Journalist and Co-Founder, Syrian Female Journalists’ Network
Milia Eidmouni is a freelance journalist who left Damascus for Jordan in 2013 due to political pressure. She contributes to several Syrian publications and international magazines, with a focus on women’s rights in situations of armed conflict. In 2012 she co-founded the the Syrian Female Journalists’ Network, a non-profit initiative that trains Syrian female journalists and promotes their role in the region’s media. Eidmouni is certified as both a media trainer and trainer on gender based violence in the United Nation Populations Fund Y-Peer Network. She has been a leading participant in several workshops and conferences related to women’s rights and gender based violence, and been active in both international and national processes to promote gender justice and women’s participation in the political process in Syria. She is an expert in the field of media gender and refugee issues. She was awarded two bachelor’s degrees, in media studies and philosophy, by Damascus University in 2007.
Senior Vice President, The Middle East Institute
Kate Seelye is senior vice president of the Middle East Institute (MEI), where she oversees communications, outreach, and programs, including the institution’s growing arts and culture program. She also serves on the board of the Ali Vural Ak Center for Global Islamic Studies at George Mason University. Prior to joining MEI in 2009, Seelye worked as a radio and television journalist covering the Arab world from 2000-2009 from her base in Beirut, Lebanon. She reported on the region for National Public Radio, the PRI/BBC show, “The World,” PBS TV’s “Frontline/World” documentary program, and the renowned Channel Four British investigative television news series, “Unreported World.”