Hamdan Dammag
Born(1973-11-28)28 November 1973
NationalityYemeni/British
AwardsArabic Creativity Prize of Al-Sharja, UAE. 2015
Scientific career
FieldsLiterature, Computer Science, Journalism, Research

Hamdan Dammag (Arabic:همدان زيد دماج), (born in Ibb 28 November 1973) is a Yemeni computer scientist and a prize-winner novelist. He has several poetry and short stories publications.[1] He is the son of Yemeni novelist Zayd Mutee' Dammaj.

He is the editor-in-chief of Ghaiman,[2] an Arabic literature journal, the vice president of the Yemen Center for Studies and Research (YCSR) and the Vice President of the International League for Peace and Human Rights (ILPHR) - Geneva. He has several publications in computer science and literature. He received his Ph.D in computer science from the University of Reading in 2005. As part of his Ph.D., he introduced a new safety-oriented variant of Statecharts, called Safecharts.[3]

Publications

Books

  • The Fly, a short-stories collection, Yemen Book Authority Publication, Sana'a, 2000.
  • No One Was But Me!, a poetry collection, Arwiqah for Studies and Publication, Cairo, 2013.
  • Perhaps He Didn't Mean it!, a short-stories collection, Arrafid Publication, UAE, 2015.
  • The Gemstone of Attakkar Mountain, a prize-winning novel, (1st edition: Arab Creativity Prize, Al-Sharja, UAE, 2015), (2nd edition: Arwiqah for Studies and Publication, Cairo, 2017).
  • The Agony of Silence: a Collection from al-Baradouni's Poems,  Alowis Foundation publication, Dubai, 2018.
  • Letters innocent of the polluted word: A Collection from al-Maqaleh's Poems, Al-A’edoun Publishers, Amman, 2021.

References

  1. Dammag, Hamdan. "dammaj.net". Retrieved 17 August 2016.
  2. Ghaiman official website. "Ghaiman.net". Archived from the original on 26 June 2017. Retrieved 30 August 2016.
  3. Dammag, H.; Nissanke, N. (1999). "Safecharts for specifying and designing safety critical systems". Proceedings of the 18th IEEE Symposium on Reliable Distributed Systems. pp. 78–87. doi:10.1109/RELDIS.1999.805085. ISBN 0-7695-0290-3. S2CID 15089056.


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