von Liberatem Pugnator Vor 2 Jahren
3136
Mehr dazu
Visiting Fellow
Masters in Political Science
http://iglp.law.harvard.edu/about/
Honorary Council
Fernando Henrique Cardoso, Former President of Brazil
Jacques Delors, Former President of the European Commission Claus-Dieter Ehlermann, Former Director General of the European Commission and Former Member and Chairman of the WTO Appellate Body
Alfred Gusenbauer, Former Chancellor of Austria
Aleksander Kwasniewski, Former President of the Republic of Poland
Ricardo Lagos Escobar, Former President of Chile
Mark Malloch-Brown, Former UN Deputy Secretary General, and Former Minister of State in the British Foreign and Commonwealth Office
José Manuel Ramos-Horta, Former President of the Democratic Republic of
Timor-Leste H.M. Felipe VI, King of Spain, as Honorary President of the Real Colegio Complutense
Jacques Santer, Former Prime Minister of the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg and Former President of the European Commission Surakiart Sathirathai, Former Foreign Minister and Deputy Prime Minister of Thailand
Nur Hassan Wirajuda, Former Foreign Minister of Indonesia
Advisory Council
Daniela Caruso, Boston University School of Law, Boston, Massachusetts
Matthew Craven, SOAS, University of London, London, United Kingdom
Christine Desan, Harvard Law School, Cambridge, Massachusetts Karen Engle, The University of Texas School of Law, Austin, Texas Jorge Esquirol, Florida International University College of Law, Miami, Florida
Gerald Frug, Harvard Law School, Cambridge, Massachusetts Antonio Garrigues Walker, J&A Garrigues, S.L.P., Madrid, Spain Janet Halley, Harvard Law School, Cambridge, Massachusetts Duncan Kennedy, Harvard Law School, Cambridge, Massachusetts
Martti Koskenniemi, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland
José Martínez Sierra, Real Colegio Complutense, Cambridge, Massachusetts
Salvador Medina Chao, Banco Santander, Madrid, Spain
Kerry Rittich, University of Toronto Faculty of Law, Toronto, Canada Leopold Specht, Specht & Partner, Vienna, Austria Joseph Stiglitz, Columbia University, New York, New York Romano Subiotto, Cleary, Gottlieb, Steen & Hamilton, Brussels, Belgium
Lucie White, Harvard Law School, Cambridge, Massachusetts Mikhail Xifaras, Sciences Po Law School, Paris, France
Academic Council
Talal Abdulla Al-Emadi, Qatar University, College of Law, Doha, Qatar
Gianmaria Ajani, Rector, University of Turin, Turin, Italy
Philip Allott, Trinity College, Cambridge University, Cambridge, United Kingdom
Helena Alviar, Universidad de Los Andes, Faculty of Law, Bogotá, Colombia
José María Beneyto, Congressman, Cortes Generales, Madrid, Spain
Yishai Blank, Faculty of Law, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel Hilary Charlesworth, The Australian National University, Canberra, Australia
B.S. Chimni, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India
Dan Danielsen, Northeastern University Law School, Boston, Massachusetts
Dennis Davis, High Court of Cape Town, South Africa
James Der Derian, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia
Alfredo Saad Filho, SOAS, University of London, London, United Kingdom
Günter Frankenberg, Johann-Wolfgang-Goethe-University, Frankfurt, Germany
Christophe Jamin, Sciences Po Law School, Paris, France
Sheila Jasanoff, Harvard Kennedy School, Cambridge, Massachusetts
Emmanuelle Jouannet, Sciences Po Law School, Paris, France Andrew Lang, London School of Economics, London, United Kingdom
Kishore Mahbubani,
Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy National University of Singapore, Republic of Singapore
Susan Marks, London School of Economics, London, United Kingdom
Pratap Bhanu Mehta, Centre for Policy Research, New Delhi, India
Horatia Muir Watt, Sciences Po Law School, Paris, France
Vasuki Nesiah, New York University, New York, New York Sundhya Pahuja, Melbourne Law School, Melbourne, Australia Ileana Porras, University of Miami School of Law, Miami, Florida Philippe Sands, University College London, London, United Kingdom
Nikolas Rajkovic, Tilburg Law School, Tilburg, The Netherlands Calixto Salomão Filho, University of Sao Paulo Faculty of Law, Sao Paulo, Brazil
Hani Sayed, The American University in Cairo, Cairo, Egypt
Amr Shalakany, The American University in Cairo, Cairo, Egypt Gunther Teubner, Johann-Wolfgang-Goethe-University, Frankfurt, Germany
Chantal Thomas, Cornell Law School, Ithaca, New York
David Trubek, University of Wisconsin Law School, Madison, Wisconsin
Robert Wai, York University, Osgoode Hall Law School, Toronto, Canada
For the 2005 and 2006 election cycles, Smartmatic provided election technology and services to 307 jurisdictions across Arizona, California, Colorado, District of Columbia, Florida, Illinois, Louisiana, Michigan, Missouri, New Jersey, Nevada, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Washington and Wisconsin. Using a Smartmatic-manufactured solution, the City of Chicago and Cook County became the first US jurisdictions to conduct the encrypted transmission of results.
In March 2016, the Utah Republican Party conducted
the first election that employed blockchain technology
to increase the transparency of
.
In June 2018,
Smartmatic signed a contract with the County of Los Angeles
to become the prime contractor for
the Voting Solutions for All People (VSAP)
. Smartmatic is responsible for systems integration, engineering and manufacturing of the new voting system to be used during the 2020 elections.
https://trello.com/b/prPcg1B4/the-white-house-national-economic-council
https://www.cisa.gov/sector-coordinating-councils
JAMES COMEY
December 2003 Deputy Attorney General
General Counsel Lockheed Martin 2005
General Counsel Bridgewater Associates 2010-2013 https://www.bridgewater.com/
Board of Directors HSBC January 2013
Head of FBI under Obama FEB 2013
https://www.dfc.gov/who-we-are/executive-staff
Was campaign manager for Corazon Aquino 1986
https://www.arm.co.za/a/a_i.php
https://www.kupanda.com/homepage/#companies-and-partners
(Debt, Aid and Trade for Africa)
Debt, AIDS, Trade, Africa (DATA) was a multinational
founded in January 2002 in London by U2's Bono & Bobby Shriver & activists from the jubilee 2000, drop the debt campaign.
DATA was created for the purposes of obtaining equality and justice for Africa through debt relief, adjusting trade rules which burden Africa, eliminating the Aids epidemic in Africa, strengthening democracy further accountability by the ealthiest nations and African leaders and transparency towards the people. In 2007, in the United States, DATA and Bono were jointly awarded the 2007 Liberty Medal for their groundbreaking efforts to address the Aids crisis and poverty in Africa. Start-up funds came from the Gates Foundation financier George Soros and technology entrepreneur Edward W. Scott In 2007, DATA and the
ONE Campaign decided to join forces, and, in January 2008, they formally merged under the name ONE.
https://www.afdb.org/en/about/mission-strategy
Campaign Manager Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada, Bolivia 1993
His UNDP observers were chosen by Venezuela's
National Electoral Council (CNE)
to supervise the signature collection for the
https://2009-2017.state.gov/s/partnerships/newbeginning/index.htm
https://childrensnational.org/about-us/boards-of-directors
https://www.bloomberg.com/profile/person/17912507
https://www.pwc.com/gx/en/about/leadership.html
https://opencorporates.com/companies/us_tx/0042535900
Kasowitz Benson Torres LLP
https://www.trilogy-international.com/TRL/board_of_directors/3382
LINKS TO OPEN SOCIETY FOUNDATION
Director of Strategic Partnerships
Director of Product Innovation & Market Access
Director of Global Communications & U.S. Programs
Solving the issue of maternal mortality requires all of our skills and expertise. Our Advisory Board members bring varied backgrounds and strengths to help us create solutions that save women’s lives.
