
Zeba Khan is a social and political commentator focused on how Islam intersects with race, politics, and identity within the U.S. Her writing has appeared in numerous outlets including The Boston Globe, The Washington Post, CNN, The Christian Science Monitor, Al Jazeera America and The Root.
Zeba has appeared on CNN, NPR, & ABC World News and has been an invited speaker at events with The New America Foundation & the University of California – Berkeley. She has also contributed to policy projects at the RAND Center for Middle East Public Policy & the Faith and Progressive Policy Initiative at The Center for American Progress.
A Fulbright-Islamic Civilizations grantee and a U.S. Department of State Critical
Language Scholarship recipient, Zeba has lived in Damascus, Syria and
travelled throughout the Middle East. She received her BA/MA in Middle
Eastern Studies from The University of Chicago & another MA from
The Fletcher School of Law & Diplomacy. Zeba is a 2016 Security Fellow with
the Truman Project and a 2017-2018 JSK Fellow at Stanford University.
Zeba has appeared on CNN, NPR, & ABC World News and has been an invited speaker at events with The New America Foundation & the University of California – Berkeley. She has also contributed to policy projects at the RAND Center for Middle East Public Policy & the Faith and Progressive Policy Initiative at The Center for American Progress.
A Fulbright-Islamic Civilizations grantee and a U.S. Department of State Critical
Language Scholarship recipient, Zeba has lived in Damascus, Syria and
travelled throughout the Middle East. She received her BA/MA in Middle
Eastern Studies from The University of Chicago & another MA from
The Fletcher School of Law & Diplomacy. Zeba is a 2016 Security Fellow with
the Truman Project and a 2017-2018 JSK Fellow at Stanford University.