John SchoeberleinJohn Schoeberlein is Director of the Program on Central Asia and the Caucasus under the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies at Harvard University, which he was instrumental in founding in 1993. The program coordinates activities at Harvard related to the study of Central Asia/Eurasia, extending from the Crimea and Caucasus to the Volga Basin, Mongolia, Western China, Afghanistan and the former Soviet Central Asian republics. His research focuses on identity, ethnicity, gender, nationality, religion, and community organization among the Islamic peoples of Central Eurasia. He has conducted a total of over six years of anthropological field research in various parts of Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, and Kyrgyzstan. He received his Ph.D. in Social Anthropology from Harvard University. He has taught courses in the anthropology, history and politics of the region as Lecturer on Central Asian studies at Harvard University since 1993. During 1998-99, he headed the United Nations' Ferghana Valley Development Programme, working on participatory approaches to conflict resolution in the region. During 2000-2001, he was Director of the Central Asia Project of the International Crisis Group, working to diminish the possibilities of conflict in the region. He regularly lectures internationally and in the U.S., with recent appearances in London, Toronto, Baku, Bishkek, Tashkent, Tbilisi, Yerevan, Ankara, New York, Ann Arbor, and Washington, D.C. (for information on some recent lectures: http://islam-eurasia.fas.harvard.edu/ie_present.html).
His current research topics include the changing role of Islam in Central Eurasia including issues related to radical Islamism, secular and religious orientations, the politics of culture and national ideology, the impact of national state formation on identity in Central Asia, the impact of economic “reforms” on pastoralism communities, and the changing role of Russian culture in Post-Soviet contexts. He has done development consulting work on the potential of local communities to participate in economic reform efforts and other issues of social development. He gives frequent consultations to various governmental and international organizations and the press regarding developments in Central Asia. He is a member of the International Advisory Board of the journal Central Asian Survey (London) and of the Board of Advisors of the Journal of Central Eurasian Studies (Tehran).
In 2008, he initiated the Project on Islam in Eurasia, which entails research on the current changes in the role of Islam in Eurasian (post-Communist) societies, as well as seeks to foster a better public understanding and better policy-making on the issues related to Islam's important role in the region.
From 2000 to 2003, he held the position of the first President of the Central Eurasian Studies Society, an international scholarly association supporting the enhancement of research in the social sciences and humanities focused on the region from the Black Sea to Mongolia. He continued to lead the organization as Director of the Secretariat, which was hosted by Harvard until 2007, when it made its first migration to Miami University of Ohio (see: http://www.cess.muohio.edu). Under his leadership, the society was established and grew to over 1,500 members in over 60 countries. Its 2003 conference, hosted by Harvard, attracted nearly 500 panelists with altogether over 800 attendees.
He is editor of the «Central Eurasian Studies World Wide» website (http://cesww.fas.harvard.edu) and of the Central-Eurasia-L Announcement List for Central Eurasian Studies (http://cesww.fas.harvard.edu/ces_cel.html).
Current and Recent Courses:
Current:
Anthropology 1668: Muslims in the Lands of the “Militant Godless”: Post-Socialism, Religion and Identity (Fall 2009)
Anthropology 1660: What is Islam?: Anthropological Perspectives (Spring 2010)
Recent:
Islamic
Civilizations 160: The Meanings of Islam in Central Asia
Anthropology 1930. Culture Wars in Eurasia
Anthropology
2865. Islamic Eurasia and the Anthropology of Post-Socialism
Government
1286: The Politics of Identity in Central Asia
Government
2204: Radicalization of Islam in the Former Communist World
Islamic
Civilizations 125: History and Culture of the Islamic Peoples of the Former
Soviet Union
Selected Publications:
Websites/Projects:
Central-Eurasia-L Announcement List for Central Eurasian Studies
«CESWW» Central
Eurasia Experts Directory
«CESWW» Dissertations
in Central Eurasian Studies
«CESWW»
Syllabi in Central Eurasian Studies
Contact Information:
Dr. John Schoeberlein, Director
Harvard Program on Central Asia and the Caucasus
Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies
1730 Cambridge Street, Room S-320
Cambridge, MA 02138 USA
Tel.: +1/617-495-4338 Program: +1/617-496-2643
Fax: +1/617-495-8319
E-mail: schoeber (at) fas.harvard.edu
LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/johnschoeberlein
FaceBook: http://www.facebook.com/schoeberlein