Atiaf Alwazir

Atiaf Zaid Al-Wazir is a researcher, human rights activist, citizen journalist and blogger and co-founder of the media advocacy group Support Yemen. Al-Wazir lived in Tunis, Tunisia then she is currently in Brussels, Belgium.[1]

Atiaf Zaid Al-Wazir
Born
Atiaf Zaid Al-Wazir
OccupationResearcher, Citizen Journalist, Blogger, Social Activist
Websitehttp://womanfromyemen.blogspot.com

Personal life and education

Al-Wazir was born in Sana’a and grew up in the US and Egypt. Her father is Zaid Ali Alwazir, a Yemeni scholar, who produced a large number of publications on political Islam, including the controversial book Al-Fardia, or "Autocracy": a research on authoritarianism in Islamic history.[2] She received her Master in International Relations from American University, in Washington, D.C. Her dissertation focused on women in prison in Yemen, between honor and crime.[3]

Career

Since 2011, Al-Wazir has chronicled the revolution in Yemen on her blog, 'Woman from Yemen' on which is broadcast documentaries supported by observations and eye witness accounts, related videos and images. She has nine years experience of campaigning for social justice programs in the Middle East and North Africa via supporting various civic societies programs.[4] She has spoken extensively on "human rights, humanitarian relief and political awareness."

She was a non-resident research fellow at The Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik (SWP). She wrote on the "Independent Youth Movement in Yemen's Transition" in the project “Transformation, Elite Change and New Social Mobilization in the Arab World” and talked about the role of Yemen's independent youth movement in the National Dialogue Conference.[5]

Al-Wazir worked at National Endowment for Democracy, Washington D.C. as a Program Officer from June 2004 to June 2008. Her work also is published in 'Foreign Policy, the Arab Reform Initiative, Project on Middle East Democracy (POMED), Jaddaliya, Al-Akhbar'.[6]

Writings

gollark: If it does DNS, that still doesn't mean all traffic goes through it, just DNS traffic.
gollark: A pi-hole? Those don't actually route all traffic. It would be very slow.
gollark: Routers will often just be abandoned to patchlessness.
gollark: > if you live in a city that's useless (approx. location) in my opinion because there are many more people in a smaller areaIt's still somewhat identifying information.
gollark: I totally would.

References


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