS, University of London) When An Existentialist Meets a Sufi: Similarities and Differences of Existential and Religious Thought on Death 

Gavin Picken (Hamad Bin Khalifa University) Traversing the Nexus of the Physical and the Metaphysical:  Negotiating Travel and Travel Writing in Sufism 

Jonas Otterbeck (Aga Khan University/Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations) For the love of the beloved: The creative use of Sufi tropes by Peter Murphy 

Najam Abbas (Institute of Ismaili Studies) Rasikh’s Reflections on Mystic Metaphor of Jalaluddin Rumi 

 

13.30-14.30: Lunch (Room 110)

 

14.30-16.00: Panel Session 6 

 

Historical Debates in the Islamic Sciences: Developments and Refutations in Kalam and Hadith (ACR)

Chair: Omar Anchassi (University of Bern)

Usaama al-Azami (University of Oxford) Ibn Taymiyya, al-Dhahabi and the Attribution of al-Nasiha al-Dhahabiyya 

Tariq Mir (SOAS, University of London) Taftāzānī and Metaphysics After Rāzī: Developments in Kalām Metaphysics in the Post-Mongol Islamic East 

Belal Alabbas (Bristol University/Exeter University) Rationalising the Akhbār of the Imāms? Al-Ṭūsī (d. 460/1067) on the Theory of Twelver Hadith Criticism 

Ramon Harvey (Cambridge Muslim College) Exploring an Islamic “Theological Turn” in Husserlian Phenomenology 

 

Political Islam and the Nation State: Challenges, Responses and New Horizons (Room 220)

Chair: Sharaiz Chaudhry

Alina Alak (University of Vienna) Salafi-Jihadi Hermeneutics 

Kassim Alsraiha (University of Cambridge) New Social Contract in The Gulf States?: The Thought of Contemporary Reformist Islamic Intellectuals 

Jaan Islam (University of Edinburgh) Decolonial Jihadis? Jihadi-Salafism in Conversation with Critiques of Hegemony and the Modern State 

Hussain Muhammad (University of Erfurt) ʿUlama, Pakistan and Politics: Islamist hermeneutics 

 

Intercultural Entanglements: Unstaged Muslim-Jewish Encounters in Europe (Part 2) (Room 216)

Chair: Sami Everett (University of Southampton)

Alyaa Ebbiary (University of Durham) To address or to avoid? Israel-Palestine and Muslim-Jewish Relations in Manchester and beyond 

Dekel Peretz (University of Heidelberg) The Politics of Music: Jewish-Muslim musical cooperations in Berlin 

Elodie Druez (Sciences Politique Paris) Singing & dancing together: Jewish-Muslim Mediterranean commonalities 

Daniella Shaw (Birkbeck, University of London) Local Muslim-Jewish Encounters: Religious Spaces in the London Borough of Barnet 

  

Islam and Modernity: The Experience and Legacy of Colonialism in the Muslim World (Room 219)

Chair: Fozia Bora (University of Leeds)

Nia Deliana (International Islamic University of Indonesia) Global South Diplomacy: Coromandel Networks and Fluidity Between Sumatra and the Ottoman 

Ahmed Arfaoui (University of Erlangen–Nuremberg) Malek Bennabi´s View Of Religion 

Hafsa Kanjwal (Lafayette College) Islam, Solidarity and the Question of Kashmir

Diietrich Reetz (Freie Universität Berlin) Din wa Duniya – The binary of Religion and World in Muslim discourse in South Asia in its complex diversity

 

Shi’ism:  Preserving and Recovering Memory, Adapting to New Challenges (Room 221)

Chair: Adam Ramadhan (Al-Mahdi Institute)

Amina Inloes (The Islamic College) Astrology in Twelver Shīʿī Ḥadīth 

Imran Visram (University of Oxford) Sound recording technologies and the preservation of Indo-Ismaili Muslim gināns 

Akif Tahiiev (Max Planck Institute) Dynamic Ijtihad in Shiism 

Aslisho Qurboniev (AKU-ISMC) Tusi and his Ismaili writings: a reconsideration of the earliest revision of Akhlāq-i Nāṣirī – MS Punjab 1557 

 

16.00-16.30: Refreshments (Atrium)

 

16.30-18.00: Closing Keynote (ACR)

 

Professor Ousmane Kane (Harvard University) 

‘Decolonizing the Study of Islam in Africa’ 

 

 

Annual Conference of the British Association for Islamic Studies

Monday 18th-Tuesday 19th May 2026

Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations (the Aga Khan University) & 
The Institute for Ismaili Studies

10 Handyside Street, London, N1C 4DN

 

Call for Papers and Panels: Submission deadline Monday 5 January 2026 5pm GMT

The British Association for Islamic Studies is delighted to announce that it will be returning to the Aga Khan Centre, London, for its 2026 Annual Conference on 18 & 19 May 2026 to be hosted by the Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations (the Aga Khan University) and The Institute for Ismaili Studies.

We now invite proposals for individual papers, as well as whole panels, from senior and early-career scholars from Professor to PhD level, as well as colleagues from beyond the academic world who have specialist expertise or unique insights to share. This includes colleagues based in centres of further education, museums and traditional centres of religious learning, among others.

​​Islamic Studies is broadly understood to include all topics and disciplinary approaches relating to the study of Islam and Muslim societies, across all time periods from the formative to the classical, and pre-modern to the contemporary. You will find a list of suggested themes at the bottom of this page.

If you have any questions about BRAIS 2026, they might be answered on our FAQ page HERE. Otherwise, please do not hesitate to contact us: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

An Inclusive Conference

BRAIS is committed to the principles of equality and inclusivity, and welcomes papers from scholars of all backgrounds and identities. We will work hard to ensure that BRAIS 2026 is a welcoming environment where everyone feels valued and supported. We are mindful that many colleagues will have dependents, and your dependents are most welcome to attend along with you, free of charge. 

Submitting Your Abstract

For individual papers, an abstract of up to 400 words should be submitted along with your details using the form available via the link below: 

THE CALL FOR PAPERS IS NOW CLOSED

Submitting Your Panel Proposal

BRAIS particularly welcomes proposals for whole panels curated around certain themes or methodologies. Panels will ideally include four individual papers, but panels of three individual papers will also be considered.

For panels, a 200-word outline of the theme of the panel, together with 200-word abstracts of each individual paper and the biography of each presenter should be submitted using the form available via the link below:

THE CALL FOR PANELS IS NOW CLOSED

Submission Deadline

The deadline for paper and panel submissions is Monday 5 January 2026 at 5pm GMT.

Any Questions?

