Dana’s research is located at the nexus of feminist theorizations of gendered and sexual violence, solidarities across geopolitical and racial differences, and feminist pedagogies. In support of her work, she has received a Future Minority Studies postdoctoral fellowship, the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council Art/Research Grant, and a Palestinian American Research Council grant.  Her writings have appeared in the Journal of Settler Colonial Studies, the Canadian Journal of SociologyFeral Feminisms, Atlantis: Critical Studies in Gender, Culture and Social JusticeAmerican Quarterly, and Feminist Formations. She is co-editor with Margaret Pappano of Muslim Mothering: Local and Global Histories, Theories, and Practices (Demeter Press 2016). Shorter opinion pieces can be found on Rabble, Ricochet, The Feminist Wire and Al Jazeera. 

Research and Teaching Interests

Areas of research include gendered and sexual violence and the “honor crime,” comparative settler colonialisms, feminist pedagogies, and representations of Arab and Muslim women. Her teaching interests include transnational feminist theories of race, gender and religion, gender politics and feminist movements in the Middle East, and indigenous and feminist solidarities.

View her profile on the Syracuse University College of Arts and Sciences website