Nova Robinson

Associate Professor, History


Associate Professor, International Studies


Affiliated with Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies

Biography

Nova Robinson CV (PDF)

Nova Robinson is a historian of the modern Middle East with a geographic specialization in Syria and Lebanon. Her research is positioned at the intersection of Middle Eastern history, women’s history, and the history of international governance. Her first book, Truly Sisters: Arab Women and International Women’s Rights, exposes how Syrian and Lebanese women’s transnational activism in the early twentieth century contributed to the construction of international women’s rights norms. Her second book, The Woman Question: The League of Nations and the Shaping of the International Women’s Rights System, explores the role of women from the global south in shaping the current system of international women’s rights. She is also co-editor with Bonnie G. Smith of the Routledge Global History of Feminism. Recent articles have been published in the International Journal of Middle East Studies, the Arab Studies Journal, the Journal of Middle East Women’s Studies, and Signs: Journal of Women in Society and Culture.

Robinson has been living, working, and conducting research in the Middle East since 2005. She is a frequent commentator on current events in the Middle East in the 香港六合彩开奖结果 area. She received her PhD from Rutgers University, The State University of New Jersey in 2015.

Areas of Research/Interest:

Modern Middle Eastern history; Greater Syria (Syria and Lebanon); Arab women’s history; women and gender history; international women’s rights; transnational feminism; social movements; nationalisms; state formation and sovereignty; international governance; Arab internationalism; League of Nations; United Nations; UN Commission on the Status of Women (UNCSW).

Courses Taught

  • UCOR 1400: Arab-Israeli Conflict
  • UCOR 1400: Syrian Crisis in Context
  • UCOR 1400: Women’s Rights as Human Rights: A Historical Inquiry
  • NST/HIST 3560: History of the Modern Middle East
  • INST/HIST/WGST 3570: Women and Gender in the Middle East
  • NST/HIST 3910: Middle East & USA since 1776
  • INST/HIST 3000: Global Histories: Encounters and Exchanges
  • INST/INST/WGST 3910: Transnational Feminisms
  • HIST 1210: Studies in Modern Civilization
  • HONOR 2250: Human Rights in the Modern World