Snir Levi is a cultural strategist and essayist working at the intersection of symbolic systems, identity, and public meaning. He helps institutions, initiatives, and communities translate psychological, cultural, and symbolic dynamics into insight-driven frameworks for communication, strategy, and social resonance.
He holds an MSc in Culture and Society (Honors) from the London School of Economics and a BA in Communication (Summa Cum Laude) from the University of Southern California, where he focused on cultural theory, media and audience studies, semiotics, and applied psychoanalysis. His early academic research explored symbolic economies in cities and media — including a dissertation on the creative class and an OAPS-awarded study on branding and masculinity.
Over the past decade, Snir has led narrative and research strategy projects across sectors — from health equity and environmental diplomacy to antisemitism discourse and urban-cultural identity. His roles have included Research Consultant at Catalyst Group International, Insights Analyst at Stanford’s Genome Technology Center, and Leadership Fellow at the American Jewish Committee. A longtime ME/CFS advocate, he helped seed the early organizing and public momentum that preceded the formation of mecfsisrael.org and Dysautonomia Israel.
At the heart of his work is a commitment to surfacing meaning, tracing symbolic patterns, and bridging emotional complexity with institutional understanding.