• Cooke, J. & Nyhagen, L., eds. (2024). Intersectional Feminist Research Methodologies: Applications in the Social Sciences and Humanities. Routledge. Open Access, available here.
  • Nyhagen, L. & Halsaa, B. (2024). ‘Religion, Gender and Citizenship’, in Birte Siim and Pauline Stoltz, eds., The Palgrave Handbook of Gender and Citizenship, 121-144. Springer Link.
  • Nyhagen, L. (2022). ‘Oppression or liberation? Moving beyond binaries in religion and gender studies.’ Invited chapter, in Caroline Starkey and Emma Tomlinson, eds., Routledge Handbook of Religions, Gender and Society. New York: Routledge, pp. 52-66.
  • Errichiello, G. & Nyhagen, L. (2021). ‘Dubai is a transit lounge’: Temporariness and class among Pakistani professional migrants in the United Arab Emirates’. Asian and Pacific Migration Journal 30(2), pp. 119-142.
  • Nyhagen L. (2020). ‘It’s not macho, is it? Contemporary British Christian Men’s Constructions of Masculinities’. The Journal of Men’s Studies. Online first, December 2020, pp. 1-19.
  • Nyhagen, L. (2019). ‘Mosques as Gendered Spaces: The Complexity of Women’s Compliance with, and Resistance to, Dominant Gender Norms, and the Importance of Male Allies’. Religions 10, 321: 1-15.
  • Nyhagen, L. (2019). 'Contestations of Feminism, Secularism and Religion in the West: The Discursive Othering of Religious and Secular Women'. Nordic Journal of Religion and Society 32 (1), 2019.
  • Nyhagen, L. (2018). ‘Citizenship, Religion, Gender and the Politics of Belonging: A Case Study of White, Middle-Class Christian Men in the East Midlands, United Kingdom’. Culture and Religion 19 (3): 253-272.
  • Nyhagen, L. (2017). 'The Lived Religion Approach in the Sociology of Religion and its Implications for Secular Feminist Analyses of Religion'. Social Compass 64 (4): 495-511
  • Nyhagen, L. & Halsaa, B. (2016). Religion, Gender and Citizenship: Women of Faith, Gender Equality and Feminism. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Nyhagen, L. (2015). 'Conceptualizing Lived Religious Citizenship: A Case-Study of Christian and Muslim Women in Norway and the United Kingdom'. Citizenship Studies 19 (6-7): 768-784.