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Nesrine Malik is a Sudanese-born journalist and author of (W&N, 2019). Based in , Malik is a columnist for and served as a panellist on the 's weekly news discussion programme .


Early life
Malik was born in , , and was raised in , and . She attended The American University in Cairo and the University of Khartoum as an undergraduate, before moving to the UK in 2004 to complete her post-graduate study at the University of London.


Career
Alongside her career as a journalist, Malik spent ten years in . She writes on British and American politics, identity politics and . Her comments in after the Charlie Hebdo shooting were quoted in New York magazine and The New York Times, a topic that she also spoke about on the BBC's alongside David Aaronovitch of and Myriam François-Cerrah of the . (8 January 2015). " Toleration After the Charlie Hebdo Attacks". BBC Newsnight, 3 September 2019. Malik's columns and dispatches for magazine focus on Sudanese politics.

In 2015, Malik and discussed the role of the and Muslim cultural identity in Britain on Channel 4 News. (7 October 2015). "Hijab in Britain: Peter Hitchens and Nesrine Malik debate". Channel 4 News. Accessed 3 December 2019. In 2016, Malik was one of three columnists featured in The Guardians "The Web We Want" series discussing and negative comments they had received online regarding their work. Following this, she contributed to a session at the British Parliament with the aim of tackling the online abuse has on emerging writers.

In 2018, journalist described Malik in the British Journalism Review as writing "with wit and punch about race, class, and gender, as well as Islam". Oborne characterised her as an example of a rising generation of politicized Muslim journalists who "use their identities to shed light on the inequalities in British society. They treat Islam as a political identity as much as a religious one. Being Muslim gives this millennial generation an air not of religious but of political defiance. For them, it is a tool for showing that Britain remains a country dominated by a small group of people."

In 2019, Malik published , which was described by the South African Sunday Times as a book in which "Malik examines and deciphers falsehoods that society has come to accept as truth." It was released in in 2020, and a new edition was published in 2021.

In 2020, she appeared on The Moral Maze as part of a debate hosted by along with , , Andrew Doyle; the debate was over the "morality of the ".


Honours and awards
In 2017, Malik was nominated "Journalist/Writer of the Year" by the Diversity in Media Awards. In the same year, she was honoured as "Society and Diversity Commentator of the Year" at the Editorial Intelligence Comment Awards.

In 2019, the Orwell Foundation longlisted Malik for the for her work on Britain's "social evils" in "exposing the hostile environment". In both 2019 and 2020, Malik was shortlisted as "Comment Journalist of the Year" at the British Journalism Awards. In 2021 the Orwell Foundation longlisted Malik again for the for journalism.

In 2021, Malik received the inaugural Robert B. Silvers Prize for Journalism. She was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 2023.


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