Meet the Project Team

Professor of the Anthropology of Islam; Project Leader
Caroline Tee is Professor of the Anthropology of Islam at the University of Chester. Her work focuses on the intersections between Islam, democratic politics and other major institutions of modernity such as modern science, secular education, and civic engagement. She is a specialist on modern Turkey, where she has carried out extensive ethnographic fieldwork over the course of 16 years.
Prof. Tee is the author of The Gülen Movement in Turkey: The Politics of Islam and Modernity (London: IB Tauris, 2016), as well as multiple articles and chapters which address the relationship between Muslim groups and the secular state tradition in Turkey. She is lead editor of The Oxford Handbook of Religion in Turkey (Oxford/NY: Oxford University Press, 2024), and co-edits the Edinburgh Studies in the Anthropology of Islam book series at Edinburgh University Press.
Dr Amin El Yousfi
Project Co-Leader
Amin El Yousfi is a College Fellow at the University of Cambridge where he completed a PhD on how everyday Muslim pieties encounter and operate through processes of secularisation and neoliberlisation. His research was based on extensive ethnographic fieldwork in France and the UK looking at the intersection between Islam, neoliberalism and secularism. In addition to studying privately a traditional curriculum of Islamic sciences with ‘ulama, Amin completed an MPhil in Economics and a second MPhil in the Social Sciences.
He also co-founded the Moroccan Centre for Innovation and Social Entrepreneurship (MCISE) before joining the University of Cambridge with a full Cambridge Trust scholarship. His work has been published in various journals such as: Religion, State and Society, Religions, the Journal of Islamic Studies and Contemporary Islam. His forthcoming monograph is soon to be published with Oxford University Press.


Dr. Maan al-Dabbagh
Research Associate
Dr. Maan al-Dabbagh is one of the few scholars globally dedicated to advancing the understanding of the intellectual history of the Hijaz in the early modern period. With a PhD in Islamic Intellectual History from Cambridge and two Master’s degrees—one in Middle East and Islamic Studies from Exeter and another in Contemporary Islamic Studies—Dr. al-Dabbagh has a robust academic foundation. This scholarly pursuit is complemented by over 20 years of studying traditional Islamic sciences under some of the most esteemed scholars across the Islamic world.
Dr. al-Dabbagh has also taught traditional Islamic texts across various disciplines, bringing a unique blend of academic rigor and traditional knowledge to the field. Passionate about bridging traditionally-inspired insights with contemporary discourses, Dr. al-Dabbagh continues to contribute to the scholarly community through research, teaching, and publications.
Dr Uzair Belgami
Research Associate


Dr Lili Di Puppo
Research Associate
Lili Di Puppo is a postdoctoral researcher at the Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology at KU Leuven, Belgium. She focuses on religion, the dialogue between theology and anthropology, sacred sites, the environment, and ethnicity. She has conducted fieldwork in Russia’s Volga-Ural region, Moscow, and Georgia. She was an assistant professor of sociology at the Higher School of Economics in Moscow from 2013 to 2022 and a university researcher at the Aleksanteri Institute, University of Helsinki, in 2023-2024.
She has published a special issue on Muslim ontologies, transcendence and anthropology in HAU - Journal of Ethnographic Theory and two others on Islam in Russia in Ethnicities and Contemporary Islam. She is the convenor of the European Association of Social Anthropology’s network ‘Muslim Worlds’ and co-editor of the book ‘Peripheral Methodologies: Unlearning, Not-Knowing and Ethnographic Limits’ (Routledge, 2021).
Dr Gregory Vandamme
Research Associate
Gregory Vandamme is a scholar specialising in classical Sufi thought, particularly the works of Ibn ʿArabī and his commentators. He holds a Ph.D. in Religious Studies from UCLouvain, where his dissertation focused on the concept of ḥayra (perplexity) in Ibn ʿArabī’s thought, exploring its implications in epistemology, metaphysics, and Qur’anic hermeneutics.
Currently, Gregory is a postdoctoral research associate at the University of Chester, following his roles as a research fellow at F.R.S.-FNRS and UCLouvain in Belgium, and as guest lecturer at SciencesPo Paris. His research primarily delves into the doctrines of speculative mysticism, Qur’anic hermeneutics, and spiritual education in Sufism.
