Camilla Adang (born 1960) is a Dutch associate professor of Islamic studies at Tel Aviv University in Tel Aviv, Israel.[1]
Adang was born in Bussum, Netherlands in 1960.[2] [3] Adang completed her doctorate in Islamic studies at Radboud University Nijmegen in Nijmegen.[3]
Adang was a fellow at the Netherlands Institute for Advanced Study in Wassenaar from September 2009 to June 2010. While there, she published a number of works on the life of Medieval Andalusian theologian Ibn Hazm and his views.[3] [4] During this time, she also contributed to a book on inter-religious polemics and rational theology. Adang was also a fellow at The Woolf Institute in Cambridge as of 2011. During this time, she delivered a seminar on Muslim-Jewish polemics in Medieval Spain which was noted for Adang's definition of Muslim Fatwas are merely legal verdicts, rather than "death sentences" as popularly portrayed in the media,[5] in addition to chairing a roundtable discussion of linguistic influences on Judeo-Muslim exchanges.[6]
Adang has also written multiple encyclopedia articles and research papers on Muslim-Jewish polemics.[7]