Ali Riaz

Ali Riaz (Bengali আলী রীয়াজ, born 3 April 1958) is an American political scientist and writer of Bangladeshi origins. He is a Professor of Illinois State University and was previously a Senior Broadcast journalist at BBC World Service. Most of his work deals with religion and politics, particularly on South Asian politics and political Islam.[1] He has written extensively on Bangladeshi politics and madrasas in South Asia. He was the editor of Studies on Asia, a bi-annual journal of the Midwestern Conference on Asian Affairs (2010-2015). He was also a public policy scholar at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars at Washington DC during the Fall of 2013.[2]

Early life

Riaz was born in Dhaka, Bangladesh to Mohabbat Ali, a senior public servant and Bilkis Ara. He earned his baccalaureate and Master's degree in Mass Communication and Journalism from the University of Dhaka in 1981 and 1983, respectively. He was awarded a graduate student fellowship at the East West Center at Honolulu, Hawaii in 1987, where he earned master's degrees in communication (1989) and in political science (1991) under the EWC fellowship from the University of Hawaii. He completed his Doctor of Philosophy in political science in 1993 on civil-military relationship in Bangladesh. His study offers a structural-historical interpretation of the causes of and conditions for the military rule in Bangladesh in its first decade, 1972-1981.

Career

Riaz started his career as a Lecturer at the Department of Mass Communication and Journalism at the University of Dhaka (DU) in 1984 where he served until 1987. Upon completion of his doctoral degree he returned to the DU as a faculty. In 1994, he received the South-Southeast Asia Fellowship of the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies (ISEAS) at Singapore where he studied the role of telecommunication in economic growth in Singapore and Malaysia. Between 1995 and 2000, he was a senior broadcast journalist at the BBC World Service at London. Since then he has taught at University of Lincoln in England, Claflin University at South Carolina, USA and joined the Department of Politics and Government at Illinois State University in 2002. He became professor in 2008 and in 2012 he is named the University Professor.

His works have focused on political Islam and rise of Islamism in Bangladesh. His books God Willing: The Politics of Islamism in Bangladesh (2004) and Islamist Militancy in Bangladesh: A Complex Web (2008) focus on the transformation of a country which was founded on the basis of a secular principle, but forsook its secularist tradition of centuries in less than a decade and embraced Islam as state religion. The political actors, their strategies, and methods of instrumentalization of Islam in the third largest Muslim majority country of the world are indicative of how and why the ideology of Islamism appeals, and how domestic, regional and international events influence the dynamics. The findings that the war in Afghanistan between 1979 and 1989, US foreign policy towards the Middle East, and the fifty year regional rivalry between India and Pakistan facilitated this transformation as much as domestic power jockeying made other analysts take pause before presenting simplistic interpretations such as poverty or Muslim exceptionalism as the causes.

Riaz's seminal work on madrasas in South Asia has drawn attention of academics and policy-makers alike. In post-2001 Riaz challenged the dominant, at times alarmist, literature produced by policy analysts that madrasas (Islamic seminaries) in Muslim societies are “the schools of jihad” and “the breeding grounds of terrorists.” Drawing on the policy documents of the US government, he has demonstrated the shortcomings of US policies towards South Asian madrasas in his book Faithful Education: Madrasahs in South Asia (2008). The book explores the history of these institutions, their role in contemporary society and politics, and relationships with local militancy and transnational terrorism in three countries namely Pakistan, India and Bangladesh. This book also provides probing analysis of the curriculum of institutions, both historical and contemporary. Underscoring the need for reform, this study also maps the way forward for rendering these institutions relevant to future generations and suggests what policy makers of the United States and other countries can do. Riaz has also studied the relationship between state and society and has written extensively on this topic. His co-authored book, Paradise Lost? State Failure in Nepal (2007) examines the relationship in Nepal while his book Unfolding State; The Transformation of Bangladesh (2006) looks at Bangladesh’s structural transformation in the first 25 years. Paradise Lost demonstrates that the nature of the state, disjuncture between the state and the society, and the rupture of the ideological hegemony of the ruling class of Nepal have created a situation where existing institutional frameworks are disintegrating and the state is rapidly unraveling. The study analyzes the roles of ethnicity, identity, and deprivation, in engendering discontent and the rise of the Maoists as a formidable political force.

In addition to more than a dozen books in English he has authored ten books in Bengali. Since 2010 Riaz every month contributes two op-ed commentary in Bengali in leading Bangladeshi daily newspapers The Daily Star[3][4] and Prothom Alo, and frequently writes in leading Bangladeshi news monthly Forum.[5][6] He is frequently interviewed by international media such as the BBC Bengali service, Al-Jazeera,[7] the [VOA] Bengali service, Deutsch Welle radio,[8] International Relations and Security Network (ISN) in Zurich.[9] He served as consultant to various international organizations, such as the Social Science Research Council (SSRC), the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, the United Nations Development Program (UNDP), the Department for International Development (DfID of the United Kingdom), the USAID, Finnish Foreign Ministry and the Bertelsmann Foundation (of Germany). Riaz appeared before congressional commissions to provide expert testimony. On November 20, 2013, Riaz testified before the House Subcommittee on Asia and the Pacific on the political turmoil surrounding the Bangladeshi elections scheduled for January 2014.[10] He testified again on 30 April 2015 before the House Subcommittee on Asia and the Pacific.

Private life

Riaz currently resides in Normal, Illinois with his wife Shagufta Jabeen and his only daughter Ila Sruti.

Bibliography

Selected Books in Bengali

References

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