Since October 2008, Aminul Hoque has been a lecturer in the Department of Educational Studies at
Goldsmiths, and a visiting lecturer at
London Metropolitan University. Aminul Hoque's writing and work focuses on issues of multicultural Britain, identity, social justice, youth policy, religion and race relations. In 2015, his book
British-Islamic Identity: Third-generation Bangladeshis from East London was published. In February 2015, he contributed in a discussion regarding the
three British schoolgirls from Bethnal Green Academy who left home to join the
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant on
BBC Radio Scotland and
BBC Radio 4. In the same month, he spoke at the London Festival of Education, hosted by the
Institute of Education. In May of the same year, he contributed on
BBC Radio 4's
Today programme. In July 2015, he was interviewed by
Nadia Ali on
BBC Asian Network about his
Ramadan memories and the
British Bangladeshi community. Aminul Hoque served as a trustee on the board of
Royal Museums Greenwich from 2016 to 2021. The
Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport,
Oliver Dowden, vetoed his reappointment for a second term in 2021. The chair of the board,
Charles Dunstone, resigned in protest at the government's failure to reappoint Aminul Hoque. Aminul Hoque said that he was "shocked, disappointed and baffled" at Dowden's veto against his reappointment. ==Awards and recognition==