
About
About
Thesis: 'Palestine up in Arms: Contentious Politics and the Arab Revolt of 1936-1939'
My research broadly focuses on political violence and contentious politics, seeking to examine what factors structure mobilisation. I study this by applying quantitative and computational methods to historical cases. My PhD thesis delves into this topic through three papers, the first of which examines how inter-ethnic exposure affected mobilisation patterns in Mandatory Palestine.
Outside of my PhD research, I am interested in contention more broadly, as well as how political contention interacts with and is shaped by culture, for which I have published research in the Journal of Palestine Studies.
- Abu El Foul, Luqman, “Rhythms of an Uprising: Indexing the 2021 Unity Intifada through an analysis of Palestinian Rap Music”, Journal of Palestine Studies 54, no. 2 (2025): 6-27.
Research
- Contentious Politics
- Political Violence
- Israel-Palestine
- Middle Eastern politics
- Historical Political Economy
Teaching
- [2024-2026] GV248 – Power and Politics in the Modern World: Comparative Perspectives