If you have any questions, please contact the Conference Committee on: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

BRAIS 2026 Suggested Themes

  • Archives and Archival Studies
  • Art, Architecture, Numismatics, Epigraphy and Material Culture
  • Black Islam(s) and African Diaspora Studies
  • Decolonising the Curriculum, including New Periodisations and (Inter)Disciplinary Approaches
  • Digital Humanities in Islamic Studies
  • Economy, Marketing and Finance
  • Education and Pedagogy
  • Environmental Humanities and Ecology
  • Gender Studies
  • Genocide Studies
  • Hadith Studies
  • History and Historiography
  • Intellectual History and the History of Science
  • Interreligious Relations and Comparative Studies
  • Islam and Muslims in the Media: Print, Online and on Screen
  • Islamic liberation theology and theologies of resistance
  • Islamophobia and Racism Studies
  • Law
  • Libraries and Book Cultures 
  • Literature and Cultural Studies including Postcolonial Studies
  • Manuscript Studies and Codicology
  • Music
  • Muslims in Asia
  • Muslims in Britain/Europe/North America and other minority contexts
  • Philosophy, Theology and Ethics
  • Qur'anic and Tafsir Studies
  • Scholasticide and Epistemicide
  • Sociology, Anthropology and Political Science
  • Sufism and Mysticism

We rely on our members and conference participants to help us expand the scope and nuance of our Annual Conference. In light of this, please do feel free to submit panel or paper proposals that are not represented in the above-mentioned themes.

Data Protection

All BRAIS 2026 paper and panel submissions will be managed by the Alwaleed Centre at the University of Edinburgh (BRAIS’s management hub). Your submission will be shared with two anonymous reviewers who will review your submission and return their verdicts. Your submission will be retained until the BRAIS 2026 conference has been delivered. At this point, all submissions will be permanently deleted from our records.

 

 

 

2022 Annual Conference of the British Association for Islamic Studies

Monday 6th - Tuesday 7th June

The University of Edinburgh 

 

Conference Programme

 

PLEASE NOTE: THIS PROGRAMME IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE 

 

All panels and plenaries will take place in the University of Edinburgh's School of Literatures, Languages and Cultures at 50 George Square, Edinburgh, EH8 9JU.

The Publisher Exhibition will be located in the same space as the main conference.

 

Click here to register for the conference.

Click here for further information about conference accommodation

 

Monday 6th June 2022 

 

09.00 onward: Registration open    

 

09.45 – 10.00: Words of Welcome 

 

10.00 – 11:15: Plenary 1:  

 

Professor Salman Sayyid (University of Leeds) 

Critical Muslim Studies: Decolonizing the Islamicate? 

 

11:15-11:30: BRAIS-de Gruyter Prize Ceremony

 

11.30 – 12.00: Coffee/Tea 

 

12.00 – 13.30: Panel Session 1 

 

Qur’anic Hermeneutics: Tools and Approaches

Room G01

Chair: Haroon Sidat (Cardiff University)

Amira  Abou-Taleb (University of Helsinki) A Mandate for Beauty in the Qur’an: the iḥsān imperative

David  Vishanoff (University of Oklahoma) Anthropological Reorientations in Qur’anic Hermeneutics: History, Structuralism, Ideology, Phenomenology, and Postmodernism

Hany  Rashwan (UAE University/University of Birmingham) Bayān, faṣāḥah, and balāghah in the Qur’ān: Orality in early Islamic literary criticism

Sohaib Saeed (Ibn 'Ashur Centre) The Multiple Authorship of al-Rāzī's Great Exegesis: Old and New Evidence

 

Muslims in Britain: Responding to Challenges and Changing Dynamics

Room G02

Chair: Alyaa Ebbiary (University of Durham)

Fatou Sambe (Cardiff University) Black Muslim Convert Experiences in Britain

Davide Pettinato (University of Exeter) Environmental activism, the ‘everyday’, and ethical/pious self-cultivation: insights from a youth-led British Muslim charity

Sharaiz Chaudhry (University of Edinburgh) Islamic Liberation Theology in Practice:  A Comparative Analysis of British Muslims’ Activism Against Class Inequality

Muzaffer Can Dilek (University of Huddersfield) Politics, education policy and teacher professional identity: Muslim teachers in England

  

Falsafa and Theology in the Medieval Period

Lecture Theatre G03

Chair: Fozia Bora (University of Leeds)

Raissa von Doetinchem de Rande (Rhodes College) A Possible Influence: Ibn Masarra’s (d. 931) Risālat al-iʿtibār and Ibn Ṭufayl’s (d. 1185) Ḥayy ibn Yaqẓān 

Torsten Hylen (Dalarna University) Three times Karbalāʾ: comparing early accounts of the death of al-Ḥusayn

Muhammad Sami (University of Oxford) Suprarational Knowledge According to the School of Ibn ‘Arabī

Belal Abu-Alabbas (University of Exeter) Lafẓī bi-l-Qurʾān makhlūq? Al-Bukhārī and his Adversaries on the Lafẓ Controversy

 

Muslims and the Environment: Contesting the Contemporary Religious and Cultural Discourses

Room G05

Chair: Kholoud Al-Ajarma (University of Edinburgh)

Siti Sarah Muwahidah (University of Edinburgh) and Fuad Faizi (State Islamic Institute of Syekh Nurjati Cirebon) The Localization of Global Climate Crisis Narratives in Indonesian Muslim Societies: Promises and Problems

Jawida Mansour (University of the People) and Kholoud Al-Ajarma (University of Edinburgh) Questioning Tobacco Production: health, environment, and economic struggle among Muslims in Palestine

Zainal Abidin Bagir (Universitas Gadjah Mada) and Haryani Saptaningtyas (Sebelas Maret University) Contrast and Convergence in Indonesian Religious Environmentalism:  A Case Study of Religious and Secular Environmental Activism

Rana Abu-Mounes (Centre for Muslim-Christian Studies, Oxford) Muslim and Christian Responses to the Water Crisis in Jordan

 

Contemporary Fiqh and Jurisprudence 

Room G06

Chair: Usaama al-Azami (University of Oxford)

Fatima Barkatulla (SOAS) Between Protectionism and Surrender: Qaradawi’s Wasatiyya and Orthodox Pragmatism in Islamic Legal Theory

Rami Koujah (Princeton University) Maqasid al-shar’'a as virtue jurisprudence

Mansur Ali (Cardiff University) Tying the knot virtually: E-Nikah in Hanafi fiqh

Al Muatasim Al Maawali (Sultan Qaboos University) The Omani Experience of Islamic Banking– A Juristic Approach to the Question, How Islamic is Islamic Banking?

 

13.30 – 14.30: Lunch

 

14.30 – 16.00: Panel Session 2

 

The Qur’an: Classical and Modern Approaches to the Sacred Text

Room G01

Chair: Sohaib Saeed (Ibn 'Ashur Centre)

Josef Linnhoff (The Institute of Advanced Usuli Studies) Coherence and Context: Khaled Abou El Fadl’s Approach to Qur’anic Exegesis

Fadhli Lukman (Universitas Islam Negeri Sunan Kalijaga Yogyakarta) The State, Islamic Caliphate, and the Official Qurʾān Translation: the politics of Al-Qur’an dan Terjemahnya of the Republic of Indonesia

Muhammad Faisal Khalil (University of Oxford) What Pigs and Other Animals Teach Us About the Vulnerability of Moral Development

 

Contemporary Turkey: Religion, Identity and Society

Room G02

Chair: Mahdi Mosawi (University of Edinburgh)

Müge Akpinar (Freie Universität Berlin) Taking Care of the Self, Taking Care of Nature: An Ethnographic Account of Fitrah and Lived Islam in Contemporary Turkey

Caroline Tee (University of Chester) Religious Charisma in the Shadow of the State: Alternative Pathways to ‘’Routinisation’' in Turkey