Retired Director, African Programme for Onchocerciasis Control
World Health Organisation
Adjunct Professor of Global Health
Duke University Global Health Institute
Managing Director
Imperial Health Sciences
Founder, Young Beninese Leaders Association (YBLA)
United Nations Appointed Leader for the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
Youth Advisor, Johns Hopkins Center for Communications Program Portfolio in Nigeria
Associate Researcher with Centre for Girls Education (CGE), Population and Reproductive Health Initiative, Ahmadu Bello University Teaching Hospital, Kaduna State, Nigeria
Vice President, UNFPA’s Youth Advisory Group
Former President of The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG)
Associate Dean for Diversity at the Morsani College of Medicine and Chief Diversity Officer for USF Health
Willard C. Rappleye Professor and Chair, Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology, Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons
Director of Services at the Sloane Hospital for Women, New York-Presbyterian/Columbia University Medical Center
Consultant, Women’s Health
Professor, Department of Global Health and Population Harvard School of Public Health Coordinator, Dean’s Special Initiative on Women and Health Director, Maternal Health Task Force
Retired Professor, Lead for International Women’s Health Research
Institute for Women’s Health, University College London
Professor in Residence, Maternal and Child Health
Fred H. Bixby Endowed Chair in Population and Family Planning Director, Bixby Center for Population, Health, and Sustainability School of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley
Founder and Chariman, Praekelt Group
Director, Country Strategy
Population Council
https://www.popcouncil.org/uploads/pdfs/Annual_Report_June_28_2019_FINAL_-_Web.pdf (GATES FOUNDATION)
https://www.keio.ac.jp/en/about/
https://www.dsm.com/corporate/about/our-purpose.html
https://new.siemens.com/global/en/company/about/supervisoryboard.html
https://www.iadb.org/en/about-us/board-governors
https://www.roche.com/about.htm
https://www.sberbank.com/about
https://www.bain.com/about/our-people/
Venkata (Raja Rajamannar) Madabhusi, Humana Inc.;
Mona Abdallah Rishmawi, United Nations High Commission for Human Rights (OHCHR);
Abdulkhaleq Abdulla, UAE University;
Khalid Abdulla-Janahi, Vision 3;
Jaime Abello Banfi, FUNDACIÓN NUEVO PERIODISMO IBEROAMERICANO;
Helmy Abouleish, Sekem Group;
Muna AbuSulayman, Alwaleed Bin Talal Foundation;
Viral V. Acharya, Leonard N. Stern School of Business;
Ann-Kristin Achleitner, Center for Entrepreneurial and Financial Studies (CEFS);
Rob Adams, City of Melbourne;
Eli Y. Adashi, Brown University;
Aderanti Adepoju, Network of Migration Research on Africa (NOMRA);
Taffy Adler, Housing Development Agency (HDA);
Rohit T. Aggarwala, C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group;
Bertie Ahern, Office of Bertie Ahem;
Mubariq Ahmad, University of Indonesia;
Masood Ahmed, International Monetary Fund (IMF);
A. Vedat Akgiray, Capital Markets Board of Turkey (CMB);
Najla Al Awadhi, Dubai Media Incorporated;
May Al Dabbagh, Dubai School of Government;
Reem Al Hashimy, Ministry of State of the United Arab Emirates; Hessa Al Jaber, Supreme Council for Information and Communication Technology (ictQATAR);
Abdullah Al Karam, Knowledge and Human Development Authority;
Mohammed Bin Essa Al Khalifa, Bahrain Economic Development Board; Hanan Al Kuwari, Hamad Medical Corporation; Riyad Abdulrahman Al Mubarak, Abu Dhabi Accountability Authority (ADAA); Khaled Bin Zayed Al Nehayan, Bin Zayed Group; Hussain J. Al Nowais, Emirates Holdings; Ohood Al Roumi, Office of the Prime Minister of the United Arab Emirates; Mowaffak Al Rubaie, National Security Council; Fahd Al-Rasheed, Emaar The Economic City; Thomas Alexander Aleinikoff, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR); Mimi Alemayehou, Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC); Alberto Alesina, Harvard University; Yvan Allaire, Institute for Governance of Public and Private Organizations (IGOPP); Tony Allan, King's College London; Natalia Allen, Design Futurist SM; George Alleyne, United Nations; Graham Allison, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University; Philip Alston, New York University School of Law; Jose E. Alvarez, New York University School of Law; José MarÃ-a Õlvarez Pallete, Telefónica Latinoamérica; Ala Alwan, World Health Organization (WHO); K. Y. Amoako, African Center for Economic Transformation (ACET); Eric Anderson, Space Adventures Ltd; Matthew Anderson, News Corporation; Peter Anderson, University of Maastricht; Ross Anderson, University of Cambridge; Anthony Andrews, Prospectors & Developers Association of Canada (PDAC); Kwesi Aning, Kofi Annan International Peace Keeping Training Centre (KAIPTC); Paola Antonelli, Museum of Modern Art; Hiroto Arakawa, Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA); Alexei G. Arbatov, Institute of World Economy and International Relations (IMEMO); Louise Arbour, International Crisis Group (ICG); Giles Archibald, Mercer (MMC); Cyrus Ardalan, Barclays Capital; Martin Arévalo de León, Interpeace; David Arkless, Manpower Inc.; Roberto Artavia, VIVA Trust; Martha C. Artiles, Manpower Inc.; Atul Arya, IHS CERA (Cambridge Energy Research Associates); Joyce Aryee, The Ghana Chamber of Mines; Ruben Atekpe, Merchants Company of West Africa Ltd - MECOWA Group; Jacques Attali, PlaNet Finance; Dorothy Attwood, The Walt Disney Company; Rick Aubry, New Foundry Ventures; Byron Auguste, McKinsey & Company; Lars Espen Aukrust, Embassy of Norway; José Ignacio Avalos Hernández, Un Kilo de Ayuda; Gustavo Averbuj, Ketchum; Khaled Awad, Grenea; Seth Ayers, The Information for Development Program (InfoDev); Azman Mokhtar, Khazanah Nasional Berhad; Henry T. Azzam, Deutsche Bank AG; James Bacchus, Greenberg Traurig LLP; Peter Baccile, JPMorgan Securities Inc.; Rikard Bagun, Kompas Daily; Brian Baird, United States House of Representatives; Rahul Bajaj, Bajaj Auto Ltd; Mitchell Baker, Mozilla Corporation; Pauline H. Baker, Fund for Peace; Raymond Baker, Global Financial Integrity; Richard E. Baldwin, The Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies; Kingsley Bangwell, Youngstars Foundation; Judith Banister, Javelin Investments; Britt D. Banks, University of Colorado; Alicia Bárcena Ibarra, United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC); Taeho Bark, Seoul National University; Thomas P. M. Barnett, Enterra Solutions, LLC; John Barrett, Department for International Development (DFID); David Barth, USAID - US Agency for International Development; Dominic Barton, McKinsey & Company; Katinka Barysch, Centre for European Reform (CER); Raymond J. Baxter, Kaiser Permanente; John Beard, World Health Organization (WHO); Alan Beattie, The Financial Times; Charlie Beckett, London School of Economics and Political Science; Rod A. Beckstrom, Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN); Mark Beer, Dubai International Financial Centre Courts; Bernard Belk, Swiss Reinsurance Company Ltd; Carol Bellamy, Education for All - Fast-Track Initiative (EFA FTI); Daniel W. Bena, PepsiCo International; Regina M. Benjamin, United States Public Health Service Commissioned Corps (PHSCC); Jeremy Bentham, Royal Dutch Shell Plc; Erik Berglöf, European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD); Desmond Bermingham, Save the Children International; Tim Berners-Lee, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT); Ann Bernstein, Centre for Development and Enterprise (CDE); Guido Bertucci, Governance Solutions International; Homi K. Bhabha, Harvard University; Jacqueline Bhabha, Harvard Law School; Neeraj Bharadwaj, Accel India Growth Management Company Pvt. Ltd; Shobhana Bhartia, HT Media Limited; Andrea Bianchi, The Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies; Simon Biggs, University of Melbourne; Betty Bigombe, Betty Bigombe Children of War Foundation; JeanLouis Billon, Groupe Sifca; Brizio Biondi-Morra, AVINA; Nancy Birdsall, Center for Global Development; Fatih Birol, International Energy Agency; Joshua Bishop, International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN); Matthew Bishop, The Economist; Giovanni Bisignani, International Air Transport Association (IATA); Don Blackmore, eWater CRC; Ron Blackwell, AFLCIO; Tony Blair, The Office of Tony Blair; Mario I. Blejer, Banco Hipotecario SA; Richard Blewitt, HelpAge International; David E. Bloom, Harvard School of Public Health; David E. Bloom, Harvard School of Public Health; Adam Bly, Seed; Edward Boateng, Global Media Alliance (GMA); Sara Boettiger, PIPRA; Iris Bohnet, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University; Kjell Magne Bondevik, The Oslo Center for Peace and Human Rights; Emma Bonino, Senate of Italy; Axel Börsch-Supan, Mannheim Research Institute for the Economics of Aging (MEA); Nick Bostrom, Future of Humanity Institute; Frans Bouwen, The Hague Process on Refugees and Migration; Peter Brabeck-Letmathe, Nestlé SA; Catherine Bragg, United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA); Erik Brandsma, E.ON AG; Ian Bremmer, Eurasia Group; Larry Brilliant, Skoll Global Threats Fund; John Briscoe, Harvard University; Jean M. Brittingham, University of Cambridge; Steven Broad, TRAFFIC International; Rosa Brooks, US Department of Defense; J. Frank Brown, INSEAD; Tim Brown, IDEO LLC; Allen Bruford, World Customs Organization (WCO); Jean-Louis Bruguière, European Commission and Ministry of Justice; Peter C. Brun, Vestas Wind Systems A/S; Willem H. Buiter, Citi; Christopher Bunting, International Risk Governance Council (IRGC); Jean-Claude Burgelman, Directorate-General for Research; M. Michele Burns, Mercer Inc. (MMC); Sharan Burrow, International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC); Martin Burt, Fundación Paraguaya; Kathy Bushkin Calvin, United Nations Foundation; Winnie Byanyima, United Nations Development Programme (UNDP); Robert Cailliau, European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN); Charles W. Calomiris, Columbia Business School; Sandro Calvani, ASEAN Regional Center of Excellence on Millennium Development Goals (ARCMDG); James Cameron, Climate Change Capital; Claudio Campagna, Wildlife Conservation Society; Joan Campbell, Chautauqua Institution; Rachel Campbell, KPMG; Richard Caplan, University of Oxford; Mauricio Cárdenas, The Brookings Institution; Marilyn Carlson Nelson, Carlson; Albert Carnesale, University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA); Mark J. Carney, Bank of Canada; David D. Caron, University of California, Berkeley; Laura Carstensen, Stanford Center on Longevity; John A. Casesa, Guggenheim Partners LLC; Andrew Cassels, World Health Organization (WHO); Margaret Catley-Carlson, Global Water Partnership (GWP); Stephen Cecchetti, Bank for International Settlements (BIS); Laura M. Cha, The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited; Chan Yuen-Ying, University of Hong Kong; Nigel Chapman, Plan International; Sonia Chapman, BASF SA; Erik Charas, Charas LDA; Mirai Chatterjee, Self-Employed Women's Association (SEWA); Moncef CheikhRouhou, HEC School of Management; Johnny Chen, Zurich Financial Services; Chen Chunming, Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention; Cheng Siwei, International Finance Forum (IFF); Heang Chhor, McKinsey & Company Inc.; Chukwu-Emeka Chikezie, Up! (Sierra Leone) Ltd; Arslan Chikhaoui, Algerian Joint Army College; Mitsuru Claire Chino, Itochu Corporation; H. S. Cho, Hyosung Group; Tejpreet Singh Chopra, Bharat Light and Power; Robert Chote, Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR); Martin Christopher, Cranfield University; Joseph Cirincione, Ploughshares Fund; Susan M. Cischke, Ford Motor Company; Hassane Cisse, The World Bank Group; Andrew Clapham, Geneva Academy of International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights; Frank Clary, Agility; David Cleevely, University of Cambridge; Steve Clemons, New America Foundation; Sanford Climan, Entertainment Media Ventures; John H. Clippinger, Harvard University; Paulo Coelho, Sant Jordi Asociados; Julie Coffman, Bain & Company; Andrew L. Cohen, JPMorgan Private Bank; Jared Cohon, Carnegie Mellon University; Andrea Coleman, Riders for Health; Steve Coll, New America Foundation; Paul Collier, University of Oxford; Brian Collins, COLLINS:; Elisabeth Comstock, General Electric Company; Peggy Conlon, Advertising Council; Kevin M. Conrad, Coalition for Rainforest Nations; Cary Cooper, Lancaster University Management School (LUMS); Richard N. Cooper, Harvard University; Jennifer Corriero, TakingITGlobal; Richard Cotton, NBC Universal Inc.; Pamela Cox, The World Bank; Aron Cramer, Business for Social Responsibility (BSR); Thomas Crampton, Ogilvy Public Relations Worldwide; Susan Crawford, Yale Law School; Martha Crenshaw, Center for International Security and Cooperation; Andrew Crockett, JPMorgan Chase International; Audrey Kurth Cronin, U.S. National War College; Cui Liru, Chinese Institutes of Contemporary International Relations; Daniel Currie, Best Buy Co. Inc.; Gregory Curtin, University of Southern California (USC); Gerald Curtis, Columbia University; Stephen D'Esposito, RESOLVE; Jo da Silva, Arup Group Ltd; Yves Daccord, International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC); Uri Dadush, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace; Richard Dalbello, Intelsat General Corporation; Elizabeth Daley, University of Southern California (USC); Richard Danziger, International Organization for Migration (IOM); Keith T. Darcy, Ethics & Compliance Officer Association (ECOA); Ara Warkes Darzi, St Mary's Hospital; Howard Davies, London School of Economics and Political Science; Stephen Davis, Yale School of Management; Gerald C. Davison, USC School of Gerontology and Andrus Gerontology Center; Hussain Dawood, The Dawood Group; Arnoud De Meyer, Singapore Management University; Cobus de Swardt, Transparency International; Dennis de Tray, The Results for Development Institute (R4D); Roxanne J. Decyk, Shell Oil Company; James Gregory Dees, Duke University; John K. Defterios, CNN International; John J. DeGioia, Georgetown University; Kevin Dehoff, Booz & Company; Mario Martin Delgado Carrillo, Government of Federal District; Deng Yongheng, National University of Singapore; Ozlem Denizmen, Dogus Group; Raghida Dergham, Al Hayat; Kemal Dervis, The Brookings Institution; Eckhard Deutscher, The Development Assistance Committee (DAC); Volker Deville, Allianz SE; Jean-Luc di Paola-Galloni, Valeo; Rafael Diez de Medina, International Labour Organization (ILO); N'Deye Bineta Diop, Femmes Africa Solidarité; Samuel A. DiPiazza, DirecTV Group Inc.; Kuseni Douglas Dlamini, Old Mutual; Steve Dobbs, Fluor Corporation; Neil Doherty, The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania; Don Lam, VinaCapital Group; Michael Donoghue, Department of Conservation; Elaine Dorward-King, Rio Tinto; Charles Doyle, Jones Lang LaSalle; Michael W. Doyle, Columbia Law School; Peter Draper, The South African Institute of International Affairs (SAIIA); Jeffrey M. Drazen, The New England Journal of Medicine; Michael Drexler, Barclays PLC; Jamie C. Drummond, ONE; Tanya Dubash, Godrej Industries Ltd; Christian Dumas, Airbus SAS; Maria Doris Dumlao, Philippines Daily Inquirer; Serge Dumont, Omnicom Group Inc.; Martine Durand, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD); Mallika Dutt, Breakthrough; Soumitra Dutta, INSEAD; Victor J. Dzau, Duke University Medical Center and Health System; Nicholas Eberstadt, The American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research; Luis Echavarri, OECD Nuclear Energy Agency; Elizabeth C. Economy, Council on Foreign Relations; Jack Ehnes, California State Teachers' Retirement System (CalSTRS); Johannes Eigner, Federal Ministry of European and International Affairs of Austria; Stuart E. Eizenstat, Covington & Burling LLP; Klas Eklund, Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken (SEB); Matrice Ellis-Kirk, Heidrick & Struggles Inc.; Bob G. Elton, Powertech Labs Inc.; Tony Elumelu, Heirs Holding Ltd; Jed Emerson, Blendedvalue.org; Robert Engle, New York University; Shelly Esque, Intel Corporation; Dan Esty, Yale University; Gareth Evans, School of Social and Political Sciences; John Evans, Trade Union Advisory Committee to the OECD; Marketa D. Evans, Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada; Christine Evans Klock, International Labour Organization (ILO); Joachim Faber, Allianz Global Investors AG; Michael Havbro Faber, ETH Zurich; Adriana Fabra Aguilar, Universitat de Barcelona; Fan Shenggen, International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI); Fang Xinghai, Shanghai Municipal Government; Asaf Farashuddin, IHS Inc.; Philippe Fargues, European University Institute; Alexandre Fasel, Federal Department of Foreign Affairs of Switzerland; Martin Feldstein, National Bureau of Economic Research; Rafael Fernández de Castro, Mexican Presidency; Olivier Ferrand, Terra Nova; Michael Fertik, ReputationDefender Inc.; Edwin J. Feulner, The Heritage Foundation; Nathaniel C. Fick, The Center for a New American Security (CNAS); Christiana Figueres, United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC); Stanley Fischer, Bank of Israel; Martin J. Fisher, KickStart International; Raymond Fisman, Columbia Business School; Maurice Flanagan, Emirates Group; Heiner Flassbeck, United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD); Frederico Fleury Curado, EMBRAER - Empresa Brasileira de Aeronáutica SA; Ann M. Florini, Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy; Dominique Foray, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL); Kristin J. Forbes, MIT - Sloan School of Management; Tina Fordham, Citi Global Markets; Henrietta H. Fore, Holsman International; Jane E. Fountain, University of Massachusetts; David Frediani, Marsh & McLennan Companies Inc. (MMC); Allan Freeth, TelstraClear; Linda P. Fried, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University; Takahiro Fujimoto, The University of Tokyo; Kumi Fujisawa Tsunoda, Think Tank SophiaBank; Yukiko Fukagawa, Waseda University; Glen S. Fukushima, Airbus Japan K.K.; Lewis M. Fulton, International Energy Agency; Yoichi Funabashi, Asahi Shimbun; Daniel R. Fung, Des Voeux Chambers; Motohisa Furukawa, Office of the Prime Minister of Japan; Peter B. Gabriel, Real World; Joel David Gallagher, Ketchum Pleon Ltd; Robert L. Gallucci, MacArthur Foundation; Shubhashis Gangopadhyay, India Development Foundation (IDF); Terry D. Garcia, National Geographic Society (NGS); Javier GarciaMartinez, University of Alicante; Anwar M. Gargash, Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the United Arab Emirates; Timothy Garton Ash, University of Oxford; Peter Gastrow, International Peace Institute (IPI);
https://www.ril.com/OurCompany/Leadership/FounderChairman.aspx
https://www.salesforce.com/company/leadership/
Grants and gifts of $750,000 or more, includes revenue received 10/1/16 – 1/15/18 and older grants still open as of 10/1/16
Alcoa Foundation • Bloomberg Philanthropies • C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group • Cargill, Incorporated • Caterpillar Foundation • The Children’s Investment Fund Foundation • Citi Foundation • ClimateWorks Foundation • Department for Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy of the United Kingdom • Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade of Australia • DOB Ecology • DOEN Foundation • Energy Agency of Sweden • European Climate Foundation • European Commission • Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development of Germany (BMZ) • Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety of Germany (BMU) • FedEx Corporation Ford Foundation • Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation • German Agency for International Cooperation (GIZ) • Good Energies Foundation • Google Inc. • William and Flora Hewlett Foundation • IKEA Foundation • Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) • Irish Aid – Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade • Johnson Controls International plc • Linden Trust for Conservation • The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation
Ministry for Europe and Foreign Affairs of France • Ministry of Economic Affairs and Climate Policy of the Netherlands • Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Denmark (Danida) • Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands (DGIS) • Ministry of Infrastructure and Water Management of the Netherlands • Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation • Charles Stewart Mott Foundation • The Nature Conservancy • Norway’s International Climate and Forest Initiative (NICFI) • Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation (Norad) • Norwegian Ministry of Climate and Environment • Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs • Oak Foundation • Open Society Foundations • Michael Polsky Family • Rockefeller Brothers Fund • Rockefeller Foundation • Stephen M. Ross Philanthropies • Shell Foundation • Skoll Global Threats Fund • Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (Sida) • Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC) • Ruth McCormick Tankersley Charitable Trust • The Tilia Fund • U.K. Department for International Development (DFID) • U.K. Foreign and Commonwealth Office (UKFCO) • United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) • U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) • Villum Foundation • The World Bank • Anonymous (1)
https://www.chinausfocus.com/author/20565/zhu-min.html
Saad Mohseni
Chairman & CEO
Jahid Mohseni
Chief Operating Officer
Anthony Bates
Group General Counsel
Shafic Gawhari
CEO Afghanistan
Elias Schulze
Executive Chairman Ethiopia
Chris McDonald
Senior Advisor APL
Nazrawi Ghebreselasie
Managing Director Ethiopia
CHAIRMANSHIP SECRETARY GENERAL
Paul POLMANChair, ICC
Paul Polman was elected Chair of ICC on 21 June 2018. The CEO of Unilever from 2009 to January 2019, Mr Polman has played a significant role first in developing the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), and now in promoting action towards their delivery as a member of the SDG Advocacy Group. He is a member of the International Business Council of the World Economic Forum, a member of the B Team and sits on the Board of the UN Global Compact as Vice Chair, and the Consumer Goods Forum, where he co-chairs the Sustainability Committee. He has also been Chair of the World Business Council for Sustainable Development.
First Vice-Chair
Ajay BANGAFirst Vice-Chair
Ajay Banga was elected First Vice-Chair of ICC on 21 June 2018. He is President and Chief Executive Officer of Mastercard and a member of its Board of Directors. Prior to Mastercard, Mr Banga served as Chief Executive Officer of Citigroup Asia Pacific, and served as a member of President Obama’s Commission on Enhancing National Cybersecurity. He is a member of the U.S. President’s Advisory Committee for Trade Policy and Negotiations, and a Co-Chair of the Partnership for New York City. He is also a founding Trustee of the U.S.-India Strategic Partnership Forum and a co-founder of The Cyber Readiness Institute.
Vice-Chair
Yassin AL SUROORVice-Chair, ICC
Yassin Al Suroor is the founder and the Executive Chairman of A’amal group he is also board member of various regional and international companies. He is the chair of A’amal Foundation, Chair of A’amal Capital Limited and sits on the executive committee of ICC World Chambers Federation.
Vice-Chair
Cherie NURSALIMVice-Chair
Cherie Nursalim was elected ICC Vice-Chair on 29 May 2019 having served as a member of the ICC Executive Board since 2013. Ms Nursalim is Vice-Chair of GITI Group, Singapore, a diversified group with real estate development, manufacturing and consumer lifestyle presence partnering with world‐renowned brands throughout the Asia Pacific region. A member of several boards including, Publicis Groupe, the ICC Research Foundation and the ICC Academy, Ms Nursalim also serves on the Business and Sustainable Development Commission global Blended Finance Taskforce and the Women’s World Banking Southeast Asia Advisory Council, and sits on the Leadership Council of the United Nations global initiative Sustainable Development Solutions Network.
