Jeremy Gunn, Ph.D. Harvard University (Religious Studies), J.D. Boston University, M.A. University of Chicago (Humanities). University Professor at the International University of Rabat (retired) and Attorney-at-Law in Washington, D.C. (retired). Among subjects taught: Religion and Politics; Religion and Politics in the Middle East; History of the Arab World; History of the Modern Middle East; International Law; US Foreign Policy; US Intelligence Community. Selected publications include: “Sharī’a in the Qur’an: A Word Meaning “Law” or a Metaphor Evoking “Path”?” (Springer); “The Human Rights Encounter between the European Union and its Southern Mediterranean Partners: Soft Values versus Hard Interests” (Oxford); “Do Human Rights Have a Secular, Individualistic & Anti-Islamic Bias?” (Daedalus); “The Quran: A Legal System or Path for Life?” (Stellenbosch); “The ‘Principle of Secularism’ and the European Court of Human Rights: A Shell Game” (Brill); “The Organisation of Islamic Cooperation: Universal Human Rights, Islamic Values, or Raisons d’état?” (Human Rights and International Legal Discourse); “Islam and the Concept of the Separation of Religion and the State” (Droit et Religions).