Curriculum Vitae: Professor Timothy C Niblock
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CURRICULUM VITAE: PROFESSOR TIMOTHY C NIBLOCK Born: Belfast, Northern Ireland, 1942 Nationality: British Education i Leighton Park School, Reading, 1956-61 ii University of Oxford (New College), 1962-65 B.A. in Politics, Philosophy and Economics 'Good' Second iii College d'Europe, Bruges, 1965-66 Certificat des Hautes Etudes Europeenes iv University of Sussex, 1966-69 D.Phil. in International Relations Thesis topic: 'Aid and Foreign Policy in Tanzania' Appointments i Teacher, St Norbert's School, Carshalton, 1961-62 ii Lecturer in Politics, University of Reading, 1969-78 (Seconded to the University of Khartoum, 1969-77) iii Lecturer in Politics and International Relations, University of Khartoum, 1969-76 iv Associate Professor in Politics, University of Khartoum, 1976-77 v Research Fellow and Deputy Director of the Centre for Arab Gulf Studies, University of Exeter, 1978-82 vi Lecturer in Politics and Director M.A. Programme in Middle East Politics, University of Exeter, 1982-1986 vii Senior Lecturer in Middle East Politics and Director, Middle East Politics Programme, 1986-89 and 1991-92 Joint Director, Research Unit for the International Study of Economic Liberalisation and its Social and Political Effects, 1990-93 Director, Graduate School of Political and Administrative Studies, 1992-93, University of Exeter. viii Professor of Middle Eastern Studies, and Director of the Centre for Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies, University of Durham, 1993-9 (Directorship to August 1998) ix Professor of Arab Gulf Studies, 1999- 2008, University of Exeter, and Director of the Institute for Arab and Islamic Studies, 1999-2005 x Emeritus Professor, Chair of the Management Board of the Institute of Arab and Islamic Studies, and Special Adviser to the Vice-Chancellor on the Middle East, University of Exeter, 2008-present. Chairmanship of the Management Board given up in July 2011. Languages In order of fluency after English: Arabic French German Kiswahili A. Research Interests and Awards (a) General description of research interests i. The political economy of Arab and Islamic states, with particular reference to Sudan, Egypt, Iraq, Libya, Saudi Arabia and the smaller Arab states of the Gulf. Specific attention is focused on the social and political effects of economic liberalisation in these states. A book on the political economy of Saudi Arabia was published, The Political Economy of Saudi Arabia, with Monica Malik (Routledge, London, 2007). Earlier, a 6-volume collection of articles was jointly edited with Rodney Wilson, under the overall title The Political Economy of the Middle East (Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, 2000). The wider theoretical framework through which Middle Eastern political economy is approached are those of underdevelopment, the dynamics of rentier state economies, and liberalisation/democratisation theories. ii. The international relations of Middle Eastern states, with particular reference to the interactions between these states and the wider international community. A recent focus has been on the impact of UN sanctions on Iraq, Libya and Sudan, on which a book was written: 'Pariah States' and Sanctions in the Middle East: Iraq, Libya and Sudan (Lynne Rienner, London, 2001). A long- running interest has been on EU policies towards, and relations with, Middle Eastern states. iii. The Gulf and Asia. Up to the present, my publications in this field have been focused mainly on the Gulf and China, but I am now broadening the focus to Gulf relations with Asia as a whole – in particular China, India, Japan, Singapore, South Korea, and Taiwan. Two articles on this topic have already been published: 2 “China’s Growing Involvement in the Gulf”, and “China’s Intensifying Relationship with Saudi Arabia” (with Norafidah Ismail), in Shen, S, and Blanchard, J-M, Multidimensional Diplomacy of Contemporary China (New York: Lexington Books, 2010). iv. Islam and the state: the role of religion in state-building and state- resisting, with particular reference to the Middle East. Also issues of human rights in Islamic perspectives, focusing on the interplay between universalism and cultural relativity. The position of Muslim communities in Europe has recently come within the scope of this research interest, and has encompassed the social, economic and political conditions facing these communities. An edited work on this, jointly with Gerd Nonneman and Bogdan Szajkowski, was published in 1996: Muslim Communities in the New Europe. v. Legitimacy, civil society and political power in the Arab World. A recent book within this sphere is Saudi Arabia: Power, Legitimacy and Survival (Routledge, London, 2006). (b) Research grants since 1985 i Nuffield Foundation, 