Iffet Piraye Yuce (Université Paris 8 / Center for Sociological and Political Research in Paris) Intersectional Approaches to Multiple Identities: Muslim Women Entrepreneurs in Turkey

  

Why Race Matters in Islamic Studies: Theoretical and Ethnographic Contributions from Muslim Africa and its Diaspora

Lecture Theatre G03

Chair: Ezgi Guner (University of Edinburgh)

Marta Scaglioni (University of Milano-Bicocca) Race and racism in Southern Tunisia

Valerio Colosio (Ankara Social Science University) Race, ethnicity and otherisation in a post-slavery context: The case of Guéra province in central Chad

Ezgi Guner (University of Edinburgh) Racing the Ummah: Humanitarianization of Muslim Internationalism and the Reconstruction of Turkish Whiteness in Africa

 

Ibn Taymiyya: Ontology, Epistemology and Scripture

Room G05

Chair: Jaan Islam (University of Edinburgh)

Danial Lav (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem) Ibn Taymiyya on Ontological Dependence and Its Ground 

Jon Hoover (University of Nottingham) Ibn Taymiyya on the Gospel’s Relation to the Torah

Safaruk Chowdhury (Cambridge Muslim College) Ibn Taymiyya’s Fiṭralism and Alvin Plantinga’s Religious Epistemology: A Study in Comparative Theories of Belief

 

British Islam: Challenges, Responses, Relationships

Room G06

Chair: Jorgen Nielson (University of Birmingham)

Laura Jones-Ahmed (Cardiff University) The Plurality of Time in Ramadan: Moon Sighting and the Search for Laylatul Qadr

Hugh Goddard (University of Edinburgh) Edinburgh and the World of Islam

Riyaz Timol (Cardiff University) Understanding British Imams: Presentation of Project Findings

Haroon Sidat (Cardiff University) Virtue and Action as Habitus: From Taalib to Khaadim

 

16.00 – 16.30: Refreshments

 

16:30 – 18:00: Panel Session 3

  

Muslim Use of Media: From Empire to the Covid-19 Pandemic

Room G01

Chair: Michael Munnik (Cardiff University)

Ibrahim Suberu (University of Port Harcourt) Digital Religiosity and the Effects of Virtual Da’awah among Nigerian Muslims Youths

Wael Hegazy (University of California Santa Barbara) Online Islamic Rituals in the Western Context

Hayat Douhan (Free University of Berlin) 2.0 Mosques in Times of The Pandemic: The Digital Media Uses among Moroccan Mosques in Germany

 

Counter radicalisation policies and their effects on Belgian Muslims

Room G02

Chair: Arthemis Snijders (KU Leuven)

Mieke Groenink (KU Leuven) Islamic religious actors providing theological counternarratives for deradicalisation in Belgium

Arthemis Snijders (KU Leuven/Ugent) 'Worse than a criminal record': The effects of counter radicalisation policies and discourse on Belgian Muslims

Lore Janssens (KU Leuven) The body as compass: the ways frontline workers’ embodiment reproduces Muslims as suspect category

 

Islamic Law: Peace, Resistance, and Rebellion

Lecture Theatre G03

Chair: Usaama al-Azami (University of Oxford)

Kaleem Hussain (University of Birmingham) Peace & Reconciliation Based on International and Islamic Law

Walaa Quisay (University of Manchester) Carceral Fiqh: Debates on the Permissibility of Hunger Strikes 

Jaan Islam (University of Edinburgh) The Law of Rebellion in Jihadi-Salafism: A Study of Sayyid Imām al-Sharīf and Abū Baṣīr al-Ṭarṭūsī

 

Islam and Gender: Challenging Patriarchy and Authority

Room G05

Chair: Tazeen Ali (Washington University in St. Louis)

Masoumeh Velayati (University of Warwick) Liberation Theology: Re-visiting the Polygamy Verses from a Gender Perspective

Laiqah Osman (Cardiff University) Muslim Women and the Dilemma of Gendered Spiritual Abuse

Shadaab Rahemtulla (University of Edinburgh) Towards an Egalitarian Islamic Masculinity: Prophet Muhammad, Khadijah, and the Politics of (Patriarchal) Memory

 

Tuesday 7th June 2022

 

09.30 – 11.00: Panel Session 4

 

Muslim Representation and Authority in the Media

Room G01

Chair: Sharaiz Chaudhry (University of Edinburgh)

Michael Munnik (Cardiff University) When Journalists Apply the Label ‘Muslim’

Tazeen Ali (Washington University in St. Louis) Beyond TV Terrorists: Politics, Sex, and American Islam in Hulu’s Ramy

Siti Sarah Muwahidah (University of Edinburgh) Shi'i Women's Digital Da'wa in Indonesia:  Nurturing New Female Authorities And Bridging Sectarian Divides

 

Muslim-Jewish Encounter: Diversity and Distance in Urban Europe

Room G02

Chair: Yulia Egorova (University of Durham)

The panel will be a round-table discussion involving scholars working on the Muslim-Jewish Encounter study funded by the Open Research Area (ORA) for the Social Sciences. This joint research project explores intercultural, interethnic and interreligious encounters as exemplified by Jews and Muslims in urban Europe; focusing on France, Germany and the UK, countries which on the face of it have followed different models of framing majority-minority relations, creating ideal conditions for a comparative study of the possibilities of living together in European cities. Although previous academic studies indicate that negative attitudes to Jews and to Muslims correlate with each other in wider society, current public discourse has instead emphasised growing antagonism between them, relating to events in the Middle East and to the rise of Islamist terror and its counteraction. However, there is ethnographic evidence that relations in urban neighbourhoods are often more complex: everyday commercial exchange, cultural traffic within music and arts scenes, spontaneous and institutionalised interfaith initiatives, nostalgic attempts to retrieve periods of conviviality, and banal contact in the street are among the many forms these relations can take. The proposed panel will bring together researchers working on the project who will present and put in a comparative perspective initial findings from their ethnographic studies in different cities in France, Germany and the UK.

 

 

Religious Discourses in Saudi Arabia and the UAE

Lecture Theatre G03

Chair: David Warren (Washington University in St. Louis) 

Usaama al-Azami (University of Oxford)  Islamic Autocracy as Political Theology: Abdullah Bin Bayyah's Theory of Autocracy

David  Warren (Washington University in St. Louis) “Tolerance is Lived and Practiced Here”: The Politics of Interfaith Dialogue in the United Arab Emirates

Arif Rabbani  (SOAS University of London) Criticisms of child marriage in Islam and contemporary legal reforms: The case of Saudi Arabia and Malaysia

  

Mapping Sufi Trajectories: From the Late Ottoman Empire to Republican Turkey

Room G05

Chair: Ezgi Guner (University of Edinburgh)

Eda Güçlü (Ludwig-Maximilians University) Mapping the Memoirs of Aşçı İbrahim Dede: A Spatial Reading

Feyza Burak-Adli (Northwestern University) “We belong neither to that nor this/Yet we belong both to that and this:” Sufi Sheikh Kenan Rifai, Modernity and Class in Turkey

Çiçek İlengiz (Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity) Sensing Sufi Love: Inheriting Mevlana Celaleddin Rumi

 

Diachronic Studies in Islamic Law, Ethics, and Legal Theory

Room G06

Chair: Jaan Islam (University of Edinburgh)

