Research > Journal Articles (12)
Dr. Nadine Naber is a scholar activist from Al Salt, Jordan. She conducts research in collaboration with local communities of color, social movements, and policy-based processes.
Dr. Naber received her PhD in Women’s Studies and Cultural Anthropology at the University of California, Davis in 2002. She is currently a Professor in the Gender and Women’s Studies Program and the Global Asian Studies Program at the University of Illinois Chicago (UIC).
Her work focuses on racial justice and MENA communities; Arab and Muslim feminist and queer activism; activist mothering within the Arab Spring revolutions and U.S. social movements; feminist abolition; feminist-queer of color activism against militarism, war, and colonization; feminist of color coalition/solidarity politics; and activist research methodologies.
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- Arab and Black Feminisms: Joint Struggle and Transnational Anti-Imperialist Activism (2016) (654)
- Middle East Section (1)
- Muslim First, Arab Second (0)
- Palestine Is Ethnic Studies: The Struggle for Arab American Studies in K–12 Ethnic Studies Curriculum (2023, with Lara Kiswani and Samia Shoman) (1)
- Reflections on Feminist Interventions within the 2015 Anticorruption Protests in Lebanon (1)
- Reframing the War on Terror (668)
- Reproductive Justice from Turtle Island to Palestine (2023) (94)
- Sondra Hale’s Ethnographic Accountability (2014) (654)
- The Radical Potential of Mothering during the Egyptian Revolution (656)
- The Rules of Forced Engagement: Race, Gender, and the Culture of Fear among Arab Immigrants in San Francisco Post-9/11 (2006) (0)
- The U.S. and Israel Make the Connections for Us (615)
- Transnational Families Under Siege (2009) (595)