Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology

Ahmet Said Aydil

Ph.D. Candidate
Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, Department Law and Anthropology, Germany

Research Focus / Expertise:

Freedom of religion, human rights law, Islam, secularism, law and anthropology

ORCID:

ORCID logo https://www.orcid.org/0009-0009-3528-0640

Biography:

Ahmet Said Aydil is a PhD Candidate in the Law and Anthropology Department at the Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology in Halle. He holds a bachelor’s degree from Bilkent University (Ankara, Turkiye). Following his graduation, he completed his legal internship, working in areas such as commercial law, international arbitration law, criminal law, and administrative law. In 2020 he passed the Turkish Bar and became a licensed attorney.

Aydil also holds an LLM from the Europa Institute, Saarland University, in International and European Human Rights Protection Law and European Economic Law. Under the guidance of Prof. Dr. Thomas Giegrich, his master’s thesis analysed the decline in human rights commitmens in Europe, driven by the rise of populist politics and the mishandling of the refugee influx of 2015, and evaluated potential remedies at the European Union and Council of Europe levels. His current research falls within the framework of the database project “Cultural and Religious Diversity under State Law across Europe” (CUREDI) at the MPI.

Contributor since:

15 June 2023