Vol. III·No. 09
Portland, OR · 45.52°N
Writing  ·  Research  ·  The Long Way Around

Siarra
Orange & the
questions worth asking

She has a curious habit of creativity and strategic communication — and an even more curious habit of refusing to leave a question alone until it answers her back.

Currently   writing & researching
Doctoral track   communication studies
Languages   seven, in pieces
Coast   both
31.2589° N · 34.7980° E
Be'er Sheva · The well of seven "Sustainability meets the needs of the present without destroying opportunities for the future." — Redclift, in the margin of every essay I've written about the Negev.

Now

Updated weekly · April '26
Reading
Daniel Bowling & David Hoffman, Bringing Peace into the Room — for the third time
Writing
A long essay on cosmopolitanism & community development in the urban Negev
Thinking About
How liquid modernity changes who gets to define a development “outcome”
Listening For
Northern shift markers in Pacific Northwestern English — and my dad's Brooklyn vowels
Coffee
Black, oat, or nothing at all — depending on the deadline

The Archive

09 essays · ongoing
i.

Mediator self-portrait

Conflict Resolution · Mediation 410/510
A response to David Whyte's poem and the question that opens Bowling & Hoffman's chapter two: what are the personal qualities of the mediator? An argument for asking the question before claiming the answer.
May 2020
Read →
ii.

New Year's (conflict) resolution: hospitality for the holidays

Conflict Resolution · Personal Essay
From the Latin crudus — raw flesh, bloodshed — to the quieter cruelties: an elderly father in a senior village, a phone he can't quite operate, a holiday no one calls on. An argument that goodness is a discipline, not a feeling.
Dec 2019
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iii.

Are pacifists cowards?

Conflict Resolution · Week 9 Journal
A response to Robert Gould, Cheyney Ryan, and Patrick Blanchfield. On Krav Maga in the Negev, a Vietnam veteran's daughter, and the slow incremental work of moral courage that doesn't show up in the cinematic frame.
Dec 2019
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iv.

Power, observation, and the physiology of resolution

Conflict Resolution · CR 510 Reflection
Notes on neurophysiology, Buddha's opposites, and Lynn & Daniel — the couple in the textbook whose conflict is really a question about whether anyone is an island.
May 2020
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v.

The elegant bird: women in development in the MENA region

International & Community Development
An argument that wing-clipping is the wrong starting metaphor. Drawing on Lazreg, Fanon, Mills, and Moghadam — and the question of who, exactly, is allowed to write the rules a woman is then expected to follow.
Feb 2020
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vi.

Earth's Promise: an urban farm in Be'er Sheva

International & Community Development
A study in asset-based community development at the international scale. How Moran Slakmon and Adam Ganson's farm in the Negev plants the seeds of a model the rest of southern Israel might one day grow into.
Mar 2020
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vii.

The bi-coastal variety

Sociolinguistics · Identity Essay
[kɑɹ] vs. [kɑ]. Pacific Northwestern with a Northern shift, and a Brooklyn lexicon that surfaces only around my father. On the social cost of speaking like you're from two places. (My neighbor coined “bi-coastal” — I kept it.)
Dec 2019
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viii.

All paws on deck: a communication campaign

Featured · Strategic Communication
A three-month campaign proposal for Portland Animal Welfare Team. Seven new monthly medical supply donors by July 31. Hashtag, op-ed, coalition lobbying, and a refusal to host an event nobody has time for.
Apr 2020
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ix.

On finishing a B.S. in Arts & Letters

Personal · Milestone
Twenty countries, two coasts, seven languages in pieces, and one hard-earned degree. A short reflection on what it actually meant to study communication, conflict, philosophy, music, and language — all at once, and on purpose.
May 2020
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Siarra Orange Nielsen, photographed at home in Portland.
Plate I
Siarra at home in Portland — wearing the necklace her grandmother gave her, in the warm light of an evening that had probably already run long.
A short biography, with footnotes implied

I write at the intersection of communication, conflict, and the questions nobody is quite ready to answer.

I'm Siarra. I trained as a broadcast journalist, fell sideways into marketing and public relations, ran SEO for sixty-plus accounts at a Pacific Northwest newspaper, and somewhere along the way picked up enough conflict resolution coursework to make me dangerous in a meeting. The B.S. in Arts & Letters from PSU is the most accurate description of what I actually do.

I am preparing for doctoral work in communication and peace studies. The questions I keep returning to: how do communities build the capacity to resolve their own conflicts? Who gets to define a development “outcome,” and what gets lost when we let outsiders write the metric? What does a strategic communication campaign look like when its readers genuinely have no time?

I have lived briefly in many places. I have trained Krav Maga near the Gaza Strip and pottery in the seventh grade. My father — Tata — is a horticulturalist who can name any plant in Latin and forgets to call on holidays; both facts have shaped what I believe about hospitality. I write in the morning, in public, where the ambient human energy keeps the prose honest.

2020
B.S., Arts & Letters · Portland State University
2019–
Conflict Resolution · Mediation 410/510 · CR 510 · ongoing
2016–'19
SEO Strategist · regional newspaper · 60+ client accounts
2015–
Independent writer & campaign strategist · nonprofit communications, PAW Team and others
In progress
Doctoral applications · communication & peace studies
A quiet correspondence

I send a letter when the essay is finished, not before.

Roughly once a month. Sometimes a draft chapter, sometimes a small thing I've been thinking about, never anything I wouldn't be proud to have my father read. No tracking pixels, no funnels, no algorithm. Just writing, when it's ready.