Cirien Saadeh, PhD
Dr. Cirien Saadeh is an Arab-American educator, community organizer, and community-trained journalist who works at the intersections of journalism, social movement development, experiential education, and sustainability. Saadeh has written for local, national, and international publications and is committed to using community journalism and community journalism education to build power in and deconstruct systems of oppression in historically marginalized communities.
Saadeh founded the Journalism of Color Training Center, a community journalism school, community journalism support organization, and soon-to-launch newsroom. She also teaches at Prescott College in the Organizing and Community Justice (MA) and Critical Social Justice and Solidarity (BA) programs and serves as the Department Coordinator for both programs.
Saadeh received her Ph.D. in Sustainability Education from Prescott College in 2019. As part of her doctoral program, she developed a theory, “Journalism of Color,” which asks how we develop sustainable journalism platforms and spaces in historically marginalized communities and create journalism methodologies that build community power and resilience.
Additionally, Saadeh has a Master of Arts in the Humanities, focusing on justice, activism, and solidarity as well a Master of Science in Resilient and Sustainable Communities, both from Prescott College. Saadeh’s community organizing apprenticeship was completed at the Organizing Apprenticeship Project (now Voices for Racial Justice) and through the University of Minnesota’s Center for Urban and Regional Affairs Neighborhood Leadership and Organizing Program. She serves on the Board of The Alley Communications, a Twin Cities-based newspaper, and most recently served on the Board of the Journalism & Women Symposium.
In 2025, Saadeh’s Journalism of Color Training Center will launch a non-academic certificate in community journalism in partnership with local newsrooms and a zine exploring the how-to of anti-racist community journalism, utilizing the Journalism of Color methodology. An open-source anti-racist community journalism handbook and curricular resources is also planned for 2025.