Samira Musleh (University of Minnesota - Twin Cities) Materialist Feminism, Premodern Marital Economy, and Islamic Ethics of Labor

Ataul Khabir (Cambridge University) A reconstruction of al-Ghazālī’s attempt to extend of the Divine Law

Adam Ramadhan (University of Oxford/Al-Mahdi Institute) Qāʿidat al-injibār: Rehabilitating Weak Traditions in Imāmī uṣūl al-fiqh

  

11:00 – 11.30: Refreshments

 

11.30 – 13:00: Panel Session 5

 

Muslims in Minority Contexts: Integration, Securitisation and Belonging

Room G01

Chair: Alyaa Ebbiary (University of Durham)

Adam Possamai (Western Sydney University) Hyper-securitisation and Belonging: Understanding the Plight of Young Muslims in Australia

Emine Turkoglu (Helsinki University) Integration Aspirations and Realities of the Gulen Movement Members in Finland

Mahmud Bin Sayeed (University of Warwick) Exploring the Teaching of Arabic in Three Independent Muslim Secondary Schools in the UK: An Empirical Enquiry

 

Islamicate Perspectives on Nation, Identity and the Other

Room G02

Chair: Hugh Goddard (University of Edinburgh)

Doga Ozturk (Independent Scholar) Resisting Orientalism by “Domesticating” the Orient: Fatma Aliye’s Namdaran-ı Zenan-ı İslamiyan

Sarah Copsey Alsader (University of Kent) Discourses of Islam in British Romantic Poetry

Dogukan Atmaca (UCL) Reshaping Ottoman Constantinople with Confessionalization

Nasser AlFalasi (University of Edinburgh) ‘Abd Allāh ibn al-Muqaffa‘ and his  administrative legacy

 

(De)colonial Perspectives Across Time

Lecture Theatre G03

Chair: Ali Kassem (University of Edinburgh)

Ibrahim Khan (University of Chicago) Rethinking Indian Muslim Nationalism: Husain Ahmad Madani’s Composite Nationalism as Anti-Colonialism

Gehad Hasanin (University of Oxford) The Orient’s Colonial Wounds: Engaging Decolonial Theory Through Maḥmūd Moḥammad Shākir’s Critique of Orientalism

Nagat Emara (Humboldt University) The Transformation of the concept of umma in the Age of Nationalism: A study of al-Marsafi's 1881 Risalat al-Kalim al-Thaman

 

The Dynamics of Sunni-Shi‘a relations in Europe

Room G05

Chair: Elvire Corboz (University of Edinburgh)

Olav Elgvin (University of Bergen) For the Greater Good: Common Goals and Institutional Sunni-Shi‘a Cooperation in Norway

Teemu Pauha (University of Helsinki) Mut‘a marriage, online boundary-work, and the social psychology of Sunni-Shi‘a relations

Elvire Corboz (University of Edinburgh) From the margins to the centre: Shi‘a-led grassroots organisations and the shaping of an inclusive Muslim identity in Britain (Co-authored with Emanuelle Degli-Esposti, University of Cambridge)

 

Heroes and Villains on the Move: How Stories of the Revered and Reviled Cross Cultural and Linguistic Boundaries

Room G06

Chair: Lucy Deacon (University of Edinburgh) 

Sarah Slingluff (University of Edinburgh) The ‘Hero Takes a Fall’? Questioning Dominant Narratives of Mūsā ibn Nuṣayr’s Corruption in Andalusi History

Kieran Hagan (University of Edinburgh) The Medieval Armenian Popular Image of Muhammad

Jaakko Hameen-Anttila (University of Edinburgh) Old heroes meet new ones: Encounters of Rustam and Ali and the Islamic identity of Iran

Lucy Deacon (University of Edinburgh) Karbala on Stage: Retelling the Martyrdom of Imam Husain in the Iranian Taʿziyeh

 

13.00 – 14.00: Lunch

 

14.00 – 15.30: Panel Session 6

 

Maps, Manuscripts and Material Culture

Room G01

Chair: Fozia Bora (University of Leeds)

Noha Hussein (Nottingham Trent University) Encountering Modernity: Quranic Epigraphy in Contemporary Mosque Architecture in the West

Sainulabdeen Mohammed Thameem (University of Birmingham) Medieval Sri Lanka in the Eyes of Andalusian Geographer Al-Bakrī (1014-1094)

Saeko Yazaki (University of Glasgow) The Islamic Manuscript Collection of A.S. Yahuda in Princeton University Library: A History of Acquisition

Asli Altinisik (Free University of Berlin) Lebaneseness and Private Capital at the National Museum of Beirut

 

Islamic Law in Historical Contexts

Room G02

Chair: Noorhaidi Hasan (Universitas Islam Internasional Indonesia) 

Grant  Kynaston (University of Cambridge) Conceptions of Islamic Law in the Colonial Court Practice of the Netherlands-Indies, 1848-1867

Ismail  Noyan (Simon Fraser University) Mecelle as the Product of Global Islamic Networks

Muhammad Almarakeby (International Islamic University of Indonesia) Neither Quiescent nor Rebellious: Legal Obligation in the Time of Necessity

 

Shiism: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives

Lecture Theatre G03

Chair: Elvire Corboz (University of Edinburgh)

Oliver Scharbrodt (Lund University) Contesting Ritual Practices in Twelver Shiism: Modernism, Sectarianism and the Politics of Self-Flagellation (taṭbīr)

Faezeh Izadi (University of Calgary) Religion in the face of the modern world: A case study of Radical Life Extension and Shia Islam

Muhammad Tajri (Al-Mahdi Institute) Evolution of Shīʿī Taqlīd on UK University Campuses

Murtaza Shakir (Aljamea-tus-Saifiyah) The Beseeched Burial: Reflections on the Historical Events Associated with the Shrine of Al-Sayyida Nafīsa in Cairo

 

Revisiting Hadith Literature: Attribution, Authority and Editorship

Room G05

Chair: Haroon Sidat (Cardiff University)

Shahin Machinchery (Universität Erfurt) Application of Takhrij as a tool: On the origin and the reliability of Isra’iliyyat of Wahab b Munabbih.

Ahmed Ragab AbuZayd (The University of Wales TSD) The Impact of Editors on Moral Hadith Classification in both Print and Digital Forms of Al-Adab Al-Mufrad

Mostafa Movahedifar (University of Birmingham) An Isnād-analytical Method: A Reconsideration of the Origin of Ismuhū Ismī Ḥadīth

 

Muslim Societies in (Post)Colonial Contexts

Chair: Usaama al-Azami

Room G06

Ali Kassem (University of Edinburgh) Anti-Muslim Hate on the Eastern Shores of the Mediterranean: Coloniality, Racialisation, and the post-colonial nation-state

Bakir S. Mohammad (University of Glasgow) From a Muḥaddith to a National Religious Figure: Badr al-Dīn al-Ḥasanī’s role in Syria’s Grand Revolt

 

15.30 – 16.00: Coffee/Tea 

 

16.30 – 18.00: Closing Keynote

 

Fatima Manji

Hidden Heritage: Rediscovering Britain's Lost Love of the Orient

UPDATE: Unfortunately Fatima is not well and unable to travel to Edinburgh. Our closing keynote has therefore been cancelled.

