Faiza Shaheen

Faiza Shaheen (born 1982) is a British academic and economist in the field of economic inequality. In 2018, she was selected to be the prospective parliamentary candidate for Labour for Chingford and Woodford Green, coming second in the 2019 general election to the incumbent, Iain Duncan Smith. In 2023, her first book, Know Your Place, was published.

Faiza Shaheen
Born1982 (age 41–42)
Leytonstone, England
Education
Occupations
  • Academic
  • economist
Years active2006–present
EmployerLondon School of Economics
Notable workKnow Your Place
Political partyLabour (2015–2024)
Independent (2024–present)
SpouseAkin Gazi
Children1
Websitefaizashaheen.co.uk

Shaheen was again selected by her local party in 2022 to stand for the constituency but was not endorsed by Labour after the July 2024 election was announced. Shaheen stood as an independent but was not elected.

Early life and education

Shaheen was born in 1982 in Whipps Cross University Hospital, Leytonstone, in East London and grew up in Chingford.[1] Her father was a car mechanic from Fiji and her mother was a laboratory technician from Karachi, Pakistan, where they met.[2][3][4][5] She has a brother and a sister.[4]

She attended Chingford Church of England Primary School,[6] Chingford Foundation School and Sir George Monoux College in Walthamstow.[7] Her first job was at Greggs in Chingford Mount.[8][9] After studying philosophy, politics and economics at St John's College, Oxford University,[3] Shaheen studied at the University of Manchester, being awarded an MSc in Research Methods & Statistics and a PhD.[10] Her doctoral thesis (2008) was Identifying 'at-risk' neighbourhoods: Exploring the scope for an Index of Area Vulnerability.[11]

Career

Shaheen first worked at the Centre for Urban Policy Studies, University of Manchester. In 2007, she joined the urban policy research charity, Centre for Cities.[12] In 2009, she became senior researcher on economic inequality at the New Economics Foundation.

In 2014, she was appointed Head of Inequality and Sustainable Development at the charity Save the Children UK.[10] In 2016, Shaheen had a cameo role in the British anthology television series Black Mirror.[13] From 2016 to 2020, she was the director of the Centre for Labour and Social Studies (CLASS), a policy think tank originating from the trade union movement.[14][15][16]

Between 2021 and 2023, Shaheen was the Inequality and Exclusion Program Director at the Center on International Cooperation, New York University. In this role, she led the team authoring From Rhetoric to Action: Delivering Equality and Inclusion, launched in September 2021 by seven Heads of State, comprising those from Spain, Sierra Leone, Sweden, Costa Rica, Ireland, New Zealand, and Senegal, as well as Nobel Prize laureate, Joseph Stiglitz and Oscar winner and SDG Advocate, Forest Whitaker, among others.[17][18] She is a visiting professor in practice at the International Inequalities Institute of the London School of Economics, where she teaches the Masters course on inequality.[19][20][16]

Shaheen is a regular contributor to debates on television news programmes, including Newsnight and Channel 4 News, has worked with the likes of Channel 4 and the BBC to develop documentaries on inequality,[21][22] and has contributed to festival debates, such as the Glastonbury Festival[23] and The World Transformed.[24]

In 2023, Shaheen's first book, Know Your Place, on social inequality in the UK, was published by Simon and Schuster.[25] Shaheen wrote the book during evenings and weekends while working full-time at the LSE.[8][26]

Parliamentary candidacies

Shaheen is a longtime Labour voter and says she has been politicised from an early age. She joined the Labour Party after Jeremy Corbyn became leader in 2015.[4] In 2017, The Guardian identified her as a "rising star"[2] and she was nominated for Woman of the Year at the Asian Achievers Awards and named one of the Top 100 Influencers on the Left by LBC broadcaster, Iain Dale.[27][28][29]

Shaheen was selected to be the prospective parliamentary candidate for the Labour Party for Chingford and Woodford Green in July 2018.[30][3][31] She has stated that her motivation for standing was the stress her own and other families had suffered as a result of welfare reforms instituted by the constituency’s longstanding Conservative incumbent, Iain Duncan Smith,[3][32] during his time as Secretary of State for Work and Pensions. In the 2019 general election, Shaheen was endorsed by Alastair Campbell,[33] Hugh Grant,[34] Ayesha Hazarika,[35] Ewan Pearson and David Schneider.[36] She increased Labour’s vote share, contrary to the national trend, and garnered the party’s largest ever vote share in the constituency, coming second by just over one thousand votes.[37]

