Lama Abu-Odeh
Lama Abu-Odeh (Arabic: لمى أبو عودة) is a Palestinian-American professor and author, who teaches at the Georgetown University Law Center. She has written extensively on Islamic law, feminism, and family law.
Abu-Odeh was born in Amman, Jordan in 1962. She is the daughter of Adnan Abu-Odeh, a former senator in the Jordanian House of Parliament and ambassador.[1] She earned her LL.B. from the University of Jordan, her LL.M. from the University of Bristol, England, her MA from the University of York, England, and her S.J.D. from Harvard University.
She has taught at Stanford Law School and worked for the World Bank's Middle East/North Africa division.
Abu-Odeh has also written on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and has voiced support for a bi-national solution, or the creation of one state in Israel/Palestine. In addition to being a scholar on a multitude of platforms, she discusses greatly the world's political and legal trends as it pertains to Muslims in a post-9/11society. By doing so predominately through the lens of academia while simultaneously critiquing trends within the academy, Abu-Odeh has began multiple discussions on the topic.[2]
References
- ↑ http://justworldnews.org/archives/2006_11.html
- ↑ "Wardman Library databases & journals for off-campus access". www.heinonline.org.ezproxy.whittier.edu. Retrieved 2016-03-05.
- Profile of Lama Abu-Odeh at the Institute for Middle East Understanding
- Georgetown Law Full-Time Faculty Biography
- The Case for Bi-Nationalism: Why one state — liberal and constitutionalist — may be the key to peace in the Middle East, The Boston Review, December 2001-January 2002