We will instead be hosting an extended refreshment and networking session from 15.30 - 17.00.                   

19.00 - 21.00: Evening Event (registration required)

 

Sema: Movements of the Soul and Sound

Univrsity of Eidnburgh Chaplaincy, 1 Bristo Pl, Edinburgh EH8 9AL

Delegates staying in Edinburgh on the Tuesday evening are warmly invite to a special performance bringing together Turkish and North African Sufi music and practice and organised by the Alwaleed Centre.

Refreshments served from 19.00 event begins at 19.30.

Further information and registration: https://souldandsound.eventbrite.co.uk

 

 

Annual Conference of the British Association for Islamic Studies

Monday 18th-Tuesday 19th May 2026

Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations (the Aga Khan University) & 
The Institute for Ismaili Studies

10 Handyside Street, London, N1C 4DN

 

Conference Programme

The British Association for Islamic Studies is delighted to be returning to the Aga Khan University's Institute for the Study of Muslims Civilisations and The Institute of Ismaili Studies at the Aga Khan Centre, London, for its 2026 Annual Conference on 18 & 19 May 2026. 

Below you will find the provisional conference programme. Please be aware that the programme is likely to change in the months leading up to our conference. 

To view the programme with all paper abstracts CLICK HERE.

 

Day 1: Monday 18 May 2026

 

10.00 - 10.10: Words of Welcome (ACR)

 

Fozia Bora (University of Leeds, Chair of the British Association for Islamic Studies) and Jonas Otterbeck (ISMC). 

 

10.10 - 11.20: Opening Keynote (ACR)

 

Professor Ovamir Anjum (University of Toledo) 

'Managing Deep Differences: Notes on an Ummatic Political Theory'

Chair: Dr Hadiza Kere Abdulrahman (University of Lincoln)

 

11.20-11.30: BRAIS Prize in the Study of Islam and the Muslim World Announcement (ACR)

  

11:30-12:00: Refreshments

 

12.00-13.30: Panel Session 1   

 

Akhbārī Knowledge and the Reconfiguration of Shiʿi Scholarship in Late Safavid Iran (Room 219)

Chair: Majid Montazer Mahdi (Institute of Ismaili Studies)

Robert Gleave (University of Exeter) Safavid Akhbārī ḥadīth commentary: Muḥammad Taqī al-Majlisī’s Lawāmiʿ Ṣāhibqirānī 

Majid Montazer Mahdi (Institute of Ismaili Studies) Writing the Self into Tradition: al-Ḥurr al-ʿĀmilī and the Politics of Scholarly Memory 

Zahra Jafari (University of Exeter) Late Safavid Akhbārī Reorientation: Shaykh Yūsuf al-Baḥrānī’s Legal Legacy

 

Lived Islam in Britain: Welfare, Solidarity, and Spiritual Experience (Room 216)

Chair: Jorgen Neilsen (University of Birmingham)

Hanan Basher (Cardiff University) Qur'anic Approaches to Spiritual Care by Muslim Chaplaincy in British Higher Education 

Muhammad Nabil (SOAS) Britain's First Muslim Burial Fund: Archival Narratives of Migration, Civil Society and Welfare 

Muthanna Saari (University of Sussex) Zakat and the moral economy: Ethic of care, social solidarity and the aspiration for a good life 

Ruqaiah Al-Kabab (University of Salford) Young Arab Muslim Adults' Lived Spiritual Experience with Allah while studying in the UK: An integrated research methodology 

 

Gender, Power, and Interpretation in Islamic History and Thought (Room 220)

Chair: Karen Bauer (The Institute of Ismaili Studies) 

Majideh Qazizadeh (University of Exeter) Women, Myth, and the Gendering of Chess in Islamicate Literature 

Laila Halani (The Institute of Ismaili Studies) Female empowerment: 'Khoja' and Momin engagement with their Aga Khan III's vision as reflected in the community's Rules (1905-1950s) 

Qudsia Mirza (University of East London) Beyond Text and Tradition: Women's Interpretive Interventions in Modern Islamic Law 

 

Transmission of Knowledge and Classifications of the Sciences Across Islamicate Cultures (Room 215)

Chair: Petra Schmidl (FAU Erlangen-Nuernberg) 

Godefroid de Callatay (UCLouvain) The Ikhwān al-Ṣafā’s classification of the sciences: an overview of its diffusion and reception over the ages and cultures 

Laura Tribuzio (UC Louvain) Marks of Power, Traces of Knowledge: Ottoman Manuscripts of the Mujmal al-Ḥikma and the Brethren of Purity 

Ahmed Tahir Nur (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona) From Alexandria to Baghdad to Istanbul: Tracing an Influential Framing of Knowledge 

Razieh Mousavi (FAU Erlangen-Nuernberg) Unity in Diversity: Numbers and the Synthesis of Knowledge in a Safavid Classification of Sciences 

 

Beyond Historiography: Alternative Sources for Early and Medieval Islamic History (Room 221)

Chair: Adam Ramadhan (Leiden University)

Leone Pecorini Goodall (Leiden University) Identifying and investigating maternal kinship ties in Umayyad and Alid panegyric 

Aliya Abdulkadir Ali (University of Cambridge) Imagining and Erasing: Women’s Political Roles in Early Islamic Genealogical and Narrative Traditions 

Aslisho Qurboniev (Institute of Ismaili Studies) Using Fatimid ‘propaganda’ as a historical source 

Clement Salah (University of Oxford) Manuscripts and Mālikī Scholarship: The Kairouan Collection as an Alternative Source for Early Islamic History 

 

East African Muslim sojourners in colonial Britain: Archaeology, anthropology and the (counter) archive of Bradford's 1904 Somali Village (ACR)

Chair: Fozia Bora (University of Leeds) 
 
The Somali Village in Colonial Bradford project investigates the largely buried and significantly overlooked history of the 1904 Great Exhibition in the West Yorkshire city of Bradford, within which a key attraction was a ‘Somali Village’. Around 57 Somali men, women and children travelled to Bradford from Somalia via France to live in a recreated village in Lister Park and perform daily cultural activities for visitors. The Village was a great success in terms of attracting visitors and commentary in the local press, yet its memory has been almost entirely erased from public consciousness. Led by a team of researchers based the UK and in Europe, our Somali-led project aims to reclaim this history by centering Somali voices, uncovering archives, and challenging British and European colonial perspectives, engaging the contemporary Somali diaspora and local culture for a co-curated reinterpretation of this colonial-era ethnographic display. 
 
