Mohamed Saleh, and Jean Tirole, “Taxing Identity: Theory and Evidence from Early Islam”, Econometrica, vol. 89, n. 4, March 2021, pp. 1881–1919.
Mohamed Saleh, “Socioeconomic Inequality across Religious Groups: Self-Selection or Religion-Induced Human Capital Accumulation? The Case of Egypt”, in Advances in the Economics of Religion, Jean-Paul Carvalho, Sriya Iyer, and Jared Rubin (eds.), Palgrave Macmillan, December 2018.
Mohamed Saleh, “On the Road to Heaven: Taxation, Conversions, and the Coptic-Muslim Socioeconomic Gap in Medieval Egypt”, The Journal of Economic History, vol. 78, n. 2, June 2018, pp. 394–434.
Christophe Lévêque, and Mohamed Saleh, “Does Industrialization Affect Segregation? Evidence from Nineteenth-Century Cairo”, Explorations in Economic History, vol. 67, January 2018, pp. 40–61.
Mohamed Saleh, “A “New” Economic History of the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) Region”, The Economics of Transition, vol. 25, n. 2, April 2017, pp. 149–163.
Mohamed Saleh, “Public Mass Modern Education, Religion, and Human Capital in Twentieth-Century Egypt”, The Journal of Economic History, vol. 76, n. 3, September 2016, pp. 697–735.
Mohamed Saleh, “The Reluctant Transformation: State Industrialization, Religion, and Human Capital in Nineteenth-Century Egypt”, The Journal of Economic History, vol. 75, n. 1, March 2015, pp. 65–94.
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