الدكتور سيد ناظم علي | جامعة حمد بن خليفة

الدكتور سيد ناظم علي

مدير مركز الاقتصاد والتمويل الإسلامي

البريد الإلكتروني

snali@hbku.edu.qa

الهاتف

974 4454 6992

موقع المكتب

C.04.017

الدكتور سيد ناظم علي

مدير مركز الاقتصاد والتمويل الإسلامي

المؤهلات العلمية

PHD in Information Sciences

MLS in Library Sciences

الكيان

كلية الدراسات الإسلامية

Divison

مركز الاقتصاد والتمويل الإسلامي

السيرة الذاتية

Dr. Syed Nazim Ali is Research Professor and Director of the Research Division at CIS.. He has spent the last 30 years spearheading interdisciplinary research in Islamic finance and faith-based initiatives in finance as well as community development. He was formerly the founding director of the Islamic Finance Project at Harvard University and Acting Executive Director of the Islamic Legal Studies program at Harvard Law School. 

Dr. Ali has previously been actively involved with the US Treasury, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, US Department of the Treasury, and central banks in other countries, working to improve understanding and  combat misconceptions about the Islamic finance industry. Most of his work focuses on social financing, Islamic finance, and Islamic information systems.

Dr. Ali received his PhD from the University of Strathclyde, Glasgow.

 

PHD in Information Sciences

University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, UK

1983

MLS in Library Sciences

Emporia State University, Kansas, USA

1975

BSC in Biology And Chemistry

Osmania University, Hyderabad, India

1970

  • Islamic Finance
  • Islamic Social Welfare
  • Ethical Finance
  • Bibliometrics
  • Scholarly Communication

Director, Research Division

CIS, HBKU

2017 - Present

Director

Center for Islamic Economics And Finance (CIEF), CIS, HBKU

2014 - Present

Director of Islamic Finance Program

Harvard University

1995 - 2014

Head of Research And Information Services

University of Bahrain

1984 - 1994

Director of Library

King Faisal University, Al Hasa, Saudi Arabia

1976 - 1983

  • Fintech, Digital Currency and the Future of Islamic Finance in the GCC. Springer Nature.
  • The Edinburgh Companion to Shari‘ah Governance in Islamic Finance. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. ISBN: 978 147 4436007.
  • Fintech in Islamic Finance: Theory and Practice. London: Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1138494800.
  • Takaful and Islamic Cooperative Finance: Challenges and Opportunities. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar. ISBN 978-1-78536 335-1
  • Islamic Finance and Development. Cambridge: Harvard Law School, Islamic Finance Project. ISBN 0-9702835-8-X
  • Building Bridges across Financial Communities: The Global Financial Crisis, Social Responsibility, and Faith-Based Finance. Cambridge: Harvard Law School, Islamic Finance Project. ISBN 0-9702835-9-8
  • Shari‘a-Compliant Microfinance. London: Routledge. ISBN 978041578266-1
  • Islamic Finance: Innovation and Authenticity, Cambridge: Harvard Law School, Islamic Finance Project. ISBN 0-970-2835-7-1
  • Integrating Islamic Finance into the Mainstream: Regulation, Standardization, and Transparency. Cambridge: Harvard Law School, Islamic Finance Project. ISBN 0-9702835-6-3
  • Islamic Finance: Current Legal and Regulatory Issues. Cambridge: Harvard Law School, Islamic Finance Project. ISBN 0-9702835-5-5
  • Information Sources on Islamic Banking and Economics 1980-90. London: Routledge. ISBN 0-7103-0486-2
  • Islamic Finance at Harvard University. In Belouafi, A., Belabes, A., & Trullols, C. (Eds.), Islamic Finance in Western Higher Education: Developments and Prospects. Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan. 209-228.
  • Big Data, Islamic Finance, and Sustainable Development Goals. King Abdulaziz University: Islamic Economics. 33(1). 83-90. DOI:10.4197
  • Publishing Islamic Economics & Finance Research: Polemics, Perceptions and Prospects. International Journal of Islamic and Middle Eastern Finance and Management, 12(3). 346-367.
  • Building Trust in Islamic Finance Products and Services. Society and Business Review, 12(3). 356-372.
  • Moving Towards Community Driven Islamic Finance. Journal of Islamic Business and Management, 7(1). 11-27.
  • Islamic Economics and Finance Education: Consensus on Reform. Journal of Islamic Economics, Banking and Finance, 12(3).75-97.
  • The Significance of Faith-based Ethical Principles in Responding to the Recurring Financial Crises. Journal of Islamic Banking and Finance, 33(4). 24-35.
  • Financing Sovereign Developmental Activities Through Non-Interest Bearing Instruments. Journal of Islamic Finance, 5(1). 26-44.
  • Post-9/11 Perceptions of Islamic Finance. International Research Journal of Finance and Economics, 39. 27-39.
  • Islamic Finance: The New Global Player. Harvard Business Review. 43.
  • Islamic Finance and Economics as Reflected in Research and Publications. Review of Islamic Economics, 12(1). 151-168.
  • A Roadmap for Making Islamic Finance Sources More Accessible: The Role of Secondary Services in the Dissemination of Research. In Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on Islamic Economics and Finance Conference Papers. Jeddah: King Abdulaziz University. 225-34.

2004, HUMA FOUNDATION AWARD, Harvard Muslim Alumni Association (HUMA), Cambridge MA