Nolte published many scholarly articles, books and book chapters including[1][2][6]
Obafemi Awolowo and the making of Remo : the local politics of a Nigerian nationalist, Edinburgh : Edinburgh University Press. Series: International African library, 40, 2009.
Colonial Politics and Precolonial History: Everyday Knowledge, Genre, and Truth in a Yoruba Town. History in Africa, 40 (2013) : 125-164.
with Ogen, O. & Jones, R. (eds.), Beyond Religious Tolerance: Muslim, Christian & Traditionalist Encounters in an African Town. Series: Religion in Transforming Africa, New York: James Currey, an imprint of Boydell & Brewer, 2017.
with Olukoya Ogen: Introduction, in Views from the Shoreline: Community, trade and religion in coastal Yorubaland and the Western Niger Delta, Yoruba Studies Review, 2(2017), 1-16, fulltext.[7]
Imitation and creativity in the establishment of Islam in Oyo, in T. Green & B. Rossi (eds.), Landscapes, Sources, and Intellectual Projects in African History. African History, vol. 6, Brill, pp. 91-115, 2018.
Boko Haram explained, The Political Quarterly 90(2019), 2, 324-325.[8] Book review.
‘At least I am married’: Muslim-Christian marriage and gender in southwest Nigeria, Social Anthropology/Anthropologie Sociale, 28(2020), no. 2, pp. 434-450.[9]
References
^ ab"Insa Nolte, PhD". wiko-berlin.de. Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin. Retrieved 11 August 2022.
^ ab"Professor Insa Nolte". birmingham.ac.uk. University of Birmingham. Retrieved 11 August 2022.