Radsch began working as a professional journalist in 2003 when she worked as a news editor at
The Daily Star (Lebanon). She then worked for
The New York Times in the Washington Bureau where she covered the 2004 elections,
Abu Ghraib, politics and culture. In 2005, Radsch left the Times to pursue a Ph.D. in international relations at
American University, where her research focused on cyberactivism in Egypt. Her dissertation, Digital Dissidence and Political Change: Cyberactivism and Citizen Journalism in Egypt, provides the first scholarly examination of the development of the youth movement in Egypt and the role that technology played in reconfiguring what she calls "the potentiality for expression and participation" and thus contributes to understanding how ICTs are implicated in processes of political change. In 2008, Radsch was hired by the Saudi-owned, Dubai-based Arabic satellite channel
Al Arabiya as the English website managing editor. As a journalist and editor at Al Arabiya she oversaw the expansion of the English website and its integration into the broader newsroom. In October 2009 she published an article about safety problems on the airline
Emirates, whose president Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed Al Maktoum is also the head of the Civil Regulatory Authority and the uncle of Dubai's ruler, Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum. According to
Reporters Without Borders, she lost her job at Al Arabiya as a result of the article. The
Australian newspaper, which originally broke the story about the safety problems, covered her dismissal. The article quoted an Emirates official denying that it had pressured the station and its PR firm claimed inaccuracies in the article, but did not specify what they were. Radsch worked for Al Arabiya from 2008 to 2009. Dr. Radsch also ran the Freedom of Expression Campaign at
Freedom House from 2010 to 2012 and was interim managing editor at the
Development Executive Group in 2008. She received her PhD from American University. ==Bibliography==