A Survivor of Rwanda’s Horrors Writes Hope Into Law

Posted by on January 25, 2006
A Survivor of Rwanda’s Horrors Writes Hope Into Law

This article was originally published by The Washington Post. She was born a Rwandan refugee in Uganda, where her parents herded cattle. A bright and determined student, she went to class under a tree using a borrowed identity, was smuggled across borders to continue her schooling, graduated from Uganda’s Makerere University and studied law on […]

Iraqi Women Seek Leadership Positions

Posted by on January 24, 2006
Iraqi Women Seek Leadership Positions

This article was originally published by United Press International. As the results of Iraq’s parliamentary elections began to trickle in, one Washington based group of Iraqi expatriates were more concerned with gender, than with party or ethnic affiliation. “We want the recognition of women to be leaders, to be in the ‘making decisions’ positions,” said […]

Inclusive Security: Hope for Congo

Posted by on December 29, 2005
Inclusive Security: Hope for Congo

This article was originally published by The Boston Globe. The war in the Democratic Republic of Congo officially ended in 2002, but the atrocities continue. Since 1998, nearly 4 million people have died, not only as a result of violence but also from disease and famine triggered by war. Every 24 hours means another 1,000 […]

The Lives They Once Knew

Posted by on December 22, 2005
The Lives They Once Knew

This article was originally published by The Jerusalem Post. In contrast to the numerous learned books that have already been published about the Balkans, in This Was Not Our War, Ambassador-author Swanee Hunt tells the history of the conflict through the experiences of those who lived through it. By conducting in-depth interviews, Hunt analyzes the […]

Southern Belle, Steel Magnolia

Posted by on December 21, 2005
Southern Belle, Steel Magnolia

This article was originally published by The Jerusalem Post. Ambassador Swanee Hunt sits in the lobby of east Jerusalem’s American Colony Hotel holding court. Indeed, her elegant style of dress and soft-spoken manner make her seem like a regal figure, as she greets the diplomats, religious figures and activists she has come to see during […]

Prominent Women’s Rights Advocate Swanee Hunt Visits Korea

Posted by on November 30, 2005
Prominent Women’s Rights Advocate Swanee Hunt Visits Korea

This article was originally published by Korea JoongAng Daily. Swanee Hunt, a Harvard University professor, who is highly renowned not only in the academic community but also in the political circle and on the global arena, is currently doing research on all kinds of gender equality barriers that keep women out of the job market. […]

Keepers of the Peace

Posted by on November 13, 2005
Keepers of the Peace

This article was originally published by Newsweek. Nowhere are women leaders more essential than in countries devastated by war. Studies from the World Economic Forum and Harvard-based nonprofit the Initiative for Inclusive Security show that women are better at creating and keeping the peace in post-conflict societies because women are–generally–less violent than their male counterparts. […]

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Where Quotas Work

Posted by on October 15, 2005
Where Quotas Work

This article was originally published by the Los Angeles Times. The new Iraqi constitution — to be approved or rejected in a nationwide referendum today — includes a provision that would never get passed in the United States: It sets aside at least 25% of the seats in parliament for women. Such an idea would […]

Women Are Key to UN Reforms

Posted by on September 14, 2005
Women Are Key to UN Reforms

This article was originally published by Scripps Howard News Service. In his first public undertaking as US Ambassador, John Bolton is pressing for sweeping institutional reforms at the United Nations. His approach is presumably intended to enhance UN efforts at peacekeeping, fighting terrorism, nuclear disarmament, and democratization. This week, 175 world leaders will convene for […]

Sudanese Women’s Priorities and Recommendations to the Oslo Donors’ Conference on Sudan

Posted by Sudanese Women Delegates with the Government of Norway, NUPI, and UNIFEM on April 1, 2005

These recommendations are an outcome of a consultative process culminating in a Symposium on Women’s Rights and Leadership in Post-Conflict Sudan, held in Oslo April 10, 2005.

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