Honorary Chair
Sunil Bharti MITTALHonorary Chair, ICC
Sunil Bharti Mittal became Honorary Chair of ICC on 21 June 2018, after having served as Chair since June 2016. Mr Mittal is the Founder and Chair of Bharti Enterprises, one of India’s leading conglomerates with diversified interests in telecom, insurance, real estate, agri and food, besides other ventures. Bharti has joint ventures with several global leaders: Singtel, SoftBank, AXA, and Del Monte, among others. Bharti Airtel, the group’s flagship company, is among the world’s largest telecommunications companies, offering mobile, fixed broadband and digital TV solutions to over 350 million customers across India, South Asia and Africa. Mr Mittal is a recipient of the Padma Bhushan, one of India’s highest civilian honours, awarded to individuals for demonstrating distinguished services of high order.
ICC Secretary General
John W.H. DENTON AOICC Secretary General
John W.H. Denton AO assumed the position as Secretary General of the International Chamber of Commerce in May 2018. Having previously served as ICC’s First Vice-Chair and on the ICC Executive Board, Mr Denton was Partner and CEO of Corrs Chambers Westgarth, a leading independent law firm in Australia. Mr Denton is also Chair of the Business Council of Australia’s Global Engagement Task Force; Chair (emeritus) of the Experts Group on Trade and Investment in Indonesia; Board Member of Asialink and Asia Society; and a Founding Member of the Australia-China CEO Roundtable.
EXECUTIVE BOARD
Fredrik Cappelen Chair, ICC Sweden (2001-2007); CEO, Nobia; Chair, Dustin (Byggmax, Securitas, Transcom, Carnegie Investment Bank, Cramo OY) and major owner in Eterna.
Nayla Comair-ObeidFounding partner, Obeid Law Firm(Beirut, Paris); Professor of Private Law and International Commercial Arbitration, Lebanese University- Faculty of Law; Author of The Law of Business Contracts in the Middle East.
Monica de Grieff(Colombia) 2018-2021 Past President, Bogota Chamber of Commerce
Daniel Feffer (Brazil) 2015-2021 Vice-Chair of the Board of Directors, Suzano Papel e Celulose S/A; Vice-President of the Board and CEO, Fundacao Arymax; President, Instituto Ecofuturo; Member, Institute of Research for Industrial Development (IEDI); Member, Competitive Brazil Movement; Member, Federation of Industries of the State of Sao Paulo; Chair, ICC Brazil; Board Member, Institute of International Relations and Foreign Trade (IRICE)
Maria Fernanda Garza(Mexico) 2014-2020 CEO, Orestia, Mexico; Chair, ICC Mexico; Member, International Affairs Advisory Committee of the Ministry of Labour; Member, National Advisory Committee of ACLAN; Vice-President, Confederation of Employers of the Mexican Republic (Coparmex); Member, Compliance Committee of Infonavit; Board Member, Corporate Responsibility Alliance AliaRSE; Member, Corporate Responsibility Network, Business and Industry Advisory Committee to the OECD
Robert Gutsche(Germany) 2015-2021 Chief Executive Officer of IFA Rotorion, Foerderkreis Freunde der Komischen Oper Berlin; Deputy Chair of the Board, Kreuzberger Kinderstiftung; Member of the Board, ICC Germany
Candace JohnsonVice-Chair, NorthStar Earth and Space; Chair, Advisory Board of Seraphim Space Capital; Co-initiator of SES/ASTRA and Chief Architect of SES Global; Founding President, Europe Online Investments; Founder, Loral Cyberstar-Teleport Europe; Co-founder, Oceania Women’s Network Satellite; Member, Kacific Satellite System Board; Founding President, Association of Private Telecom Operators; Founding President, Global Telecom Women’s Network.Former President, EBAN, the European Business Angel and Early-Stage Investment Network (2014-2018); Co-Founder, ABAN – African Business Angels Network, MBAN, MENA Business Angels Network, Global Business Angels Network; Non-Executive Director, SES-ESL; President Johnson Paradigm Ventures
Giampiero Massolo(Italy) 2018-2021 Chairman, Fincantieri S.p.A.; Chairman, Italian Institute for the International Political Studies
(ISPI)Xu Niansha(China) 2018-2021 Chairman, China Poly Group Corporation; Vice Chair, CCOIC; Chairman, ICC China Commission on Corporate Responsibility and Anti-Corruption
Frank Ning(China) 2015-2021 Chair of Board, Sinochem Group; Former Chair of COFCO Corporation and Former Vice Chair and President of China Resources (Holdings) Co. Ltd, Hong Kong; Member of the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection of the CPC; Member of the “13th Five-Year Plan” National Development Planning Expert Panel; Co-Chair, Sustainable Development Working Group of APEC Business Advisory Council; Chair, APEC China Business Council; Chair, Trade & Investment Taskforce for B20
Patrick Obath(Kenya) 2017-2019 Managing Consultant, Eduardo Associates; Director, Trade Mark East Africa, East African Business Council (EABC), Kenya Power and Lighting Company Limited (KPLC), Afren Plc, Standard Chartered Bank; Steering Committee member of Global Green Growth Forum Kenya Chapter, Chair, Director and Programme Leader, Kenya Private Sector Alliance (KEPSA) various sectors.
Mari Pangestu(Indonesia) 2015-2021 Professor of International Economics, University of Indonesia; Member of the Board of Astra International and Bank BTPN (Bank Tabungan Pensiunan Nasional); Government of Indonesia, Minister of Trade (2004-2011) and Minister of Tourism and Creative Economy (2011-2014). Member of the WEF Global Future Council on Trade and Investment
Yongmaan (YM) Park(Korea) 2014-2020 Chair, Doosan Leadership Institute; Chair, Korea Chamber of Commerce and Industry; Chair, Doosan Corporation, Doosan Heavy Industries & Construction and Doosan Engineering & Construction; Chair, Doosan Infracore; Member, Board of Directors for the Special Olympics; Chair, Korea-Spain Economic Cooperation Committee
Kasemsit Pathomsak(Thailand) 2014-2020
Executive Chair, Merchant Partners Securities PLC and Merchant Partners Asset Management Ltd.; President, Pathomsak Holdings Ltd.; Chair of Audit and Corporate Governance Board, Christiani & Neilsen (Thai) PLC; Director, UOB Kay Hian Securities (Thailand) PLC; Director, National Power Supply PLC; Chair, Paramount Capital Pte. Ltd. (Singapore); Honorary Chair, ICC Thailand; Director and Deputy Secretary General, Board of Trade of Thailand; Executive Board Member, Young President Organization ASEAN United Chapter; Former President, BT Securities Ltd.; Country Director for Investment Banking of CLSA (Thailand); Advisor to Thai Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Commerce
Latifur Rahman(Bangladesh) 2014-2020
Chair and CEO, Transcom Group; Vice-President, ICC Bangladesh; Chair, Nestle Bangladesh and Holcim Cement (Bangladesh); Member, Governing Board of BRAC; Former President, Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce & Industry, Dhaka; Bangladesh Employers’ Federation; Member, Executive Committee, Federation of Bangladesh Chambers of Commerce & Industry; Member, Executive Board of Bangladesh Bank (Central Bank)
Anne Veronique Schlaepfer(Switzerland) 2016-2022
Co-Chair, Arbitration Committee, International Bar Association; Partner, White & Case; Vice-President, ICC International Court of Arbitration; Member, London Court of International Arbitration
Harsh Pati Singhania(India) 2017-2019
Director, J K Organisation; Vice Chair & Managing Director, J K Paper Ltd; Past President, ICC India, Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce & Industry (FICCI)
Philippe Varin(France) 2016-2022 Chair of the Board of Directors, Areva; Member, Board of Directors of Saint-Gobain; Chair, Le Cercle de l’Industrie; Special Representative of the French Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Development for ASEAN countriesKok
Seng Vong(Macao) 2016-2022 Vice Chair of the Board of Directors, Macao Chamber of Commerce and ICC Macao; Vice Chair of the Board of Directors, Macao Importers & Exporters Association; President, Macao Shipping & Logistics Association; General Committee President, Macao Consumer Council
Thomas Wellauer(Switzerland) 2014-2020 Group Chief Operating Officer, Swiss Re; Head, Corporate Affairs and Member of the Executive Committee, Novartis; Member, Supervisory Board of Munich Re; CEO, Financial Services Division, Credit Suisse; CEO, Winterthur Insurance Group
Zabihullah Ziarmal (Afghanistan) 2018-2021 CEO, Cefe Group International; Founding Member and First Vice Chairman, ICC Afghanistan.
Ex officio
Hamad Buamim Chair, ICC World Chambers Federation
Sunny Verghese Chair, World Business Council for Sustainable Development
Horizon 2020 is the biggest EU Research and Innovation programme ever with nearly €80 billion of funding available over 7 years (2014 to 2020) – in addition to the private investment that this money will attract. It promises more breakthroughs, discoveries and world-firsts by taking great ideas from the lab to the market.
Horizon 2020 is the financial instrument implementing the
, a
flagship initiative aimed at securing Europe's global competitiveness.
Seen as a means to drive economic growth and create jobs, Horizon 2020 has the political backing of Europe’s leaders and the Members of the European Parliament. They agreed that research is an investment in our future and so put it at the heart of the EU’s blueprint for smart, sustainable and inclusive growth and jobs.
By coupling research and innovation, Horizon 2020 is helping to achieve this with its emphasis on excellent science, industrial leadership and tackling societal challenges. The goal is to ensure Europe produces world-class science, removes barriers to innovation and makes it easier for the public and private sectors to work together in delivering innovation.
Horizon 2020 is open to everyone, with a simple structure that reduces red tape and time so participants can focus on what is really important. This approach makes sure new projects get off the ground quickly – and achieve results faster.
The EU Framework Programme for Research and Innovation will be complemented by further measures to complete and further develop the
. These measures will aim at breaking down barriers to create a genuine single market for knowledge, research and innovation.
PRIViLEDGE
United Kingdom, London - June 26, 2018 - The European Commission has awarded the Smartmatic – Cybernetica Centre of Excellence for Internet Voting (SCCEIV) a new research award under the Horizon 2020 Programme.