Fozia Bora (University of Leeds) Local and global resonances of counter-archival research on Bradford's Somali Village of 1904
 
Christopher Gaffney (University of Bradford) Uncovering the 1904 Bradford Exhibition
 
Abira Hussain (UCL) The zoological framing of Somali subjects
 
Yahya Birt (Everyday Muslim) The Problem with Agency in the Völkershauen: The Case of Bradford's Somali Village in 1904

 

13.30-14.30: Lunch

  

14.30-16.00: Panel Session 2 

 

Ijtihād, Ethics, and Islamic Legal Theory Across Time (Room 219)

Chair: Mohammad Rasekh (Institute of Ismaili Studies) 

Ali-Reza Bhojani (University of Birmingham) Ijtihād and plurality: theorising difference from theology to law and ethics 

John Burden (University of Chicago) After Ijtihād: Imām al-Ḥaramayn al-Juwaynī and the Emergence of the Qāʿida Fiqhiyya 

Alexandre Caeiro (Hamad Bin Khalifa University) Social Critique in Modern Hadith Commentary: A Study of the Doha Sharia Judge Aḥmad b. Ḥajar Āl Būṭāmī al-Bin‘alī’s 1981 Kabā’ir Text 

 

Al-Bukhārī: Islam’s Foremost Traditionist (Room 221)

Chair: Rob Gleave (University of Exeter) 

Belal Alabbas (Cambridge Muslim College/University of Bristol), Jon Hoover (University of Nottingham), Omar Anchassi (University of Bern) and Ramon Harvey (Cambridge Muslim College) will discuss Dr Alabbas’s new book ‘Al-Bukhārī: The Life, Theology and Legal Thought of Islam’s Foremost Traditionist’. 

 

Infrastructures of Care, Charity and Constraint: Islamic Authority from the Humanitarian Sphere to the Household (Room 215)

Chair: Justin Jones (University of Oxford)

Emma Tomalin (University of Leeds) Beyond Tangibles: Muslim Local Faith Actors and the Intangible Work of Post-Conflict Development in Mindanao 

Sandra Pertek (University of Birmingham) Developing Islamic ethico-legal framework toward women’s protection in forced displacement 

Muhammad Nabil (SOAS) British Muslim Charities: Contemporary Manifestations of Canons and Traditions 

Muhammad Faisal Khalil (University of Oxford) Fractal Sovereignty and Rent Registers in the Muslim Household: Clerical Fief-holders from Marriage to Death

 

Transregional Sufism: Ontology, Ritual, and Reform from the 13th Century to the Present (Room 220)

Chair: Walid Ghali (AKU-ISMC) 

Sepideh Afrashteh (Ryukoku University) The Ontology of the Human Being in Rūmī’s Mathnawī in Light of Ibn ʿArabī’s Metaphysical Thought 

Fitzroy Morrissey (University of Oxford) Ibn ʿArabī’s treatment of samāʿ in al-Futūḥāt al-makkiyyah 

Tom Woerner-Powell (University of Manchester) Yataqarrabu ilayi bilnawāfili: Ethics of Supererogation and Sufi Social Activism

 

New Approaches to Shiʿi Hadith (ACR)

Chair: George Warner (Institute of Ismaili Studies)

Zarangez Karimova (Institute of Ismaili Studies) Inside al-Wāfī: Epistemology and Ontology in Fayḍ al-Kāshānī's Compendium 

Stephen Burge (Institute of Ismaili Studies) Fasting in al-Kulaynī’s Furūʿ al-Kāfī: A Structural Analysis 

Hasan Al-Khoee (Institute of Ismaili Studies) The Traditions of the Imams as Historiographical Correctives in Early Shiʿi Literature 

George Warner (Institute of Ismaili Studies) ‘Our Speech Is Difficult’: Conceptualising the Speech of ʿAlī in Early Commentaries on Nahj al-balāgha 

 

16.00-16.30: Refreshments

 

16.30-18.00: Panel Session 3 

 

Beyond Boundaries: Examining Cross-Communal Interactions in Early and Medieval Islam (ACR)

Chair: Leone Pecorini Goodall (Leiden University)

Kyle Longworth (Leiden University) Does Class Transcend Community? The Economic Backgrounds of Muslim and Non-Muslim Administrators during the Umayyad Caliphate (ca. 661–750) 

Adam Ramadhan (Leiden University) Congregational Prayer and Communal Boundaries in the Early Imāmī Community 

Yi-Chia Chang (University of Edinburgh) Crossing Communal Knowledge Boundaries: The Transmission and Reception of Yaḥyā b. Sallām al-Baṣrī’s Tafsīr in the Early Islamic West

Clara Pitocchi (University of Oxford) Legal Confusion or Legal Pluralism? A Draft Inheritance Query to Muslim Jurists from the Cairo Geniza 

 

Islam, Knowledge, and Narrative in Contemporary Culture (Room 220)

Chair: Uzair Ibrahim (University of Exeter) 

Silke Ackermann (Oxford University, History of Science Museum) What do we mean by "Islamic Science" in Museums? 

Jonas Otterbeck (Aga Khan University, ISMC) Cubism is Divine: Rasheed Araeen's universalism and rebuttal of Eurocentric art history 

Usaama Al-Azami (Hamad Bin Khalifa University) “Liberalizing Islamism” in the Post-Arab Spring Moment: The Case of Jasser Auda 

 

Reconfiguring “Reality”, Authority, and Political Theology in Contemporary Muslim Thought: Fiqh al-Wāqiʿ, Post-Salafism, and the Politics of Islamic Renewal (Room 221)

Chair: Besnik Sinani (Tubingen University) 

Besnik Sinani (Tubingen University) Post-Salafism: Religious Revisionism and Political Transformation in Contemporary Muslim Thought 

Rezart Beka (Hamad Bin Khalifa University) Theorizing Reality in Contemporary Islamic Thought: The Case of Scholars of Fiqh al-Wāqiʿ 

Ermin Sinanovic (Shenandoah University) Embedded Islamism: Evidence from Southeast Asia

 

Towards a “Barbados-to-Bengal” Complex? Rethinking the Scales of Global Islam through Latin America and the Caribbean (Room 219)

Chair: Ken Chitwood (Universität Bayreuth)

This roundtable proposes a “Barbados-to-Bengal Complex” as both an extension and critique of Shahab Ahmed’s  “Balkans-to-Bengal Complex.” Ahmed mapped a vast post-Mongol, Afro-Eurasian zone—stretching from Southeast Europe through Anatolia, Iran, Central Asia, and the Indian subcontinent—held together by shared concepts, Sufi-inflected practices, circulating texts, and entangled histories. While his formulation, which foregrounded the movement of people, ideas, texts, and devotional forms, challenged Eurocentric divisions and disciplinary silos, its geographic concentration inadvertently reinforced the marginalization of histories and contemporary formations beyond Afro-Eurasia. Specifically, this roundtable discusses an agenda for theorizing global Islam in ways that are not merely geographically expanded but conceptually re-scaled. It positions the Americas as integral, rather than peripheral, to understanding Islamic belonging, circulation, and religious formation in a globalised world. 

Participants:

Kholoud Al-Ajarma (University of Edinburgh)

Ken Chitwood (Universität Bayreuth)

Mark Lindley-Highfield of Ballumbie Castle (University of the Highlands and Islands, Inverness) 

 

Negotiating Muslimness: Gender, Law, Media, and Power in Global Context (Room 215)

Chair: Aneeq Ejaz (University of Texas at Austin) 

Sumeera Hassan (University of Helsinki) Scripturalist Micro-Authority Online: Clip Culture and the Negotiation of Kinship Ethics in the Finnish-Pakistani Diaspora

Gianluca Parolin (Aga Khan University, ISMC) Nitṭallaʾ? Redefining Agency in Divorce on Egyptian Screens: Intersections of Gender and Class in Islamic Law and the Humanities 

Nafisa Kianni (University of East London) An intersectional analysis of British Muslim women’s political experiences during the process of selection, election and operation of the work environment

 

18.00-19.00: Reception hosted by the Aga Khan University's Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations (Atrium)

 

18.30-19.30: Special Panel: Advice for Postgraduate and Early Career Researchers in Islamic Studies (ACR)

BRAIS is committed to supporting Postgraduate and Early Career Researchers as part of its focus on Equality, Diversity and Inclusion in Islamic Studies. In doing so, BRAIS aims to create an academic community that is both open and inclusive for those who are not yet established in their fields. This panel gathers a range of scholars who will share advice and experiences as part of our initiative to support the development of the next generation of scholars across the many sub-disciplines of Islamic studies.