1985. £11,414 for work on a project entitled 'Class and Power in the Arab World' ii Economic and Social Research Council, 1986. £10,500 for work on a project entitled 'State-building and State-resistance in Islam'. Jointly with Dr N Ayubi iii Diana Tamari Foundation, 1987. £26,000 for salary of a research fellow, to work on the social and political role of Islamic trusts in Palestine iv British Council, 1987. £750 to establish links with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences v Palestine Studies Trust, 1987. £6,000 for further support of the research project mentioned in iii vi Canon Foundation, 1989. £19,000 for work on a project entitled 'The Social and Political Effects of Economic Liberalisation in the Middle East' vii British Academy, 1989. £350 to establish research links with the Academy of Sciences of the German Democratic Republic viii University of Exeter, 1990. £4,500 to establish a Research Unit for the International Study of Economic Liberalisation and its Social and 3 Political Effects. Jointly with Professor S Wilks ix Canon Foundation 1991. £3,000 for a symposium based on the research project mentioned in vi x British Academy, 1991. £450 for further support of ix xi Economic and Social Research Council, 1992. £4,500 for a seminar programme on democratisation and economic liberalisation in the Middle East, Eastern Europe and the Far East xii British Council, 1992. £450 to support a research visit to Egypt xiii European Association for Middle Eastern Studies, 1993. £21,000 to produce a survey of European Middle Eastern studies xiv Economic and Social Research Council, 1993. Approx. £47,200 for a project entitled 'Creating the Basis for Democracy in the Middle East: Conceptions of Citizenship in the Levant' xv Council of Europe, 1993. Approx. £11,000 for research seminars on the political, economic and social role of Muslim minorities/communities in Europe xvi INTAS, Brussels, 1995. £42,000 for joint research with Former Soviet Union scholars on economic and political liberalisation in Central Asia and the Middle East xvii Overseas Development Administration, London, 1996. £198,000 for a socio-economic survey of the Kurdish areas of Iraq (joint with Professor Ewan Anderson). The project ultimately brought in more than £900,000 of funding from the same source xviii European Commission, Marie Curie Awards, 2007. £93,572 for acting as Project Coordinator of a research project on State-Business Relations and Employment Nationalisation in the Persian Gulf B. Teaching (a) Courses taught (all one-year; at least 2 contact hours per week) i International Politics (undergraduate; classes of 20-70) University College, Dar es Salaam, 1967-8 University of Khartoum, 1969-77 University of Reading, 1977-8 University of Exeter, 1983-93 4 ii International Politics (postgraduate; classes of 10-15) University of Khartoum, 1970-73 iii Politics and Government in Africa (undergraduate; classes of 50-100) University of Khartoum, 1969-77 iv Middle East Politics (undergraduate; classes of 10-35) University of Reading, 1977-8 University of Exeter, 1979-93 University of Durham, 1993-99 v Contemporary History of the Middle East (undergraduate, classes of 5-30) University of Durham, 1993-9 University of Exeter, 1999-2005 vi Politics and International Relations of the Middle East (postgraduate; classes of 7-20) University of Khartoum, 1975-7 University of Exeter, 1982-93 University of Durham, 1993-99 University of Exeter, 1999-2005 vii Political Economy of the Middle East (postgraduate; classes of 7-20) University of Exeter, 1983-4 and 1991-3 University of Durham, 1993-99 viii Research Methodology (postgraduate; classes of c.10) University of Exeter, 1999-2008 ix Theory and Practice of Socialism (undergraduate; classes of 30-60) University of Khartoum, 1973-5 x Comparative Politics (undergraduate; classes of 30-100) University of Khartoum, 1972-7 University of Reading, 1977-8 xi Dissertation supervision (MA; 5-10 per year; undergraduate c.5 per year at Durham) University of Exeter, 1982-93 University of Durham, 1993-9 University of Exeter, 1999-2008 (b) Teaching innovations i Design and introduction of a Diploma in International Relations, University of Khartoum 1970, for the training of Sudanese diplomats ii Design and introduction of an MA in Middle East Politics, University 5 of Exeter 1982 iii Design and introduction of a Doctoral Programme in Middle East Politics, University of Exeter 1987 iv Design and introduction of an MA in Middle East Politics, University of Durham 1993 v Structuring of a set of MA programmes, University of Durham, 1994-6 vi Design and introduction of a BA in Politics and History of the Middle East, University of Durham, 1996 vii Structuring of a BA in Islamic Studies, University of Durham, 1997 viii Structuring of 5 new undergraduate degree programmes in Arabic Studies,