The project entitled “PRIViLEDGE” brings together a consortium of key European players in cryptographic research from the fintech and blockchain domains who will collaborate to advance the development of cryptographic protocols for privacy and security within the context of distributed ledger technology (DLT).
The project kicked off in January 2018 and is due to last for 3 years.
Consortium members include
Smartmatic – Cybernetica Centre of Excellence for Internet Voting
,
,
,
Technical University Eindhoven
,
,
,
,
and
.
Blockchain and DLT have emerged as one of the most revolutionary technology developments in recent years, with the goal of eliminating centralised intermediaries and installing distributed trusted services. Although based on cryptographic techniques at their core, the currently deployed DLTs do not address privacy. Research will focus on pioneering development of new cryptographic techniques and protocols which can protect the data, facilitate these applications, and make DLTs deliver on their promises.
Commenting on the award, Mike Summers (Director, SCCEIV) stated “this award recognises the important contribution of our team to advancing online voting technologies which ensure security and voter privacy, whilst taking advantage of improved transparency and verifiability properties and enhanced public trust that blockchain and DLT can help deliver.”
Horizon 2020 is the biggest European Union Research and Innovation programme. It was created in 2014 to ensure Europe produces world-class science, removes barriers to innovation and makes it easier for the public and private sectors to work together in delivering innovation.
Mr. Robert Rangel is senior vice president, Lockheed Martin Government Affairs. In this position, he directs the corporation’s liaison with Congress, leads marketing activities with the Pentagon and manages federal, state and local government customer relationships.
Prior to his current role, Mr. Rangel served as vice president, Programs & Global Security Policy. In this role, Mr. Rangel worked in conjunction with mission area leaders to develop and coordinate the overall corporate strategy to keep programs sold and capture new business for major programs and policies across Lockheed Martin. He also supported Lockheed Martin’s business areas by providing advice and guidance on U.S. government foreign policy and national security priorities, to include their impact on Lockheed Martin pursuits and objectives in the international market. Mr. Rangel also managed Lockheed Martin’s strategic relationships with key domestic and international think tanks.
Prior to joining Lockheed Martin, Mr. Rangel served as the special assistant to the Secretary of Defense and Deputy Secretary of Defense from June 2005 to June 2011, for two Secretaries of Defense during two administrations. In this position, equivalent to a civilian agency Chief of Staff, Mr. Rangel advised the Secretary of Defense and ensured execution on all matters pertaining to Department of Defense operations, defense policy, strategy, budget, programs, personnel and organizational issues. In 2010, Mr. Rangel chaired the Secretary of Defense Efficiencies Task Force which developed and implemented recommendations to eliminate $50 billion in defense overhead and duplicative programs.
Prior to joining the Department of Defense, Mr. Rangel served on the staff of the House Armed Services Committee for over 18 years in a variety of positions. He was appointed Staff Director in March 2000 and served three different committee chairmen in this capacity. He was responsible for the formulation, passage and enactment of annual national defense authorization legislation and direction of all committee oversight and legislative operations. Prior to that, he served as Deputy Staff Director starting in January 1995.
Mr. Rangel graduated from the University of Kentucky with a bachelor’s degree in Political Science.
Rupert joined Serco as Group Chief Executive on 1 May 2014, tasked with turning around what was, at the time, a troubled business. Since then, Serco has been transformed into a specialist supplier of services to Government in Health, Defence, Transport, and Justice and Immigration. He joined Serco from Aggreko plc, the temporary power business, where he served 11 years as Chief Executive. During his tenure at Aggreko, the market capitalisation of the business increased from £450 million to over £5 billion.
Prior to Aggreko, he was with the software company Misys plc for five years, latterly as Chief Executive of its Banking and Securities Division. He spent the first 16 years of his career at GEC plc. He studied Politics, Philosophy & Economics at Oxford University and was President of the Oxford Union.
Rupert is currently senior independent director and a member of the audit, nomination and remuneration committees of DS Smith plc. He was also previously senior independent director of Electro components plc and a member of the remuneration, nomination and audit committees.
Rupert is a Visiting Fellow at Oxford University.
Angus joined Serco as Group Chief Financial Officer in October 2014. He was previously Chief Financial Officer and Interim Chief Executive at Aggreko plc, Managing Director at Pringle of Scotland, and held senior finance positions at PepsiCo Inc. including Regional Finance Director for Central Europe.
Angus was also previously Senior Independent Director of GKN plc and a Non-Executive Director of Howden Joinery.
Angus is currently a Senior Independent Director and the Chair of the Audit Committee of Ashtead Group plc, and is an Honorary Professor at the University of Edinburgh.
Anthony has a wealth of experience from over 17 years at Compass Group Plc; he was most recently Group Workforce and Organisation Director, responsible for supporting over 40 countries and prior to this he was the HR Director for Europe and Japan. Additionally, Anthony has held other roles at Compass Group including Director of Group Labour Strategy as well as being responsible for shared services and operational HR Director roles across a number of sectors in the UK.
Anthony is a Chartered Fellow of the Institute of Personnel and Development and holds Masters Degrees in both Strategic Human Resources and Employment Law & Industrial Relations.
Anthony is responsible for all elements of People Services across the Serco Group, as well as Group Transformation and Corporate Shared Services.
Mark was appointed as Chief Executive Officer, Serco Asia Pacific in April 2013 following his appointment as Chief Operating Officer in January 2013.
He has extensive international experience in business and operations management, holding numerous senior leadership positions in state-owned, public and private equity business environments.
Prior to joining Serco, Mark was Chief Operating Officer for the China National Bluestar Group based in Beijing. In this role he was responsible for leading the operations of subsidiary companies in the group's $8 billion business portfolio. Prior to working in China, Mark spent 8 years in the United States working on multinational companies including General Electric, after commencing with GE in Australia.
Mark's formal education stems from Applied Science and Business, and includes a Master of Business Administration from the Victoria University.
David (Dave) J. Dacquino serves as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Serco Inc., a leading provider of professional, technology, and management services to every branch of the U.S. military, numerous U.S. federal civilian agencies, the intelligence community, the Government of Canada, state and local governments, and commercial clients.
Dave oversees the $1 billion business with approximately 6,000 employees providing support in the areas of defense, transportation, citizen services, and health services. Dave brings to Serco more than 30 years of experience in the defense, aeronautics and technical services industry.
In his previous role at Serco, Dave served as Senior Vice President of the Defense Services business unit and oversaw the Company's work in the areas of ship and shore/base modernization, hardware integration, acquisition and program management, logistics support, and personnel readiness.
Before Serco, Dave served as President and CEO of SkyLink, a leading aviation and logistics service provider with international operations in over 60 countries. Previous roles included: CEO for the North America operations of VT Group, a technology integrator with a strong focus on C4ISR, transportation, logistics and facilities management; Vice President and lead executive of Raytheon Technical Services Company's integrated support solutions division; and an extensive career at Lockheed Martin, where he ultimately held the position of Vice President and General Manager of logistic services and oversaw more than 3,500 personnel at 75 locations worldwide.
David (Dave) J. Dacquino serves as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Serco Inc., a leading provider of professional, technology, and management services to every branch of the U.S. military, numerous U.S. federal civilian agencies, the intelligence community, the Government of Canada, state and local governments, and commercial clients.
Dave oversees the $1 billion business with approximately 6,000 employees providing support in the areas of defense, transportation, citizen services, and health services. Dave brings to Serco more than 30 years of experience in the defense, aeronautics and technical services industry.
In his previous role at Serco, Dave served as Senior Vice President of the Defense Services business unit and oversaw the Company's work in the areas of ship and shore/base modernization, hardware integration, acquisition and program management, logistics support, and personnel readiness.
Before Serco, Dave served as President and CEO of SkyLink, a leading aviation and logistics service provider with international operations in over 60 countries. Previous roles included: CEO for the North America operations of VT Group, a technology integrator with a strong focus on C4ISR, transportation, logistics and facilities management; Vice President and lead executive of Raytheon Technical Services Company's integrated support solutions division; and an extensive career at Lockheed Martin, where he ultimately held the position of Vice President and General Manager of logistic services and oversaw more than 3,500 personnel at 75 locations worldwide.
Phil joined Serco Middle East in April 2019, as Chief Executive Officer. He is responsible in leading Serco's business in the Middle East region.
He joined Serco from Atkins where he most recently held the position of Managing Director of Engineering and Design in the Middle East & Africa (MEA). Phil was with Atkins for nine years, during which he also led the Transport and Infrastructure business, based in the Middle East, and previously the global Power Division.
Phil has over 25 years' experience in industry including significant leadership and operations in the energy sector, where he was a Nuclear Site Director in the UK.
David joined Serco in November 2015 as the Group General Counsel and Company Secretary.
He leads on legal and commercial activities, the company secretarial function and on governance and compliance matters.
He has extensive experience in the IT and services businesses having held roles as General Counsel of the BT Global Services division of BT plc as well as senior counsel of DuPont de Nemours. David started his career in private practice at Ashurst the leading City law firm and he is a qualified solicitor. He attended Southampton University and he is a non-executive director of the Legal Services Board, the independent body responsible for overseeing the regulation of lawyers in England and Wales and a member of its Audit Committee.
Kate Steadman joined Serco as Group Strategy and Communications Director in February 2016. She is responsible for the further development of our strategy, as well as Marketing, Internal Communications, and leading our efforts to further develop Serco’s reputation as a valued and respected source of innovative thinking about the delivery of public services. Kate was previously Senior Vice President for Strategy for the Global Government & Agencies business of Sodexo Group, with a footprint across 80 countries.
Prior to this Kate was responsible for Strategy and Public Sector Development for Sodexo in the UK and Ireland. Until 2010, Kate was an adviser to senior politicians in the fields of Criminal Justice, Home Affairs, Legal Affairs, Prisons & Probation. She graduated from Cambridge University and was President of the Cambridge Union.
Cheryl Mills graduated from Stanford Law School and, in 1990, passed her bar exam. Shortly thereafter, Mills worked as an associate at the legal firm Hogan & Hartson in Washington DC She represented school districts concerning the application of Brown v. Board of Education.
Mills was appointed as the deputy general counsel of former President Bill Clinton and former Vice President Al Gore's transition team, the Transition Planning Foundation, before the election in 1992.
After Clinton's election, she served as associate counsel to the president and, by 1998, Mills had become a deputy in the Office of White House Counsel. She acted as one of Clinton's attorneys in 1997, when the Clinton re-election campaign was accused of "campaign fund-raising abuses." In 1999, Mills defended Clinton before the US Senate during the president's impeachment trial.
