Between 2016 and 2018, Khoja-Moolji was a postdoctoral and visiting scholar at the
University of Pennsylvania's Alice Paul Center for Research on Gender, Sexuality and Women. In 2018, she joined the Gender, Sexuality, and Women's Studies program at
Bowdoin College, where she earned early tenure and promotion within three and a half years. In 2022, Khoja-Moolji was appointed as the Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani Associate Professor of Muslim societies, a tenured and endowed chair position, at
Georgetown University. Her first book,
Forging the Ideal Educated Girl: The Production of Desirable Subjects in Muslim South Asia, published by the
University of California Press (2018), is a genealogy of the 'educated girl.' The book shows how girl's education is a site of struggle for multiple groups—from national to religious elites—through which they construct gender, class, and religious identities. The book was published in the Islamic Humanities open-access series. The book won the 2019 Jackie Kirk Outstanding Book Award from the Comparative and International Education Society. Her second book,
Sovereign Attachments: Masculinity, Muslimness, and Affective Politics in Pakistan, also published the
University of California Press (2021), re-theorizes sovereignty by drawing on affect, cultural, and religious studies. The book won the Best Book Award from the Theory section of the
International Studies Association. The book also won the 2022 Best Book award from The Association for Middle East Women's Studies. Her third book,
Rebuilding Community: Displaced Women and the Making of a Shia Ismaili Muslim Sociality published by Oxford University press (2023), is a first attempt to archive the lives of twentieth-century Ismaili women. The book follows Ismaili women who were
displaced in the 1970s from East Africa and
East Pakistan, to elaborate how they recreated their religious community in transit and in new regions of settlement, particularly North America. The book won the 2024 Nautilus Book Award. Her fourth book,
The Impossibility of Muslim Boyhood (University of Minnesota Press, 2024) is a public cultural critique of Muslim boyhood in America. In 2019, Khoja-Moolji was elected to the South Asia Council of the
Association for Asian Studies. In 2023, she joined the Steering Committee of North American Religions at the
American Academy of Religion. Khoja-Moolji is the recipient of multiple career awards: the Emerging Scholar Award from the Muslim Philanthropy Initiative based at
Indiana University; the Early Career Award for Community Engagement from the International Studies Association's Feminist Theory and Gender Studies section; Khoja-Moolji has published writing in
Al Jazeera and the
Express Tribune on Ismaili culture and Islamic culture. == References ==