Chair: Alyaa Ebbiary (Lancaster University/ BRAIS EDI Officer) How to market yourself as an ECR in a corporatising HE sector

Omar Anchassi (University of Bern) Perspectives from the front lines of the academic job market 
 
Iman Dawood (LSE) Challenges of post-doctoral life, motherhood, and being an international student in the UK university sector 

Rob Gleave (Exeter University) Large research projects and recruiting postdocs

 

Day 2: Tuesday 19 May  

 

10.00-11.30: Panel Session 4 

 

Law, Authority, and Reform in the Late Ottoman Empire (Room 220)

Chair: Tom Woener-Powell (University of MAnchester)

Hamdi Çilingir (Sakarya University) and Şerife Eroğlu Memiş (Ankara Hacı Bayram Veli University) Between State Interest and Waqf Interest: The Council of State (Şûrâ-yı Devlet) and Ottoman Interventions in Waqfs, 1868–1908 

Ismail Noyan (Simon Fraser University) Towards a More Connected History of the Mecelle: Islamic Law, Codification, and Transimperial Networks Beyond Istanbul 

Bilal Taşkın (Istanbul Medeniyet University) Layers of Reality in Late Ottoman Thought: Ismā‘īl al-Galanbawī’s Theory of Nefs al-Amr 

 

From Creed to Currency: Islamic Legal and Ethical Reasoning Across Time and Space (Room 215)

Chair: Ali-Reza Bhojani (University of Birmingham) 

Camelia Garchi (Ez-zitouna University) Shari'ah Compliance or Islamic Moral Economy? Operationalising Ibn Ashur's Maqasid via sustainability 

Kadir Gombeyaz (Kocaeli University) The First (?) Commentary on al-Fiqh al-Akbar Written in Mamluk Egypt: Ahmad b. Sayf al-Din b. Fakhr al-Din al-Nasafi and His Sharh al-Fiqh al-Akbar 

Syed Muhammad Bilal Zaidi (LUMS) When "Principal" Loses Meaning: Ribā, Fiat Money, and the Ethics of Obligation 

 

Between Tradition and Nation in East and Southeast Asian Islam (Room 219)

Chair: Ermin Sinanovic (Shenandoah University) 

Adele Cozzani (University of Naples) Islamic education in China during the Ming-Qing era: an introduction to Jingtang Jiaoyu, the Chinese Islamic educational system 

Trang Nguyen Quynh (VNU University of Social Sciences and Humanities) The Philosophy of “Purification” in Shiʿa Theology and Its Localization through the Roja Ritual of the Cham Bani Community in Vietnam 

Irfan Sarhindi (University of Oxford) Between Pancasila and Caliphate: Muslim Students Making Sense of Political Standpoints in Indonesia's Post-Digital Education 

Tingting Zhong (University of St Andrews) A Mainland Hui Muslim on the Periphery: Naming "Self" and "Other" in Ma Jianfu's Zaichang de Xinyang 

 

Islam in Contemporary Europe: Faith, Migration, and Governance (Room 221)

Chair: Alyaa Ebbiary (Lancaster University)

Martin Eidrup (University of Gothenburg) and Goran Larsson (University of Gothenburg) Regulating Islam Through Democracy Criteria: A Comparison of Swedish and Belgian Legislation 2015-2025 

Egdunas Racius (Vytautas Magnus University) and Katarzyna Gorak-Sosnowska (Warsaw School of Economics) Migration of Central and Eastern European convert Muslims to the MENA region: between religious obligation (of hijra) and utility 

Daniel Vékony (Corvinus University of Budapest) Rejecting “bad Muslims”: The selective nature of Central European migration policies and image construction of Muslims in the context regular and irregular migration 

 

Hermeneutics in Motion: Ethics, Mysticism, and Moral Consciousness in the Qurʾān (ACR)

Chair: Ahmed Tahir Nur (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona)

Sheam Abdul Aziz Khan (Cardiff University) Before the Pen Touches the Page: The Qur'an as Read by its Translators - A Study of Contextual Determinants in the Hermeneutics of Qur'anic Translation 

Shabnaz Khan (Institute of Ismaili Studies) Between Text and Practice: Testimonial Inequality, Qurʾānic Verse 2:282, and It's Legal Application in Pakistan  

Abdud Dayyan Mohammad Younus (University of Birmingham) Mystical Ways of Knowing and Hermeneutical Coherence in Tafsīr al-Mahāʾimī 

  

11:30-12:00: Refreshments

 

12.00-13.30: Panel Session 5   

 

Muslim Women at the Intersection of Theology and the State (221)

Chair: Laila Halani (Institute of Ismaili Studies) 

Whitney Buchanan (University of Edinburgh) Progressive Muslimah Leaders' Engagement with Political Muslim Advocacy in the United States and Germany 

Anika Kabani (University of Oxford) Islam as Explanation, Secularity as Requirement: The predicament of Muslim women asylum seekers in the U.S. 

Fatimah Aidara (Independent Researcher) Rābiʿah Reimagined: Divine Love and Poetic Longing in Contemporary Expressions of Tasawwuf 

Thulfekar Ali (University of Glasgow) Which Eve, Which Women? Creation Narratives and the Making of Women’s Status in Islamic Thought 

 

Islam in Conversation: Textual, Theological, and Religious Boundaries (Room 215)

Chair: Clara Pitocchi (University of Oxford)

Marina Pyrovolaki (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki) Jesus as Word and Spirit in the Qur'an: Reframing Christology after Nicaea 

Martin Whittingham (Centre for Muslim-Christian Studies Oxford and Regent's Park College, Oxford) Muḥammad ʿAbduh and Rashīd Riḍā on the Bible 

Yasmin Ilkhani (AKU ISMC) The Inversion of Death Pollution in a Contemporary Zoroastrian Cemetery in Yazd, Iran 

 

Islam, Authority, and Society in the Contemporary Gulf (Room 220)

Chair: Tom Lea (University of Edinburgh)

Fatima  Elhag (University of Oxford) Family Law in the Gulf: Gender Dynamics, Litigants' Strategies, and Socio-Legal Analysis of Qatar's Judicial Rulings 

Philippe Thalmann (University of Cambridge) Prophetic Landscapes: Salafi lives in post-oil Saudi Arabia 

Daniel Miller (University of Oxford) "Occupying the Holy Lands of Islam": Intra-Wahhabi Contestation over Non-Muslim Intervention in the Gulf War 

 

Islam, Secularism, and Political Authority (Room ACR)

Chair: Tom Woener-Powell (University of Manchester)

Umar Shareef (Georgetown University) Revisiting the Islamic Secular 

Yahaya Halidu (The University of Texas at Austin) Islam, Modernity & The Crises of Secular Ideologies in Ghana 

Dietrich Reetz (Leibniz Zentrum Moderner Orient) Religious Governance and Socialist Ideals: Barkatullah's Pamphlet on "Islam and Socialist Body-Politic" in 1919 

Aneeq Ejaz (University of Texas at Austin) Sacralized Words, Enshrined Body: Pakistan's Founding Father between Scriptural Religion and Sacred Kingship    

 

Prophethood, Polemic, and Metaphysics in Sunni Kalām (Room 219)

Chair: Stephen Burge (Institute of Ismaili Studies) 

Navid Chizari (Ibn Haldun University) The Rational Necessity of Prophethood in Classical Muslim Thought 

Ramon Harvey (Cambridge Muslim College) The Jagged Reed Pen Cuts Sharply: On al-Māturīdī's Lampoons of al-Kaʿbī 

Robbie Hoque (University of London) Cognitive Psychology and a Taymiyyan framework for a theory of divine mind. 