After serving under the Clinton White administration, Mills, in 1999, was hired as the senior vice president for corporate policy and public programming at the cable and internet firm, Oxygen Media. In 2002, Mills served as the senior vice president for administration and operations as well as general counsel for New York University (NYU). She was also the executive secretary of the University Board of Trustees. She remained at NYU until 2009.
In 2009, Mills joined the staff of then-newly-appointed Secretary of State Hilary Clinton Initially, Mills was part of the transition team, a temporary position, however, she stayed on and served as the chief of staff. Mills was the counselor to the Department of State as well. Her job was to manage foreign policy and operational priorities. She oversaw the Obama administrations
"$3.5 billion global hunger and food security initiative" and a $800 million development project in Haiti.
After her tenure at the Department of State, Mills founded the BlackIvy Group. According to its website, BlackIvy "builds and grows commercial enterprises in Sub-Saharan Africa...develop[ing] logistics and infrastructure solutions for emerging economies and businesses that serve the needs of the growing consumer class."
The firm has locations in Ghana, Tanzania, and in Washington, D.C. Mills serves as the firm's CEO.
Mills serves on several boards. She has been on the board of BlackRock, Inc., an investment firm, since 2013.[6]
She is on the board of the Clinton Foundation and the See Forever Foundation.
The Board of Directors, by resolution adopted by a majority of the Board of Directors, may provide for an Executive Committee of two (2) or more directors. If provision be made for an Executive Committee, the members thereof shall be elected by the Board of Directors to serve at the pleasure of the Board of Directors. During the intervals between the meetings of the Board of Directors, the Executive Committee shall possess and may exercise such powers in the management of the business and affairs of the Corporation as may be authorized by the Board of Directors, subject to applicable law. All action by the Executive Committee shall be reported to the Board of Directors at its meeting next succeeding such action, and shall be subject to revision and alteration by the Board of Directors. Upon recommendation by the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee, the Board of Directors may remove any committee member at any time. Vacancies on the Executive Committee shall be filled by the Board of Directors.
Committee Members
Marillyn A. Hewson is Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer of Lockheed Martin Corporation. She previously held several increasingly responsible executive positions with the Corporation, including President and Chief Operating Officer and Executive Vice President of Lockheed Martin’s Electronic Systems business area.
Ms. Hewson joined Lockheed Martin more than 35 years ago as an industrial engineer. During her career she has held several operational leadership positions, including President of Lockheed Martin Systems Integration; Executive Vice President of Global Sustainment for Lockheed Martin Aeronautics; and President and General Manager of Kelly Aviation Center, L.P. She has served in key corporate executive roles, including Senior Vice President of Corporate Shared Services; Vice President of Global Supply Chain Management; and Vice President of Corporate Internal Audit.
Ms. Hewson currently serves on the Board of Directors of Johnson & Johnson, the Congressional Medal of Honor Foundation, the Board of Governors of the USO, and as Chair of the Catalyst Board of Directors. She previously served on the boards of DuPont, DowDuPont and Carpenter Technology. She is a member of The University of Alabama’s President’s Cabinet and the Board of Visitors of the Culverhouse College of Business. Ms. Hewson has served on several U.S. government advisory bodies, including current appointments to the American Workforce Policy Advisory Board and the National Space Council’s Users' Advisory Group.
Ms. Hewson is former chairman and current Executive Committee member of the Aerospace Industries Association, a member of the Board of Directors of the Business Roundtable, a Director of the Atlantic Council’s International Advisory Board, a Fellow of the Royal Aeronautical Society and an Associate Fellow of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. Ms. Hewson also serves on the Board of Trustees of the King Abdullah University of Science and Technology in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, and the Khalifa University for Science and Technology in the United Arab Emirates.
In 2019, TIME magazine identified Ms. Hewson as one of the “100 Most Influential People in the World,” and FORTUNE magazine ranked her No. 1 on its list of “50 Most Powerful Women in Business” for the second year in a row. In 2018, she was named the “CEO of the Year” by Chief Executive Magazine, a Top 10 “Businessperson of the Year” by FORTUNE magazine, and one of the “World’s 100 Most Powerful Women” by Forbes.
Kenneth R. Possenriede is executive vice president and chief financial officer (CFO) for Lockheed Martin Corporation. As CFO, Mr. Possenriede is responsible for all aspects of the corporation’s financial strategies, processes, and operations.
He previously served as vice president of Finance and Program Management at Aeronautics, where he was responsible for the business area’s finances and program management processes, including accounting, contracts, business management, financial planning, scheduling and earned value. He also served as vice president and treasurer for Lockheed Martin. In that role, he was responsible for the company's worldwide banking activity, including global treasury operations, foreign exchange and capital markets, rating agency relations, capital planning, facilities and risk management.
He holds a Master of Business Administration from the University of Michigan and bachelor’s degree from Rutgers University in economics.
Rick Ambrose is Executive Vice President of Lockheed Martin Space and an officer of Lockheed Martin Corporation. Space is a more than $10 billion enterprise that employs approximately 20,000 people and provides advanced technology systems for national security, civil and commercial customers. Chief products include major systems for satellites, human space flight, strategic and missile defense, satellite command and control, sensor and data processing including predicative analytics and big data applications, space observatories and interplanetary spacecraft and a range of sensing, communications and exploration payloads.
With four decades of experience in the defense and aerospace industry, Ambrose has led a significant number of programs in support of military, commercial and national security missions. Previously, he was President of Lockheed Martin’s Information Systems & Global Solutions-National business, responsible for leading a 6,500-person organization serving the U.S. intelligence community and international partners.
Ambrose also served as Vice President and General Manager of the Surveillance and Navigation Systems line of business within Space and prior to that, he led Mission Systems and Sensors Tactical Systems as Vice President and General Manager. He began his career with Lockheed Martin as Vice President of Ground Systems and Regional Executive of the Rocky Mountain region for the company’s Management and Data Systems and Astronautics Operations.
Before joining Lockheed Martin in 2000, Ambrose was Vice President of Space Systems for Raytheon’s Command, Control and Communications business segment and formerly served as President and General Manager for Space Systems, Hughes Information Technology Systems.
Ambrose serves on the Denver Museum of Nature & Science Board of Trustees and is a National Association of Corporate Directors Governance Fellow, a Fellow of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, and an International Academy of Astronautics Full Academician. He was honored with The Aviation Week Network’s Laureate Award for Space: Leadership in 2018, is a 2017 recipient of the National Defense Industrial Association Space Division Peter B. Teets Award, was named a LinkedIn Top Voice in Technology in 2019, and is a five-time recipient of the Wash100 award by Executive Mosaic.
He has a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering technology from the DeVry Institute of Technology and a master’s degree in business administration from the University of Denver.
Tim Cahill is the senior vice president of Lockheed Martin International. Mr. Cahill is responsible for developing and executing strategies to grow the corporation’s international business by strengthening customer relationships and industry partnerships in 70 countries. He also serves as the senior executive overseeing the corporation’s business activities in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
Most recently, Mr. Cahill served as the vice president of Integrated Air and Missile Defense, where he was responsible for program execution of the entire portfolio including, Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) System, Patriot PAC-3 Missile, TLVS, and Falcon Ground Based Air Defense among others.
Since joining Lockheed Martin in 1995, Mr. Cahill has had positions of increasing responsibility including the vice president of Strategic and Missile Defense Systems and Engineering & Technology for Lockheed Martin Space. He also holds a patent for a modular spacecraft bus design.
Mr. Cahill began his career as an officer in the U.S. Air Force, managing the integration and launch of 20 military, NASA and classified spacecraft on Space Shuttle, Titan and Atlas launch vehicles.
Mr. Cahill holds Bachelor and Master of Science degrees in Aeronautical and Astronautical Engineering from Purdue University and a Master of Science in Business from Stanford University.
Michele A. Evans is the executive vice president of the Aeronautics business area for Lockheed Martin Corporation. Aeronautics is a more than $20 billion enterprise employing approximately 25,000 people.
The Aeronautics portfolio features fifth-generation tactical aircraft, air mobility, unmanned and intelligence/surveillance/reconnaissance platforms, including the F-35, F-22, F-16, C-130; as well as Advanced Development Programs at Lockheed Martin’s Skunk Works®.
Ms. Evans is also actively involved in Lockheed Martin’s diversity and inclusion initiatives, serving as the executive sponsor for the Women’s Impact Network and Leadership Forum.
With more than 32 years of experience in the defense and aerospace industry, she has led a significant number of programs in support of the U.S. Air Force, Army, Marine Corps and Navy; as well as for commercial and international military customers. Previously, she was deputy executive vice president for Aeronautics, leading the full portfolio of Aeronautics’ lines of business and platforms.
Ms. Evans has held positions of increasing responsibility throughout the corporation. At Lockheed Martin’s Rotary and Missions Systems business area, she served as vice president and general manager of the Integrated Warfare Systems & Sensors line of business; as well as vice president for C4ISR (Command, Control, Communications, Computers, Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance) and the Undersea line of business. She was also Vice President for Business Development and Strategy for the Mission Systems & Training organization. Throughout her career, she has been responsible for multiple platform programs including the A-10 weapons system, as well as avionics programs on the C-130 and F-35, and served as the executive manager on multiple domestic and international campaign wins.
Ms. Evans graduated magna cum laude from Clarkson University with a Bachelor of Science degree in mechanical engineering. She serves on the board of the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum, and is a member of Clarkson’s Coulter School of Engineering Advisory Board.
Scott Greene is executive vice president of Missiles and Fire Control (MFC) for Lockheed Martin Corporation. MFC is a $10 billion enterprise that employs 19,000 people.
MFC develops, manufactures and supports advanced combat, missile, rocket and energy systems and provides technical services and logistics support for military customers that include the U.S. Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, Special Operations Forces and allied nations. Commercial programs include products and services for the global civil nuclear power industry, microgrids, renewable energy solutions and energy storage.
Mr. Greene’s career spans more than 35 years of service within the aerospace industry. He has a comprehensive business perspective, rooted in years of partnering with U.S. and international customers to deliver complex system integration programs, including rotary and fixed wing aircraft, space systems and missiles. Scott has supported several lines of business within the corporation and has significant experience in the international marketplace.
