- Mai Yamani
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Mai Yamani Born 1956
Cairo, EgyptOccupation Anthropologist, Scholar, Author, Researcher Notable work(s) Visiting scholar at Carnegie Middle East Centre, Beirut, 2008-2009.
Visiting Fellow at the Brookings Institute, Washington DC, 2008
Dr. Mai Yamani (Arabic: مي يماني; born 1956) is a Saudi Arabian independent scholar, author, and anthropologist.Contents
Biography
Dr. Mai Yamani was born in Cairo, Egypt in 1956 to an Iraqi mother from Mosul and a Saudi Arabian father from Mecca. Her father is Sheikh Ahmed Zaki Yamani who gained international fame as Saudi Arabia's Minister of Petroleum Affairs. Her paternal grandfathers came from Yemen, hence the surname Yamani "from Yemen". Her early education included schooling in Baghdad, Iraq and in Jeddah, Saudia Arabia. She studied French at Chateau Mont Choisi in Lausanne, Switzerland, in 1967-1975. She received her A.B. Degree (Summa cum Laude: Highest honors) from Bryn Mawr College outside Philadelphia, and subsequently attended Oxford University where she was the first Saudi Arabian woman to obtain a M.St. and a D.Phil. from Oxford in Social Anthropology. She started her career as a university lecturer in Saudi Arabia and moved on to become a scholar at leading international think tanks in the U.S., Europe, and the Middle East. She has been a research fellow at the Royal Institute for International Affairs in London, a visiting fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington, DC, and a visiting scholar at Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut. She speaks fluent Arabic, English, French and Spanish, and has a working knowledge of Persian, Hebrew and Italian.
Works
- Changed Identities: Challenges of the New Generation in Saudi Arabia (Arabic: هويات متغيرة : تحديات الجيل الجديد في السعودية )
- Cradle of Islam: the Hijaz and the Quest for Identity in Saudi Arabia
External links
References
Categories:- 1956 births
- Living people
- Saudi Arabian academics
- Saudi Arabian women writers
- Arab anthropologists
- Social anthropologists
- Bryn Mawr College alumni
- Alumni of the University of Oxford
- Saudi Arabian Sunni Muslims
- People of Iraqi descent
- Saudi Arabian people stubs
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