In July 2022, Shaheen was selected again by her constituency party to contest the seat at the next general election.[38] However, following the announcement of the 2024 general election, the Labour Party declined to endorse her candidacy, citing ‘recent social media activity’ which it viewed as supportive of Palestinians.[39][40] Shaheen then resigned from the Labour Party[41] and stood as an independent candidate for the constituency.[42] The Labour Party replaced her with Shama Tatler, a candidate with no ties to the constituency and a member of the Jewish Labour Movement, a Zionist lobby group.[40]

Shaheen's independent candidacy was endorsed by Ronnie O'Sullivan, the professional snooker player, who lives in the constituency[43][44] and by 50 members of the local Labour Party.[45] At the election on 4 July, Iain Duncan Smith retained the seat with just over one third of the votes, while Shaheen finished third with 12,445 votes, 79 votes behind the Labour candidate, and nearly 5,000 votes behind the winner.[46] The combined vote for Labour and Shaheen accounted for over half of the total votes. Shaheen blamed the result on the Labour Party for not endorsing her candidacy.[47]

Political positions

Shaheen supports investment in public services: in particular, the NHS, schools and the justice system. She supports electoral reform, an end to arms sales to countries involved in civilian killings and rapid action on the climate crisis. She has also urged the reform of party political funding and the curtailing of the influence of large corporations on public policy.[17]

Shaheen has stressed the urgency of rebuilding Whipps Cross Hospital in Leytonstone and repairing the Broadmead Road bridge in Woodford Green, closed due to safety concerns by Redbridge Council. She advocates for urban renewal of the Chingford Mount area and opposes development without the requisite investment in infrastructure, including reversing the closure of essential local resources.[17]

Personal life

Shaheen married actor Akin Gazi in 2013.[48][49] They have one son, born in 2024.[1] They live in Woodford Green, Woodford, East London.[50]

Publications

  • Shaheen, Faiza; Fieldhouse, Ed; Deas, Iain (2008). Identifying 'at risk' neighbourhoods: exploring the scope for and Index of Area Vulnerability. University of Manchester. OCLC 643496958.
  • Shaheen, Faiza (2008). The challenge of increasing employment in London (Report). Centre for Cities.
  • Shaheen, Faiza (2010). Why the cap won't fit (Report). New Economics Foundation.
  • Shaheen, Faiza (2010). Filling the jobs gap (Report). New Economics Foundation.
  • Shaheen, Faiza (2011). Why the rich are getting richer (Report). New Economics Foundation.
  • Shaheen, Faiza (2011). Ten reasons to care about economic inequality (Report). New Economics Foundation.
  • Shaheen, Faiza (2011). Degrees of value (Report). New Economics Foundation.
  • Shaheen, Faiza; Kersley, Helen (2011). Improving services for young people (Report). New Economics Foundation.
  • Shaheen, Faiza; Kersley, Helen (2012). The economic impact of local and regional pay in the public sector (Report). New Economics Foundation.
  • Seaford, Charles; Shaheen, Faiza (2012). Good jobs for non-graduates (Report). New Economics Foundation.
  • Shaheen, Faiza; Penny, Joe; Lyall, Sarah (2013). Distant neighbours (Report). New Economics Foundation.
  • Shaheen, Faiza (2014). Reducing economic inequality as a sustainable development goal (Report). New Economics Foundation.
  • Shaheen, Faiza; Kersley, Helen (2014). Addressing economic inequality at root (Report). New Economics Foundation.
  • McDonnell, John, ed. (2018). Economics for the Many. Verso Books.
  • Shaheen, Faiza, ed. (2021). From Rhetoric to Action:Delivering Equality & Inclusion (Report). Pathfinders.
  • Shaheen, Faiza (2023). Know Your Place. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 9781398505377. OCLC 1264212038.

Filmography

References