Prior to this role, Mr. Greene was MFC’s vice president of Tactical & Strike Missiles, with total business, operational and financial responsibility in the areas of Precision Fires & Combat Maneuver Systems, Close Combat Systems, Strike Systems, Advanced Programs and Hypersonic Weapon Systems.
He has a bachelor’s degree in business and applied economics from Cornell University. Scott is a member of the National Defense Industrial Association, the Air Force Association and the Association of the United States Army.
Frank A. St. John is executive vice president of Rotary and Mission Systems (RMS) for Lockheed Martin Corporation. RMS is a $16 billion gross enterprise employing 34,000 people across the globe, with approximately 10 percent in Australia, Canada, Mexico, New Zealand, Poland, United Kingdom and other countries.
The RMS portfolio features more than 1,000 programs, including helicopters, integrated air and missile defense, littoral warfare, undersea warfare, radar, electronic warfare, cyber solutions, C4ISR, and training and logistics systems. RMS supports the U.S. Air Force, U.S. Army, U.S. Coast Guard, U.S. Marine Corps, U.S. Navy and Missile Defense Agency, as well as intelligence, civil, commercial and international military customers.
Mr. St. John is actively involved in Lockheed Martin’s diversity and inclusion initiatives, serving as executive sponsor for the company’s Able & Allies Leadership Forum.
Mr. St. John joined Lockheed Martin’s Missiles and Fire Control (MFC) business area as an engineering intern more than 30 years ago and has held leadership positions of increasing responsibility.
Most recently, he served as executive vice president where he was responsible for ensuring MFC’s lines of business successfully met the company’s commitments and responsibilities to its customers and the corporation.
During his tenure at MFC, Mr. St. John also served as executive vice president and deputy of Programs, vice president of Tactical Missiles/Combat Maneuver Systems and lead executive for the MFC Orlando, FL campus.
Mr. St. John earned Bachelor of Science and Master of Science degrees in electrical engineering from the University of Central Florida. He is a member of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Air Force Association, Surface Navy Association and serves on the Association of the United States Army Council of Trustees.
Richard H. (Rick) Edwards is strategic advisor to the CEO on critical enterprise-wide initiatives.
Mr. Edwards has been with the company for more than 35 years and most recently served as executive vice president of Lockheed Martin International helping increase orders and sales, improve business operations and functional coordination, and expand the company’s footprint in Europe, Asia, and the Middle East. Through his personal outreach and engagement, he strengthened Lockheed Martin’s industrial partnerships around the world, positioning the company for future growth.
Prior to that, Mr. Edwards served as executive vice president of Missiles and Fire Control (MFC). While he was in this role, MFC secured several significant long-term strategic contract wins and grew international sales to 37 percent of MFC’s 2016 sales. Mr. Edwards also served as vice president of Tactical Missiles and Combat Maneuver Systems (TM/CMS) for MFC where he was responsible for Precision Fires, Close Combat Systems, Ground Vehicles, Nuclear Systems and Solutions programs, as well as MFC’s business in the United Kingdom. During that time he achieved significant expansion into new business markets, doubling the size of the TM/CMS line of business in approximately five years.
Throughout his career Mr. Edwards has held several significant leadership positions including: capture program director for the Joint Common Missile, Javelin program director, and Tactical Missiles program director, where he was responsible for all aspects of Javelin, Hellfire, Longbow, Predator, Common Missile and Precision Guided Munitions programs.
Prior to joining Lockheed Martin, Mr. Edwards served in a variety of leadership positions of increasing responsibility at Fairchild Republic Company in Hagerstown, Md., where he gained experience in cost estimating and scheduling as well as industrial engineering.
Mr. Edwards is a member of the Association of the United States Army Council of Trustees. He additionally serves on the Board of Directors of the Dallas Opera and the Advisory Boards for the Dallas Regional Chamber of Commerce, the Navy League of the United States Fort Worth Council and the Committee of the Academy of Medicine, Engineering and Science of Texas for the Industry and Community Affiliates.
Mr. Edwards graduated from Gettysburg College with a Bachelor of Science degree in business administration.
Dean Acosta is senior vice president, Communications for Lockheed Martin Corporation. He leads global communications strategies and activities across the four business areas and internationally, and provides strategic communications counsel to the corporation’s senior executives.
Mr. Acosta has been with the company since May 2019 and his responsibilities include overseeing the corporation’s media relations, executive and employee communications, marketing communications, community relations and visual communications strategies and programs. He also directs issues management and crisis communications, and leads philanthropy initiatives that enhance the corporation’s reputation as a good corporate citizen.
Mr. Acosta has almost three decades of experience in communications and journalism, with much of it spent leading corporate communications teams, in the technology, energy and aerospace and defense sectors. Most recently, he served as vice president and chief communications officer for Resideo, a smart home technology company, where he led employee and executive communications, media relations, social media and public affairs.
Prior to that, Mr. Acosta was vice president of Global Communications for two of Honeywell’s businesses, and he also served as Phillips 66’s global head of Corporate Communications. His career includes communications director roles at Lockheed Martin and Boeing. He also served as press secretary for NASA in the aftermath of the space shuttle Columbia disaster and through the shuttle program’s return to flight. He began his career as an award-winning print and broadcast journalist.
Mr. Acosta earned his bachelor’s degree from the University of Texas at San Antonio and his master’s degree in strategic communication and leadership from Seton Hall University.
Stephanie C. Hill is the senior vice president of Enterprise Business Transformation at Lockheed Martin. Ms. Hill is responsible for developing strategies and implementing integrated, cross-functional solutions that transform operations through technology, culture, and processes to deliver business-based outcomes. She leads the corporation’s Digital Transformation and Enterprise Information Technology teams, comprising more than 4,700 professionals worldwide.
During her time with Lockheed Martin, Ms. Hill has held positions of increasing responsibility including: deputy executive vice president of the Rotary and Mission Systems business area; senior vice president of Corporate Strategy and Business Development; vice president and general manager of Cyber, Ships and Advanced Technologies; vice president and general manager of the Information Systems and Global Solutions Civil business; vice president of Corporate Internal Audit; and vice president and general manager of the Mission Systems and Sensors business.
Ms. Hill is a member of the Board of Directors of S&P Global and the Board of Visitors for the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. She was named to Black Enterprise’s 2019 list of Most Powerful Women in Corporate America and was recognized as one of Computerworld's Premier 100 IT Leaders and one of the World Trade Center Institute’s International Leadership Awardees in 2015. She was honored as the U.S. Black Engineer of the Year by Career Communications Group in 2014 and included on EBONY Magazine’s Power 100 list. In 2013, AFCEA presented Ms. Hill with the Heroines in Technology Award. Deeply committed to the development of others, she mentors many students and Lockheed Martin professionals. She also is Co-executive Sponsor of Lockheed Martin’s African American Council of Excellence.
Born in Baltimore, Maryland, Ms. Hill graduated with high honors from the University of Maryland, Baltimore County with a Bachelor of Science degree in Computer Science and Economics; the university also recognized her with an honorary doctorate in 2017.
Greg A. Karol is senior vice president of Human Resources for Lockheed Martin Corporation. He is responsible for the corporation’s diverse workforce of 110,000 employees in over 50 countries around the world. He develops and implements the global human resources strategy, including benefits, compensation and performance management, talent acquisition, diversity and inclusion, labor relations, talent and organizational capability, and workforce solutions and intelligence. He also oversees the corporation’s global security organization.
Mr. Karol has more than 33 years of experience serving in Lockheed Martin’s Human Resources, Labor Relations and Production Operations functions. During his time in human resources leadership roles, he has held positions of increasing responsibility including the vice president of corporate labor relations and vice president of human resources for the Missiles and Fire Control business area. Most recently he led the human resources function for the Aeronautics business area.
He joined the company in 1986 as a production supervisor supporting the Patriot and Pershing II missile programs. In that role, he was also one of the creators of the Performance Management Teams Program.
A native of Grand Rapids, Michigan, Mr. Karol graduated from the University of Central Florida with a bachelor’s degree in business administration. He also earned a master’s degree in business administration and human resources management from the Florida Institute of Technology and completed a global executive master’s in human resources program at Rutgers University.
Maryanne Lavan is the Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary for Lockheed Martin Corporation. She is responsible for the Corporation’s legal affairs and law department, including serving as counsel to its senior leadership and Board of Directors.
She previously served as Vice President of Corporate Internal Audit, providing independent assessments of governance, internal controls and risk management. She joined Lockheed Martin in 1990 as an attorney and served in increasingly responsible positions.
Ms. Lavan graduated magna cum laude from the State University of New York at Albany with a Bachelor of Science degree. She received her juris doctor degree from the Washington College of Law, American University.
Ms. Lavan is a member of the Public Contract Law Section of the American Bar Association. She serves on the governing bodies for the Leadership Council on Legal Diversity, Equal Justice Works, Council for Court Excellence, University at Albany Foundation, and Fordham University.
Leo S. Mackay, Jr. is senior vice president of Ethics and Enterprise Assurance for Lockheed Martin Corporation. As the chief audit executive, he provides independent, objective assurance and advisory activity to improve the corporation’s operations. He is also on the Board of Directors of LM Ventures, Lockheed Martin’s $200M venture capital fund.
Dr. Mackay previously served as vice president of Corporate Domestic Business Development; and president of ICGS, LLC, a joint venture of Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman focused on the U.S. Coast Guard’s modernization.
A graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy, Dr. Mackay was a secretary of the Navy Distinguished Midshipman Graduate. After pilot training, he spent three years flying the F-14 and graduated from the U.S. Navy’s Fighter Weapons School (Topgun). He is a veteran of Operation Earnest Will. Dr. Mackay was deputy secretary of Veterans Affairs, and the designated chief operating officer, of the second largest U.S. cabinet agency.
Dr. Mackay is a member of the U.S. Naval Institute and the Council on Foreign Relations. He is an independent director of Cognizant, Inc., and USAA Federal Savings Bank and also serves as a strategic advisor to Pegasus Capital Advisors.
Dr. Mackay earned a master's degree and doctorate in public policy from Harvard University. He was a Kennedy Fellow, Harvard MacArthur Scholar, Graduate Prize Fellow, and a Research Fellow at the Center for Science and International Affairs.
Rodney (Rod) A. Makoske is senior vice president of Corporate Engineering, Technology and Operations (CETO) for Lockheed Martin Corporation. As the principal engineering and operational leader for the corporation, he oversees the recruitment, retention and development of an 82,000-person engineering, operations and information technology workforce. He is also responsible for technology and operations strategy, the offices of the Chief Technology Officer, Chief Engineer and Chief Data and Analytics Officer, and performance across the corporation including thousands of contracts in the U.S. and across 70 countries.
