Arnold Yasin Mol
Guest Contributor
Arnold Yasin Mol is a PhD Candidate in Religious Studies and Islamic Intellectual History at Leiden University. His research focuses on otherization and ethics within Islamic intellectual and exegetical history, with a special focus on the Ottoman tafsīr tradition (working title: The Qurʾān and the Other: Islamic Ethics and the Tafsīr Tradition). He is a research assistant at the Institute for the Revival of Traditional Islamic Sciences (www.IRTIS.org.uk) and studies the traditional Islamic seminary in both the Deoband and Ottoman curriculum. He is Lecturer in Islamic theology and Qurʾānic studies at the Islamic University of Applied Sciences Rotterdam (IUASR, www.Islamiciniversity.nl). He is a Fellow at Yaqeen Institute for Islamic Research (YIIR, www.yaqeeninstitute.org) and a fellow at the British Board of Scholars and Imams (www.BBSI.org.uk). He is the Research Consultant on Religion and Theology of Care at a Dutch healthcare NGO, and is a spiritual care worker in detention-and healthcare settings.
His research focuses on:
- Islamic intellectual history, Islamic theology and philosophy, Ḥanafī-Māturīdīsm
- Islamic exegetical history, Tafsīr studies, and Qurʾānic studies
- Islamic jurisprudence and philosophy of law (uṣūl al-fiqh), Islamic ethics, Islam and human rights discourse
- Islam and political thought, Islamic international law (siyar), Muslim concepts of the Other (Islamic comparative religion, theology of the Other), non-Muslim minority policy (aḥkām al-dhimma, millet system)
- Islamic studies, Ottoman studies, Islam in the west, Muslim minorities, Islamophobia
- Sharīʿa and governance, Muslim minority jurisprudence
- Islamic contemporary thought, and modernist/reformist, and (anti-)extremist movements
- Islamic spiritual care, character and value education
- Religious studies, conversion theory, hermeneutics, epistemology, psychology of religion
- Christianity, Late Antique religions, comparative religion and theology
- Philosophy of religion, theodicy, theology of care, theological anthropology
- Political theology, human rights discourse, (global) ethics, moral philosophy and intellectual history, moral psychology
- Otherization and dehumanization, religion and violence, conflict studies, fundamentalism and cult studies, intellectual history of extremism and totalitarianism, ideological worldview studies, spiritual care and rehabilitation, healthcare rights-based approaches, ethics and CVE policy.