Professor Glenn Hardaker is Director of the Centre for Lifelong Learning and Senior Professor at Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah Institute of Education, Universiti Brunei Darussalam.
Dr Siti Mazidah Haji Mohamad is a lecturer at Universiti Brunei Darussalam, specialising in human geography. She obtained her PhD in Human Geography at Durham University in 2015 and her thesis was Rooted Muslim Cosmopolitanism: An Ethnographic Study of Malay Malaysian Students’ Cultivation and Performance of Cosmopolitanism on Facebook and Offline. Her research interests include: 1) Spatialities of Muslim identities focusing on performance of religiosity and negotiation of identity in the online space; 2) Micro-geographies of young people’s lives focusing on their everyday use of new social media and their virtual mobility; 3) Muslim Fashion focusing on hijab consumption and practices and the growing modest fashion in Brunei; and 4) Muslim Cosmopolitanism focusing on the use of new social media in creating cosmopolitans and how Muslim perform their cosmopolitanism online. She is the cluster leader of 'Global Muslim Mobilities' research cluster in the faculty.
Dr. Annie Dayani is a lecturer at the School of Business and Economics UBD since 2001. She graduated from UBD with a Bachelor of Business Administration. Under UBD study
Dr Siti Mazidah Haji Mohamad is a lecturer at Universiti Brunei Darussalam, specialising in human geography. She obtained her PhD in Human Geography at Durham University in 2015 and her thesis was Rooted Muslim Cosmopolitanism: An Ethnographic Study of Malay Malaysian Students’ Cultivation and Performance of Cosmopolitanism on Facebook and Offline. Her research interests include: 1) Spatialities of Muslim identities focusing on performance of religiosity and negotiation of identity in the online space; 2) Micro-geographies of young people’s lives focusing on their everyday use of new social media and their virtual mobility; 3) Muslim Fashion focusing on hijab consumption and practices and the growing modest fashion in Brunei; and 4) Muslim Cosmopolitanism focusing on the use of new social media in creating cosmopolitans and how Muslim perform their cosmopolitanism online. She is the cluster leader of 'Global Muslim Mobilities' research cluster in the faculty.
Amin Abdul Aziz is Adjunct Professor at the Institute of Policy Studies, University of Brunei Darussalam. He was trained in traditional Islamic knowledge and holds
Dr Siti Mazidah Haji Mohamad is a lecturer at Universiti Brunei Darussalam, specialising in human geography. She obtained her PhD in Human Geography at Durham University in 2015 and her thesis was Rooted Muslim Cosmopolitanism: An Ethnographic Study of Malay Malaysian Students’ Cultivation and Performance of Cosmopolitanism on Facebook and Offline. Her research interests include: 1) Spatialities of Muslim identities focusing on performance of religiosity and negotiation of identity in the online space; 2) Micro-geographies of young people’s lives focusing on their everyday use of new social media and their virtual mobility; 3) Muslim Fashion focusing on hijab consumption and practices and the growing modest fashion in Brunei; and 4) Muslim Cosmopolitanism focusing on the use of new social media in creating cosmopolitans and how Muslim perform their cosmopolitanism online. She is the cluster leader of 'Global Muslim Mobilities' research cluster in the faculty.
Dr Siti Mazidah Haji Mohamad is a lecturer at Universiti Brunei Darussalam, specialising in human geography. She obtained her PhD Durham
Dr Siti Mazidah Haji Mohamad is a lecturer at Universiti Brunei Darussalam, specialising in human geography. She obtained her PhD in Human Geography at Durham University in 2015 and her thesis was Rooted Muslim Cosmopolitanism: An Ethnographic Study of Malay Malaysian Students’ Cultivation and Performance of Cosmopolitanism on Facebook and Offline. Her research interests include: 1) Spatialities of Muslim identities focusing on performance of religiosity and negotiation of identity in the online space; 2) Micro-geographies of young people’s lives focusing on their everyday use of new social media and their virtual mobility; 3) Muslim Fashion focusing on hijab consumption and practices and the growing modest fashion in Brunei; and 4) Muslim Cosmopolitanism focusing on the use of new social media in creating cosmopolitans and how Muslim perform their cosmopolitanism online. She is the cluster leader of 'Global Muslim Mobilities' research cluster in the faculty.
Mr Adna Rahman is a lecturer in UBD, who has worked at the national level with multi-cross discipline students and student-entrepreneurs from various
Dr Siti Mazidah Haji Mohamad is a lecturer at Universiti Brunei Darussalam, specialising in human geography. She obtained her PhD in Human Geography at Durham University in 2015 and her thesis was Rooted Muslim Cosmopolitanism: An Ethnographic Study of Malay Malaysian Students’ Cultivation and Performance of Cosmopolitanism on Facebook and Offline. Her research interests include: 1) Spatialities of Muslim identities focusing on performance of religiosity and negotiation of identity in the online space; 2) Micro-geographies of young people’s lives focusing on their everyday use of new social media and their virtual mobility; 3) Muslim Fashion focusing on hijab consumption and practices and the growing modest fashion in Brunei; and 4) Muslim Cosmopolitanism focusing on the use of new social media in creating cosmopolitans and how Muslim perform their cosmopolitanism online. She is the cluster leader of 'Global Muslim Mobilities' research cluster in the faculty.
Amin Abdul Aziz is Adjunct Professor at the Institute of Policy Studies, University of Brunei Darussalam. He was trained in traditional Islamic knowledge and holds
Dr Siti Mazidah Haji Mohamad is a lecturer at Universiti Brunei Darussalam, specialising in human geography. She obtained her PhD in Human Geography at Durham University in 2015 and her thesis was Rooted Muslim Cosmopolitanism: An Ethnographic Study of Malay Malaysian Students’ Cultivation and Performance of Cosmopolitanism on Facebook and Offline. Her research interests include: 1) Spatialities of Muslim identities focusing on performance of religiosity and negotiation of identity in the online space; 2) Micro-geographies of young people’s lives focusing on their everyday use of new social media and their virtual mobility; 3) Muslim Fashion focusing on hijab consumption and practices and the growing modest fashion in Brunei; and 4) Muslim Cosmopolitanism focusing on the use of new social media in creating cosmopolitans and how Muslim perform their cosmopolitanism online. She is the cluster leader of 'Global Muslim Mobilities' research cluster in the faculty.