Alaoui was born in Paris to a Moroccan father and a French mother, and grew up in
Marrakesh, Morocco. When Alaoui turned 18, she moved to New York City to study photography at the
Graduate Center of the City University of New York. She returned to Morocco in 2008. To do this, she used image creation, reports and studio video installations. One of her commonly used techniques was to set up a portable studio in a public place such as a market square and to invite interested passers-by to be photographed. Alaoui often emphasizes her subjects, minimizing the background of some of her portraits. Art critic Lara Atallah described her work as a "rebuke [of] the orientalist discourse", referring to the theory of
Orientalism proposed by
Edward Said. Her photos were published in
The New York Times and
Vogue. In 2013, she was commissioned by the
Danish Refugee Council to create a series of portraits of refugees in
Lebanon. The project was called
Natreen ("We Wait"). In 2015, she completed a photographic assignment "Everyday Heroes of Syria", in Lebanon,
Jordan and
Iraq, focusing on
Syrians living in
refugee settlements. ==Death==