Joey Shea

Joey Shea is a former Nonresident Fellow at TIMEP focusing on digital rights, information controls, and the impact of technology across the region. Her research examines the political, legal, and economic contexts of network filtering and monitoring technologies, digital media manipulation, including misinformation, disinformation and propaganda, and targeted digital attacks. She researches online freedom of expression and human rights issues, as well as policy solutions that protect the right to privacy and access to information. Her research interests also include the impacts of technology on crisis and conflict and regional cybersecurity dynamics. Previously, Ms. Shea was an Information Controls Research Fellow with the Open Technology Fund and eQualit.e, where she conducted research on censorship and surveillance in Egypt. She has also contributed research to Columbia University’s Global Freedom of Expression Database. In the past, she worked as a researcher at the American University in Cairo. Formerly based in Lebanon, she was also a researcher at the American University of Beirut focusing on refugee rights, as well as working in various capacities at other development organizations. Ms. Shea is a graduate of the University of Toronto and McGill University. She also studied Arabic language and literature at the Institut français du Proche-Orient in Beirut. You can follow her on Twitter at @joey_shea.

Articles by: Joey Shea

North Sinai’s Information Blackout

One of the most enduring and impactful features of frequent counterterrorism operations and measures in North Sinai has been the repeated shutdown of communications networks throughout the region.

Hate Speech, Social Media and Political Violence in Iraq: Virtual Civil Society and Upheaval

Growing more emboldened since Iraq’s defeat of ISIS, armies of online trolls have shed the Internet’s cloak of anonymity.

Egypt’s Digital Foreign Policy

As Egypt’s crises with its immediate neighbors have mounted significantly in recent years, so too has the country’s willingness to use subversive cyber elements for statecraft.