About the Presenters



Jean Francois Rischard

Jean-François Rischard is a national from Luxembourg, with a US green card, and is married, with three children. He is 57 years old. He has graduate and post-graduate degrees in Economics (University of Aix-Marseille, licence and DES, 1971 and 1973), a Law Doctorate (Luxembourg, 1971), and a Masters in Business Administration (Harvard Business School, 1975, with first and second year honors). He speaks and writes fluent English, French and German. From 1975 to 2005, he worked at the World Bank, and became Vice-President of the institution from 1992 on.

He lives in Paris, after having spent more than 20 years in the United States and especially Washington D.C., where he maintains a home and many links. He has straddled the Atlantic for much of his student and working life, and is well versed in both U.S. and European ways of doing business and corporate governance bents.

He has worked in some 60 developed and developing countries, and maintains – beyond Europe – an extensive network of relationships with government and business leaders throughout North America, Latin America, the Middle-East, Asia, and parts of Africa. He is an avid reader with a broad range of interests in finance, business and markets, world events and trends. He likes skiing and golf.


Hafsat Abiola
www.kind.org

Hafsat abiola is a young activist who works to promote women, youth, and democracy in Nigeria, her home country, and around the world. She is a founding member of several initiatives including Global Youth Connect, Youth Employment Campaign, and Vital Voices: Women in Democracy. She is a member of the World Wisdom Council and the World Future Council. Hafsat is the author of many articles published in international and national media, and assistant editor of Imagining Ourselves, an international anthology of women, that will be published in 2006.

Hafsat is also the Executive Director of the Kudirat Initiative for Democracy, KIND, an NGO that seeks to empower democracy and development in Nigeria by strengthening organizations and creating initiatives that advance women. KIND’s main programme is Kudra, a programme that offers leadership training to 750 young women across Nigeria each year.

In recognition of her work, hafsat was selected as a Global Leader of Tomorrow by the World Economic Forum in 2001 and as an Ashoka Fellow in 2003, and received awards from the State of the World Forum, the Association for Women’s Rights in Development, the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, and the National Association of Nigerian Students. She sits on several boards including Educate Girls Globally, Women’s Learning Partnership, Youth Employment Campaign, and Institute of Noetic Sciences. Hafsat graduated from Harvard College in 1996 and received an honorary doctorate degree from Haverford College in 2003.

"For your work on issues of women and youth leadership programs in Nigeria and for your efforts to promote community voices, Haverford College proudly confers on you the degree of Doctor of Public Letters," honoris causa, May 18, 2003. Haverford's honorary doctorate heralded a year of recognition for KIND.

In October, Hafsat Abiola was inducted as an Ashoka fellow. According to Jan Piercy, former Executive Director of the World Bank, "Time after time, Ashoka's social entrepreneurs have defined the future–and then have persuaded the world's established institutions to follow." With her induction, KIND's Executive Director joins an esteemed community of social entrepreneurs and visionaries. The recognition also provided a three year grant to support KIND's Young Women's Leadership program. Also in December, honour came from the home front with Hafsat receiving the Meritorious Award from the National Council of Women's Societies' Lagos Chapter, to empower women.


Jane Goodall
www.janegoodall.org

In 1965, Jane earned her Ph.D in Ethology from Cambridge University. Soon thereafter, she returned to Tanzania to continue research and to establish the Gombe Stream Research Centre.

Through the years her work continued to yield surprising insights, such as the unsettling discovery that chimpanzees engage in a primitive form of brutal “warfare.” In early 1974, a "four-year war" began at Gombe, the first record of long-term warfare in nonhuman primates. Members of the Kasakela group systematically annihilated members of the "Kahama" splinter group.

In 1977, Jane founded the Jane Goodall Institute for Wildlife Research, Education and Conservation to provide ongoing support for field research on wild chimpanzees. Today, the mission of the Jane Goodall Institute is to advance the power of individuals to take informed and compassionate action to improve the environment for all living things. The Institute is a leader in the effort to protect chimpanzees and their habitats and is widely recognized for establishing innovative community-centered conservation and development programs in Africa and the Roots & Shoots education program in nearly 100 countries.

