She is a poet, writer, columnist, and translator. She graduated from the American University of Afghanistan in 2020 with a degree in Political Science and Public Administration. Currently, she is the director of the Musawer Foundation, which works on children's literature, education, and rights advocacy. She has published six books and many articles, and essays. She is a visiting scholar at Wellesley College, MA, United States
Humaira Rahbin
She is an analyst at the Centre for Information Resilience in London and a New America Afghanistan Observatory fellow. Humaira worked mainly for women's empowerment with civil society organizations, the U.S. Agency for International Development, and the Dutch diplomatic mission in Afghanistan. She has written for journals, newspapers, and other outlets, including The Intercept and the London School of Economics human rights blog. Rahbin holds an M.Phil. degree in public policy from the University of Cambridge. A Cambridge Trust scholar and alumna of Lucy Cavendish College, she is also a member of Chatham House’s Common Future Conversations platform
Azadah Raz Mohammad
She is a Ph.D. candidate at the Melbourne Law School. Her doctoral research investigates the case for the inclusion of an “international crime of terrorism” in the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court.
Azadah holds an LL.M. in International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights from the University of Essex and a second LL.M. in International Criminal Law as a Fulbright Scholar from Ohio State University.
In September 2021, Azadah co-founded the Ham Diley (همدلى) Campaign, assisting vulnerable Afghans at the risk of persecution and advocating accountability for victims of atrocity crimes in Afghanistan. She has worked on humanitarian and human rights-related projects in close collaboration with Afghanistan’s justice institutions. Besides, she has worked with the Administrative Office of the Afghan President and as an adjunct lecturer of law at the American University of Afghanistan.