Mohammad Shahid Alam
Mohammad Shahid Alam is a Pakistani economist, academic, and social scientist. He is a professor of economics at Northeastern University. He is a member of the Advisory Board of the Institute for Policy Research & Development, London.[1] BackgroundAlam was born to a Muhajir Family in 1950 in Dhaka, East Pakistan, moving to West Pakistan in 1971[2] following the creation of Bangladesh from East Pakistan. He holds a BA from the University of Dhaka, an MA from the University of Karachi, and a Ph.D. from the University of Western Ontario.[3] (1979)[2] His brothers are, the Pakistan Air Force flying ace, Air Commodore Muhammad Mahmood Alam and particle physicist M. Sajjad Alam. CareerAlam's academic writings focus, among other things, on the economic effects of Western foreign and economic policies on formerly colonized states. He writes critically about the present-day global wealth disparities produced by Western policies. He draws attention to the pro-capitalist ideological intent and Eurocentric biases of mainstream economics. He is an outspoken opponent of U.S. policies in the Middle East and the Global South.[4] His publications include:
He is also a regular contributor to CounterPunch. Alam is a critic of Zionism and Israel, which he does not believe has a right to exist.[5] He is a supporter of the boycott of Israel movement, and wrote in a column for CounterPunch in 2002, "The Academic Boycott of Israel," that "resistance to the colonizer must be violent."[6] In 2004 a column of Alam's, "America and Islam, Seeking Parallels" made an analogy between the September 11 attacks, which he called an Islamic insurgency, and the American Revolution, attracting controversy and criticism from right-wing critics such as David Horowitz and Daniel Pipes, who appeared on The O'Reilly Factor to attack Alam, and Alam received death threats.[7] Books
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