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Mahmoud Eid

Researcher at University of Ottawa

Publications -  44
Citations -  451

Mahmoud Eid is an academic researcher from University of Ottawa. The author has contributed to research in topics: Terrorism & Government. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 44 publications receiving 429 citations. Previous affiliations of Mahmoud Eid include Al-Azhar University.

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Journal Article

Clash of Ignorance

TL;DR: The clash of ignorance thesis as mentioned in this paper is a critique of the clash of civilizations theory and challenges the assumptions that civilizations are monolithic entities that do not interact and that the Self and the Other are always opposed to each other.
Book ChapterDOI

Perceptions about Muslims in Western Societies

Mahmoud Eid
TL;DR: The mainstream media continue to be a major source of information about Islam and Muslims for Western audiences (Eid & Khan, 2011) as discussed by the authors, and Muslims worldwide represent around one-quarter of the global population.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hydroxychloroquine augments early virological response to pegylated interferon plus ribavirin in genotype-4 chronic hepatitis C patients.

TL;DR: Addition of hydroxychloroquine to pegylated interferon plus ribavirin improves the rate of early virological and biochemical responses in chronic hepatitis C Egyptian patients without an increase in adverse events.
Journal Article

Editorial: Ethics, New Media, and Social Networks

TL;DR: The last two decades have witnessed a rapid transformation of traditional media into new media that encompasses digital, computerized, and networked information and communication technologies as mentioned in this paper, which has raised concerns and discussions around the positive and negative implications of the new media, and other issues such as control of information, volume and speed of communication, Habermasian democratic public sphere, and the global influence of media conglomerates.
Journal ArticleDOI

A New-Look for Muslim Women in the Canadian Media: CBC's Little Mosque on the Prairie

TL;DR: A qualitative and quantitative content analysis of the first season's eight episodes investigates how Muslim women have been portrayed in LMP, drawing on Luhmann's (1987) theory on representation of society, Millar's (1793) observations about women in society, Hall's (1997) Other, Said's (1978) Orientalism, Kristeva's (1991) theories on foreigners, and Bhabha's (1994) Third Space as discussed by the authors.