Katherine Elizabeth Fleming

[7] Fleming is the co-founder and co-director (with Sofia Papaioannou) of "Istorima," a large-scale oral history/public humanities project funded by the Stavros Niarchos Foundation.

[9] She is an appointee to the Administrative Board of the Chancellerie des Universités de Paris; a member of the Conseil Scientifique of the Biblioteque Nationale de France; is on the board of the Aliph Foundation in Geneva; sits on the Executive Board of the John S. Latsis Public Benefit Foundation in Greece; serves on the Board of Trustees of Barnard College of Columbia University; is a Director at Time Partners, an independent private markets advisory firm based in London; and is a Director at the NASDAQ-traded AudioEye (AEYE), among other engagements.

In 2022, the government further decorated her as a Commander in the Order of Beneficence in recognition of her contributions to Greek culture.

[14] In 2023, the Universitatea Creştina Dimitrie Cantemire awarded her an honorary doctorate in recognition of her leadership in higher education.

Fleming's first book, The Muslim Bonaparte: Diplomacy & Orientalism in Ali Pasha's Greece (Princeton, 1999), is a standard of doctoral reading lists in cultural history and in the history of southeastern Europe, and has been translated into Albanian, Greek, Italian, and Turkish.

[15][16] In Greece, the Greek edition was widely reviewed and received coverage in the popular press.

[20][21] Fleming is co-editor, with Adnan Husain, of A Faithful Sea: The Religious Cultures of the Mediterranean 1200–1700 (Oxford OneWorld, 2007).

In 2009, the journal Nationalities Papers printed an apology and retraction after it published an article that made extensive use of Fleming's work without citation or reference (Alice Curticapean, "Are you Hungarian or Romanian?"

Katherine Elizabeth Fleming at the Getty Museum in 2023