Peer-Reviewed Journal Articles

2021

2018

2018

2017

2017

2024

2021

2020

2025

2022

2020

Publications

‘I Find Comfort Here’: Rohingya Women and Taleems in Bangladesh’s Refugee Camps.Journal of Refugee Studies. 34 (1): 874-889. [Published Online First: July 2019]

Narratives of Agency: Women, Islam, and the Politics of Economic Participation in Afghanistan.Journal of International Women’s Studies. 19 (3): 60-70.

The Merits and Limits of a Gendered Epistemology: Muslim Women and the Politics of Knowledge Production.Journal of International Women’s Studies. 19 (1): 20-33.

  • Finalist of the 2017 Student Essay Competition by the Feminist and Women’s Studies Association, UK & Ireland

Farkhunda’s Legacy: Gender, Identity, and Shifting Societal Narratives in Afghanistan.” Feminist Review. 117 (1): 178-185.

Rights, Roles, and Rural Realities: A Case Study on the Effects of Fatwa Decrees Against Women in Rural Bangladesh.” Muslim World Journal of Human Rights. 14 (1): 1-27. [Special Issue on ‘Gender and Islam’]

Chapters in Edited Volumes

Women’s Worlds: Vignettes and Memories of Afghanistan.” In: Choudhury, N. and Schmeding, A. (eds.), Frontier Ethnographies: Deconstructing Research Experiences in Afghanistan and Pakistan. New York: Berghahn.

“I Am Not Alone”: Rohingya Women Negotiating Home and Belonging in Bangladesh’s Refugee Camps.” In: Mayer, T. and Tran, T. (eds.), Power and Agency in Migration: Voiced from Displacement and Belonging. New York: Routledge. [co-authored with Nafay Choudhury]

Survival and Resilience: Rohingya Refugee Women’s Narratives of Life, Loss, and Hope.” In: Bonnerjee, S. (ed.), Subaltern Women’s Narratives: Strident Voices, Dissenting Bodies. London: Routledge.

Commissioned Peer-Reviewed Research Papers/Reports

Gendered Fields of Red Gold: Women and Saffron Along the Silk Roads.” In: Silk Roads Papers, 3rd Edition. UNESCO Silk Roads Programme.

Assessing Gender, Power, and NGO Programming in Bangladesh’s Rohingya Refugee Camps. Centre for Asia Pacific Refugee Studies, University of Auckland.

Trajectories of Gender Inequality, Identity, and Violent Extremism in Rural Bangladesh.” In: Conflicting Identities: The Nexus Between Masculinities, Femininities and Violent Extremism in Asia. UNDP and UN Women.