Dr. Goodall's scores of honors include the Medal of Tanzania, the National Geographic Society's Hubbard Medal, Japan's prestigious Kyoto Prize, the Prince of Asturias Award for Technical and Scientific Research 2003, the Benjamin Franklin Medal in Life Science, and the Gandhi/King Award for Nonviolence. In April 2002 Secretary-General Annan named Dr. Goodall a United Nations “Messenger of Peace.” Messengers help mobilize the public to become involved in work that makes the world a better place. They serve as advocates in a variety of areas: poverty eradication, human rights, peace and conflict resolution, HIV/AIDS, disarmament, community development and environmentalism. In 2003, Queen Elizabeth II named Dr. Goodall a Dame of the British Empire, the equivalent of a knighthood.

Dr. Goodall has received honorary doctorates from numerous universities, including: Utrecht University, Holland; Ludwig-Maximilians University, Munich; Stirling University, Scotland; Providence University, Taiwan; University of Guelph and Ryerson University in Canada; Buffalo University, Tufts University and other U.S. universities.

read more about her biography at http://www.janegoodall.org/jane/study-corner/Jane/bio.asp

 


Austin Gutwein
www.hoopsofhope.org

In the spring of 2004, I watched a video that showed children who had lost their parents to a disease called AIDS. After watching the video, I realized these kids weren’t any different from me except they were suffering. I felt God calling me to do something to help them. I decided to shoot free throws and on World AIDS Day, 2004, I shot 2,057 free throws to represent the 2,057 kids who would be orphaned during my day at school. People sponsored me and we were able to raise almost $3,000. That year, the money was used by World Vision to provide hope to 8 orphan children.

From that year forward, hundreds of people have joined me in a basketball shoot-a-thon called Hoops of Hope. By doing something as simple as shooting free throws, Hoops of Hope participants have raised over $120,000. The children left behind by AIDS now have access to food, clothing, shelter, medical care and finally a school!

This year, our goal is to raise $150,000 to build a medical lab in Sinazongwe, Zambia. This lab will enable medical staff to test parents from HIV/AIDS prior to administering medication for the disease. The medication will allow parents suffering from HIV/AIDS to prolong their life and keep their children from becoming among the 15 million children already orphaned by this disease. I hope you'll join us by participating or sponsoring a participant. It's an awesome event that will leave an impact not only on the lives of the kids we're helping, but on yours as well.

In Him,
Austin

 


John Dennis Liu
www..earthshope.org

Biography:
John D. Liu is an American of Chinese descent who has lived in China since 1979. Mr. Liu helped to open the CBS News bureau at the time of normalization of relations between China and the United States and worked for CBS for more than a decade as producer/cameraman.

Mr. Liu has also worked with RAI Italian State Television and ZDF German State Television.
Since the mid-90’s Mr. Liu has directed the Environmental Education Media Project that uses media to help educate about environmental issues worldwide. In this role, John has made many films on environmental topics including “A Steppe Ahead”, “Line in the Sand”, “Because They’re Worth It”, “Jane Goodall – China Diary” and many more. Mr. Liu has produced and directed films for BBC, National Geographic and others broadcasters. Mr. Liu is currently leading the “EARTH’S HOPE” initiative engaged in communicating about Integrated Poverty Eradication and Large-Scale Ecosystem Rehabilitation based on lessons learned through the documentation of the Loess Plateau Watershed Rehabilitation.

In 2006, Mr. Liu was awarded a fellowship for the communication of Science by the Rothamsted Research Institute in the UK.

Download Liu CV
Download Article about Earth's Hope

 


Marc Kielburger
www.freethechildren.com

Marc Kielburger is the co-founder and chief executive director of Leaders Today, a world renowned youth leadership organization. He is also the chief executive director of Free The Children, the world’s largest network of children helping children through education.

An award-winning social advocate, Marc is also a leadership specialist and a New York Times best-selling author. He has traveled to more than 50 countries, visiting underprivileged children and helping with development initiatives.

As chief executive director of Free The Children, Marc oversees a unique, youth-driven charity that has changed the lives of more than one million young people around the world The organization has built more than 500 schools in Asia, Africa and Latin America, providing daily education to more than 50,000 children. Free The Children has earned four Nobel Peace Prize nominations and facilitated high profile partnerships with organizations such as the United Nations and Oprah’s Angel Network.

Marc graduated magna cum laude from Harvard University, having completed a degree in international relations. He won a coveted Rhodes Scholarship and went on to complete a law degree at Oxford University with an emphasis on human rights law.