Davide Ravazzoni (University of Groningen) What Equals the Thing in the Souls: Ibn Taymiyya on Desire and Just Price in Commercial Exchange 

 

13.30-14.30: Lunch

  

14.30-16.00: Panel Session 6 

 

From Page to World: Materiality and Meaning in Arabic Manuscripts (Room 221)

Chair: Aslisho Qurboniev (Institute of Ismaili Studies) 

Sarah Bowen Savant, Mathew Barber, Lorenz Nigst, Masoumeh Seydi, and Peter Verkinderen  (AKU-ISMC): KITAB-Transform – Transforming the Story of the Arabic Book, 700–1800 

Jonas Burkhard (Yale University) The Many Lives of the Most Popular Arabic Manuscript World Map: Ibn al-Wardī's (d. 1457) Kharīdat al-ʿAjāʾib wa-Farīdat al-Gharāʾib 

Ahmad Arif Zulkefli (International Islamic University Malaysia) The Importance of Codicological Evidence in African Islamic Manuscript Traditions: A Case Study of Taqyīd fī Bayān Wazn al-Aʿmāl by Aḥmad ibn Mubārak al-Sijilmāsī (d. 1156/1743) 

 

Theology at the Limits of Reason: From Post-Classical Debates to AI (Room 220)

Chair: Mansur Ali (Cardiff University)

Amir Mohammad Emami (University of Exeter) Beyond Conception: Mīrzā Mahdī Iṣfahānī’s Critique of Conceptualising God in Islamic Philosophical Theology 

Azad Raouf Qazaz (KU Leuven) Zeroness (al-ṣifrāniyya) beyond Oneness (al-waḥdāniyya): A New Metaphor for Divine Transcendence 

Sofia Tsourlaki (SOAS) Islamic Liberation Theology in the Digital Age: Critical Reasoning, and AI-Mediated Religious Engagement.    

  

Exploring Qurʾānic Meaning: Stylistic and Theological Perspectives (Room 215)

Chair: Fozia Bora (University of Leeds)

Saf Chowdhury (Cambridge Muslim College) Balancing Revelation and Application: An Analysis of Shaykh ʿAlī al-Qaradāghī’s Fiqh al-Mīzān 

Amina Inloes (The Islamic College) Meteors in the Qur'an 

Muhammad Faisal Khalil (University of Oxford) Sūrat al-Baqarah: Redactional Layering or Prophetic Dramaturgy? An Apocalyptic-Stage Stylometric Adjudication 

Saeid Sobhani (Islamic college of London) The Glorification of All Beings in the Qurʾān: A Theological and Philosophical Study of Tasbīḥ 

 

Authority, Community, and Visibility in Shiʿi and Alevi Contexts (Room 219)

Chair: Uzair Ibrahim (Univeristy of Exeter)

Carlos Mendez (University of Edinburgh) The Growing Mediated Visibility of Shi`ism and the (Co)Construction of a Renewed Shi`i Publicness 

Hossein Mousavi (Royal Holloway, University of London)  Were Shi’i Clerics Eurocentric in the 1920s? A Hermeneutic Challenge to the Definition of Eurocentrism in the Social Sciences 

Ufuk Erol (Leibniz Institute of European History) Producing Religious Authority: Sayyid Families, Genealogies and the Making of Alevi Religious Leadership 

 

British Muslim Experiences of Inclusion, Exclusion, and Solidarity (ACR) 

Chair: Haroon Sidat (Cardiff University)

Tasnim Idriss (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam) Islamophobia on Social Media in the UK: Discursive Dynamics and Muslim Responses on X during the 2023 Gaza War 

Iman Dawood (London School of Economics & Political Science) Forging 'Unity' in Times of Peril: British Muslim Activism in the Era of Far-Right Politics 

Muhammed Tajri (Al-Mahdi Institute) The Practitioners' Predicament – Challenges in Caring for Clients on the Shia-LGB Nexus 

Muhammad Abbasi (Royal Holloway University of London) Legal Status of Unregistered Muslim Marriages (Nikāḥ) under English law 

 

16.00-16.30: Refreshments

 

16.30-18.00: Closing Keynote Session

 

Islamic Literary Heritage at the Institute of Ismaili Studies (ACR)

Dr Nourmamadcho Nourmamadchoev and Dr. Karim Javan (Ismaili Special Collections Unit The Institute of Ismaili Studies, London)

An opportunity to view some of the stunning manuscripts held by the Institute for Ismaili Studies with specialist insight from colleagues at the IIS Special Collections Unit.

 

 

 

Annual Conference of the British Association for Islamic Studies

The University of Edinburgh 

Monday 6 - Tuesday 7 June 2022 

Conference Registration

We look forward to welcoming you to the 2022 Annual Conference of the British Association for Islamic Studies on 6th and 7th June 2022.

PLEASE NOTE: Registration for the conference is managed by our hosts at the University of Edinburgh via the University's online payment system,  ePay. 

Further information about delegate fees can be found below.

We are not offering accommodation packages for BRAIS this year due to the wide variety of accommodation options available near the venue. We hope to offer generous discounts on University of Edinburgh accommodation and further information will be available by the end of March 2022.

Become a Member of BRAIS and SAVE ON DELEGATE FEES

Remember, BRAIS members receive significant discounts on conference fees. Although you can attend BRAIS 2022 as a non-member of BRAIS, would therefore suggest you sign-up as a member before registering in order to claim your discounted delegate fee.

To become a member of BRAIS, click HERE

Delegate Fees and Registration:

Delegates can choose to attend the full conference (two days) or just one day. There are three delegate categories to choose from and the costs are outlined below. Delegate fees include lunch + all refreshment during the day.

Full Conference Fees:

Student member of BRAIS: £85 - BOOK HERE

Student non-members + Full/Associate Members of BRAIS: £130 - BOOK HERE

Non-students/non-members of BRAIS: £160 - BOOK HERE

Single Day Fees:

Student member of BRAIS: £50 - BOOK HERE

Student non-members + Full/Associate Members of BRAIS: £75 - BOOK HERE

Non-student/non-members of BRAIS: £90 - BOOK HERE

Any Questions?

If you have any questions at all, please contact the BRAIS 2022 team directly: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..