Ibrahim Warde

Ibrahim Warde is a scholar in the field of international finance. He is a professor of International Business at The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University, where he is also associated with the Fares Center for Eastern Mediterranean Studies.

Ibrahim Warde
Citizenship Lebanon  United States  France
Alma materUniversity of California, Berkeley (Ph.D.)
Scientific career
FieldsFinance, Islamic finance, regulation, political economy
InstitutionsThe Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University

Education

Warde attended a prestigious Jesuit School in Lebanon, Collège Notre Dame de Jamhour from the first grade up until he graduated. Afterwards, he studied at the Jesuit college Saint Joseph University located in Beirut.

Warde pursued his Ph.D. studies at University of California, Berkeley, graduating in 1988 and holds an M.B.A. from the Ecole des Hautes Etudes Commerciales de Paris.[1]

Career

Warde has taught at The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University. Previously he has taught at the Sloan School of Management and the University of California, Berkeley.[2]

Books authored

  • Islamic Finance in the Global Economy (Edinburgh University Press, 2013) ISBN 978-0748627776
  • The Price of Fear: The Truth behind the Financial War on Terror, (I.B. Tauris & Co, 2007) ISBN 978-185043 424 5
  • Mythologies américaines, co-authored Marie Agnès Combesque ( Le Félin, 2002) ISBN 978-2866454678
  • Le modèle Anglo-Saxon en question, co-authored with Richard Farnetti (Economica, 1997) ISBN 978-2717834369
gollark: To be honest Perl regexes probably can parse HTML, but they are also probably TC.
gollark: It encourages people to keep doing their silly standard-violating things because they technically *work*, and makes your parsing logic more complex and flaky.
gollark: And they *do* handle it, because at some point down the line someone thought making it compatible was better than encouraging people to NOT DO REALLY STUPID UNPARSEABLE THINGS.
gollark: A few websites will just go "Standards? What are they?" and ignore the standards and then just expect parsers to handle it anyway.
gollark: Technically HTML isn't even parseable with XML parsers because it is for some TRIANGULAR reason a weird SGML subset.

References

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