He is the co-author of national bestsellers Take Action! – A Guide to Active Citizenship, Take More Action, and most recently, New York Times best-seller Me to We: Finding Meaning in a Material World. Together with Craig Kielburger, Marc is also a syndicated columnist carried by the Toronto Star, Vancouver Sun and Huffinton Post as well as for Canada’s most widely read women’s magazine, Canadian Living.

Marc was also recently selected by the World Economic Forum as one of the 250 Young Global Leaders.

Marc’s work has been featured on The Oprah Winfrey Show, CNN, BBC.

read more of his biography. click here




Dr. Mechai Viravadya
http://www.pda.or.th/eng/

Mr. Mechai Viravaidya is the Founder/Chairman of the Population and Community Development Association (PDA), one of Thailand's largest and most successful private, non-profit development organizations. Since 1974, PDA has initiated community-based family planning services, poverty reduction, rural development and environmental programs, as well as HIV / AIDS prevention activities throughout Thailand. Mr. Mechai played a large role in the success of Thailand's national family planning program, which resulted in one of the most rapid fertility declines in the modern era as the rate of annual population growth declined from over 3% in 1974 to 0.8% in 2002, and the average number of children per family fell from seven to under two.

Mr. Mechai was appointed to the Thai Senate in 1987 and again in 1997; each term for three years. Then in 2000, under Thailand’s new constitution, he was elected to serve a six year term. He was appointed as a Minister to the Office of the Prime Minister in 1991 and 1992, when he assisted Prime Minister Anand Panyarachun as the chief architect in establishing a comprehensive national HIV I AIDS prevention policy and program. This initiative is regarded as the most outstanding national effort by any country, and by 2004 Thailand had experienced a 90% reduction in new infections of HIV.

He has also served as Government Spokesman, Deputy Minister of Industry, CEO of the Provincial Waterworks Authority, Chairman of Krung Thai Bank and the Telephone Organization of Thailand. He was appointed as the Ambassador for UNAIDS in 1999.

Mr. Mechai has received numerous awards including 1997 the United Nations Population Award, the Ramon Magsaysay Award for Public Service in 1994, the Paul Hoffman Award and the United Nations Gold Peace Medal in 1981. He has been granted decorations from the Governments of Thailand, Australia and the Federal Republic of Germany. He was a Visiting Scholar at the Harvard Institute of International Development in 1988-89, and holds several honorary doctorate degrees from Universities in Thailand and abroad. Mr. Mechai Viravaidya was born on January 17, 1941.

 

Marie So
Marie So, Co-Founder marie@venturesindev.org
Marie So graduated from Harvard Kennedy School’s Masters in Public Administration/International Development (MPA/ID) program. Marie has working experiences in both public and private sectors. In public sector, she worked with the United Nations, the United Nations Development Program in Suva, Fiji on a rural banking and gender land rights project; the Dubai Development and Investment Authority in the United Arab Emirates for bilateral trade and investment strategy between China and Dubai. In private sector, Marie gained experiences in engineering field, in consumer products with Procter and Gamble and in the financial sector with Merrill Lynch. Marie also earned her Masters in International and Public Affairs (MIPA) from Hong Kong University and her bachelor degree in Economics, Industrial Engineering, and Management Science from Northwestern University (BSc). She also attended the United World College (UWC) of the Pacific. Marie grew up in Hong Kong and enjoys scuba diving, modern dancing, traveling and painting. Marie is also fluent in Cantonese, Mandarin, and French.



Carol Chyau

Carol Chyau, Co-Founder carol@venturesindev.org
Carol Chyau graduated from Harvard Kennedy School’s Masters in Public Administration/International Development (MPA/ID) program. During the course of her studies at Harvard, Carol worked with the United Nations Development Programme in New York City and Thailand. She completed projects studying Information Communication Technologies in Thailand and Growing Sustainable Business projects in New York. She also studied Internet connectivity in rural areas in Cambodia as a World Resources Institute case writer. Carol has also worked in microfinance with EDPYME Edyficar in Lima, Peru. Carol graduated from the University of Pennsylvania’s joint-degree Huntsman Program in International Studies & Business (BS/BA) with concentrations from the Wharton School in Finance and Management with minors in Spanish and Fine Arts. While studying at Penn, Carol spent a semester living and studying in Santiago, Chile. She enjoys traveling, photography, biking and art history. Carol is fluent in Mandarin and Spanish.

 

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