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AAPOR Member Spotlight: ​Besheer Mohamed

04/04/2018

Besheer Mohamed, a senior researcher at Pew Research Center, is an expert in religious beliefs and practices in the United States, with a special focus on religious minorities – especially Muslim Americans. Most recently, Besheer was a lead author and key spokesperson for the Center’s 2017 report “U.S. Muslims Concerned About Their Place in Society, but Continue to Believe in the American Dream,” based on the third national survey of U.S. Muslims conducted by the Center over the past decade.

Besheer was also a primary researcher on the Center’s 2014 Religious Landscape Study; as part of this study, he helped author “Religion in Everyday Life,” an examination of the ways people exhibit – or do not exhibit – their religious beliefs, values and connections in their day-to-day lives. He also helped write “One-in-Five U.S. Adults Were Raised in Interfaith Homes,” which provides a detailed look at religious mixing in American families.

In 2013, Besheer helped coordinate the Center’s survey of U.S. Jews, which was the most comprehensive national survey of the Jewish population since the 2000-2001 National Jewish Population Survey. Besheer also worked on the Center’s 2011 survey of U.S. Mormons.

When he’s not working to advance the U.S. public’s understanding of religious minority groups in America, Besheer can usually be found at the Center’s weekly board game lunches, testing out new games with what some might call academic rigor. He also enjoys spending time camping and hiking with his wife and daughter.
Outside of his work at Pew Research Center, Besheer authored “Hybrid Identity Among Black American Muslims,” in the Oxford Handbook of African American Islam. He also has regularly attended and presented at AAPOR conferences since 2012, and he recently taught a research methods course at George Washington University.

Before coming to Pew Research Center, Besheer earned a doctorate in sociology and a master’s degree in Middle East Studies from the University of Chicago. He also holds a B.S. in computer science and cognitive psychology from Cornell University, which he made use of in his pre-graduate school career in software development and business consulting.