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Sameer Yasir Editor

Mubashar Hasan is presently a research fellow at the Department of Cultural Studies and Oriental Languages at the University of Oslo, Norway. In Bangladesh, he holds the position of an Assistant Professor at the Department of Political Science and Sociology, North South University, Bangladesh.  In 2018, he was awarded an Emerging Early Career Research Award, 11th Global Studies Conference in University of Granada, Spain, by the Unites States-based Common Ground Research Network. He was previously a Bangladesh research fellow at the RESOLVE Network at the United States Institute of Peace, Washington, DC, and a shortterm visiting fellow at the American Institute of Bangladesh Studies and Institute for South Asian Studies, UC Berkeley (2016). He has a PhD from Griffith University, Australia, an MLitt in Muslims globalization and the West from the University of Aberdeen, UK, and an Msc in globalization—origin, development and contemporary impact from the University of Dundee, UK. His research on religion, politics and violence were published in leading journals such as Australian Journal of Politics and History, Asian Journal of Political Science, Harvard Asia Quarterly, India Quarterly and South Asia Research. He has published a chapter in the book titled Being Muslims in South Asia. His brief think pieces were published in Chicago Tribune, San Francisco Chronicle, The Quint, Scroll.in, The Conversation, The Wire, Asian Correspondent, Firstpost and so forth.  He is currently writing his book Islam and Politics in Bangladesh.  Kenji Isezaki runs the Department of Peace and Conflict Studies, and Global Campus programme at Tokyo University of Foreign Studies in Japan. He has served in several United Nations peacekeeping missions and when Japan became the lead country for the disarmament, demobilization and reintegration (DDR) programme for Afghanistan security sector reform (SSR), he directed DDR with the support of the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan and successfully disarmed 60,000 soldiers of the former Afghan military forces in two years. He has also served as the chief of DDR Coordination Section for the United Nations Mission in Sierra Leone (UNAMSIL); UN-appointed governor of Cova Lima for the United Nations Transitional Administration in East Timor (UNTAET); and representative of the Japanese government to the DDR special committee by the Department of Peacekeeping Operations at United Nations Secretariat in New York. Apart from teaching, he currently serves as the Vice-President of the Association for Aid and Relief, a Japanese NGO which works in 14 post- and in-conflict countries, and also enjoys supports from Japanese imperial family.  Sameer Yasir is an independent researcher and until recently was associated with the Global Campus programme of Tokyo University of Foreign Studies. He was an assistant professor at the Centre for International Relations (Peace and Conflict Studies) at Islamic University of Science and Technology, where he taught conflict studies for five years and wrote academic and policy papers and was the youngest professor appointed by the university in its history. He is the winner of 2017 best academic article by Oxford Development Studies at Oxford Department of International Development, in the memory of late Professor Sanjaya Lall. His research focus is on armed conflict, rehabilitation of ex-combatants, and counter-insurgency (COIN) and radicalization in South Asia. He worked as Asia Programs Officer at the Information and Resource Center Asian Dialogue Society, Singapore.