An international human-rights lawyer for 25 years, Nina Shea
joined Hudson Institute
as a senior scholar,
For the 10 years prior to joining Hudson,
Ms. Shea worked at Freedom House, where she directed the Center for Religious
Freedom, an office which she had helped found in 1986 as the Puebla Institute.
Ms. Shea has served as a Commissioner on the U.S. Commission on International
Religious Freedom since its founding in 1999. She was appointed as a
U.S. delegate to the United Nations' Commission on Human Rights by both
Republican and Democratic administrations. where she directs the Center for
Religious Freedom, in November 2006.
For over a decade, she has worked extensively for the advancement
of individual religious freedom and other human rights in U.S. foreign
policy as it confronts Islamist extremism, as well as
authoritarian regimes. For seven years, until 2005, she helped organize and
lead a coalition of churches and religious groups that worked to end a
religious war against Christians,
traditional African believers, and dissident Muslims
in southern Sudan; in 2004 and 2005, she contributed to the drafting of the
Iraqi Constitution's religious freedom provision; and she authored and edited
two widely acclaimed reports, Saudi Arabia's Curriculum of Intolerance
(2006) and Saudi Publications on Hate Ideology Invade American Mosques
(2005), both of which translated and analyzed Saudi governmental publications
that teach hatred and violence against the religious "other." She
regularly presents testimony before Congress, delivers public lectures,
organizes briefings and conferences, and writes frequently on religious freedom
issues. Her 1997 book on anti-Christian persecution, In the Lion's Den,
remains a standard in the field.
Ms. Shea is a member of the bar of the District
of Columbia. She is a graduate of Smith College
and American University's Washington College of Law.
Commissioner Shea was appointed to the Commission by then-Speaker
of the House Dennis Hastert (R-IL).
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