Mohamed Saleh et Jean Tirole, « Taxing Identity: Theory and Evidence from Early Islam », Econometrica, vol. 89, n° 4, mars 2021, p. 1881–1919.
Mohamed Saleh, « The Middle East: Decline and Resurgence in West Asia », dans The Cambridge Economic History of the Modern World: Volume II: 1870-2010, sous la direction de Stephen Broadberry et Kyoji Fukao, 2021, à paraître.
Mohamed Saleh, « Socioeconomic Inequality across Religious Groups: Self-Selection or Religion-Induced Human Capital Accumulation? The Case of Egypt », dans Advances in the Economics of Religion, sous la direction de Jean-Paul Carvalho, Sriya Iyer et Jared Rubin, Palgrave Macmillan, décembre 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, juin 2018, p. 394–434.
Christophe Lévêque et Mohamed Saleh, « Does Industrialization Affect Segregation? Evidence from Nineteenth-Century Cairo », Explorations in Economic History, vol. 67, janvier 2018, p. 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, avril 2017, p. 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, septembre 2016, p. 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, mars 2015, p. 65–94.
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