Throughout his 30 years at Lockheed Martin, Mr. Makoske has held multiple leadership positions, including serving as the vice president of Technical Operations for Lockheed Martin Systems Integration; vice president of Modernization, Sustainment and Advanced Programs for Lockheed Martin Mission Systems and Sensors; vice president and group managing director for Lockheed Martin UK Integrated Systems; and, vice president of Engineering and Technology for Lockheed Martin Mission Systems and Training.
Mr. Makoske is the executive sponsor for the strategic partnership between Lockheed Martin and Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. He is also a member of the Expert Network Community of the World Economic Forum, a member of the International Academy of Astronautics and an Associate Fellow of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics.
He has a bachelor’s degree in Mechanical Engineering from Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University.
Rob Mullins is senior vice president of Corporate Strategy and Business Development for Lockheed Martin Corporation. He is responsible for developing and implementing comprehensive strategies to position Lockheed Martin for predictable and sustainable business growth.
Dr. Mullins joined Lockheed Martin in March 2018 as the vice president of Strategy and Business Development for Lockheed Martin’s Space business area.
With more than 20 years of experience in aerospace and defense strategy and business development, Dr. Mullins has successfully led corporate strategy and development organizations for several public companies.
Prior to joining Lockheed Martin, he served as executive vice president of Corporate Strategy and Mergers & Acquisitions at Cobham plc. Before joining Cobham, Dr. Mullins was senior vice president of Corporate Strategy for Alliant Techsystems (ATK), a Fortune 500 aerospace and defense firm that is now part of Northrop Grumman.
Earlier in his career, Dr. Mullins held a variety of leadership roles with Northrop Grumman. While a member of the permanent research staff at the RAND Corporation, he completed a two-year assignment in the U.S. Department of Defense as special assistant to the deputy chief of staff, Air and Space Operations, Headquarters U.S. Air Force.
Dr. Mullins has a bachelor’s degree in government from Franklin & Marshall College, a master’s degree in public and international affairs from the University of Pittsburgh and a doctor of philosophy degree in war studies from King’s College, University of London.
Mr. Robert Rangel is senior vice president, Lockheed Martin Government Affairs. In this position, he directs the corporation’s liaison with Congress, leads marketing activities with the Pentagon and manages federal, state and local government customer relationships.
Prior to his current role, Mr. Rangel served as vice president, Programs & Global Security Policy. In this role, Mr. Rangel worked in conjunction with mission area leaders to develop and coordinate the overall corporate strategy to keep programs sold and capture new business for major programs and policies across Lockheed Martin. He also supported Lockheed Martin’s business areas by providing advice and guidance on U.S. government foreign policy and national security priorities, to include their impact on Lockheed Martin pursuits and objectives in the international market. Mr. Rangel also managed Lockheed Martin’s strategic relationships with key domestic and international think tanks.
Prior to joining Lockheed Martin, Mr. Rangel served as the special assistant to the Secretary of Defense and Deputy Secretary of Defense from June 2005 to June 2011, for two Secretaries of Defense during two administrations. In this position, equivalent to a civilian agency Chief of Staff, Mr. Rangel advised the Secretary of Defense and ensured execution on all matters pertaining to Department of Defense operations, defense policy, strategy, budget, programs, personnel and organizational issues. In 2010, Mr. Rangel chaired the Secretary of Defense Efficiencies Task Force which developed and implemented recommendations to eliminate $50 billion in defense overhead and duplicative programs.
Prior to joining the Department of Defense, Mr. Rangel served on the staff of the House Armed Services Committee for over 18 years in a variety of positions. He was appointed Staff Director in March 2000 and served three different committee chairmen in this capacity. He was responsible for the formulation, passage and enactment of annual national defense authorization legislation and direction of all committee oversight and legislative operations. Prior to that, he served as Deputy Staff Director starting in January 1995.
Mr. Rangel graduated from the University of Kentucky with a bachelor’s degree in Political Science.
https://privycouncil.independent.gov.uk/privy-council/
is Executive Chairman of the Board of Directors of DNO International ASA, an Oslo-listed oil and gas company active in the Middle East and North Africa. An experienced industry executive, he serves concurrently as Chairman of RAK Petroleum Public Company Limited in the United Arab Emirates and of Foxtrot International, LDC, a Franco-American oil and gas company active in West Africa. He was founder and first chief executive of Houston-based Apache International, Inc. In addition to his industry positions, Mr. Mossavar-Rahmani is active in public and international affairs. He is a Trustee of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and Chairman of its Department of Islamic Art Visiting Committee, a member of the Visiting Committee to Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government and a Director of the Persepolis Foundation. He has published more than 10 books and dozens of articles on global energy markets and was decorated a Commandeur de l’Order National de la Cote d’Ivoire for services to the energy sector of that country.
Mr. Mossavar-Rahmani has been Executive Chairman of the Board of Directors since the Company’s founding in June 2013, having served as Executive Chairman of the Board of Directors and Chief Executive Officer of RAK Petroleum PCL since May 2010. His role as Executive Chairman of the Company encompasses the management responsibilities of the Chief Executive Officer, including oversight of the Company’s strategy and operations.
Mr. Mossavar-Rahmani also holds the position of Executive Chairman of the DNO Board of Directors and Chairman of the Foxtrot International Board of Directors.
In addition to his industry positions, Mr. Mossavar-Rahmani is active in philanthropy, education and the arts. He is a member of Harvard University’s Global Advisory Council and Trustee of the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art where he chairs the audit committee. He has published more than 10 books on global energy markets and was decorated Commandeur de l’Ordre National de la Côte d’Ivoire for services to the energy sector of that country. He is a graduate of Princeton (AB) and Harvard Universities (MPA). Mr. Mossavar-Rahmani is a U.S. citizen and resides in the United States.
Amir Ali Handjani
Director
Mr. Handjani has been a member of the Board of Directors since 2013, having served as a member of the RAK Petroleum PCL Board of Directors since 2010 and also as its General Counsel from 2006 to 2010. Mr. Handjani holds a B.A. degree from Boston College and a Juris Doctor degree from the Northeastern University Law School. He is a member of the District of Columbia and New Jersey Bar Associations. Mr. Handjani is a U.S. citizen and resides in the United Arab Emirates.
Director
Mr. Jawa became a member of the Board of Directors at the time of listing, having served as a member of the RAK Petroleum PCL Board of Directors since 2009. He serves as chairman, chief executive officer and president of Starling Holding Ltd, a family office and a global investment group that deals with private equity and direct investments worldwide.
Mr. Jawa serves on the board of Emaar Properties and is the chairman of its investment committee and member of its risk committee. He is chairman of Emaar Turkey and a board member of Emaar Misr in Egypt where he is chairman of the audit committee and a member of its investment committee. Mr. Jawa also serves on the board of Emaar; The Economic City in Saudi Arabia where he is a member of the nomination & remuneration committees and on the board of Emaar Development where he is a member of the investment and nomination committees.
He has been recognised as one of the ‘Global Leaders of Tomorrow’ by the World Economic Forum in Davos. Mr. Jawa holds a Masters in Business Administration and a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration, both from the University of San Francisco. Mr. Jawa is a Saudi Arabian citizen and resides in the United Arab Emirates.
Director
Mr. Dale is the Managing Director of DNO. Mr. Dale holds a Master of Law degree from the University of Oslo and an Executive Master of Business Administration degree in financial management from the Stockholm School of Economics. Mr. Dale joined the Board of Directors in 2015. Mr. Dale is a citizen and resident of Norway.
Director
Mr. Al Ghurair became a member of the Board of Directors in June 2016. He is a member of the board of directors of Al Ghurair Investment LLC, one of the largest diversified industrial enterprises in the Middle East. An experienced oil and gas and finance executive, he serves as chief executive officer of Al Ghurair Energy DMCC, vice chairman of Libyan Emirates Refinery Company and a director of Pakistan-based TransAsia Refinery Ltd. Mr. Al Ghurair is also a director of Abdulla Al Ghurair Holding and of Mashreq Bank, where he is a member of the audit committee. He holds a finance degree from Suffolk University in the United States. He is a citizen and resident of the United Arab Emirates.
Bijan Mossavar-Rahmani
Executive Chairman
Bijan Mossavar-Rahmani is an experienced oil and gas executive and has served as DNO’s Executive Chairman of the Board of Directors since 2011.
Mr. Mossavar-Rahmani serves concurrently as Executive Chairman of Oslo-listed RAK Petroleum plc, DNO’s largest shareholder. He is a Trustee of the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art and a member of Harvard University’s Global Advisory Council. He has published more than ten books on global energy markets and was decorated Commandeur de l’Ordre National de la Côte d’Ivoire for services to the energy sector of that country. Mr. Mossavar-Rahmani is a graduate of Princeton (AB) and Harvard Universities (MPA). He is a member of the nomination and remuneration committees.
Lars Arne Takla
Deputy Chairman
Lars Arne Takla has extensive experience from various managerial, executive and board positions in the international oil and gas industry.
Mr. Takla has held various managerial positions with ConocoPhillips, including Managing Director and President of the Scandinavian Division. He was Executive Chairman of the Norwegian Energy Company ASA between 2005 and 2011. Mr. Takla was appointed Commander of the Royal Norwegian Order of St. Olav for his strong contribution to the Norwegian petroleum industry. He holds a Master of Science degree in chemical engineering from the Norwegian University of Science and Technology. He was elected to DNO’s Board of Directors in 2012 and is a member of the HSSE committee.
Elin Karfjell
Director
Elin Karfjell is CFO of Statsbygg and has held various management positions across a broad range of industries.
Ms. Karfjell has been Managing Partner of Atelika AS and has served as Chief Executive Officer of Fabi Group, Director of Finance and Administration at Atea AS and partner of Ernst & Young AS and Arthur Andersen. Other board directorships include Aker Philadelphia Shipyard, North Energy ASA and Contesto AS. Ms. Karfjell is a state authorized public accountant. She has a Bachelor of Science in Accounting from Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied Sciences and a Higher Auditing degree from the Norwegian School of Economics and Business Administration. Ms. Karfjell was elected to the Company’s Board of Directors in 2015 and is a member of the audit committee.
Gunnar Hirsti
Director
Gunnar Hirsti has extensive experience from various managerial, executive and board positions in the oil and gas industry as well as the information technology industry in Norway.
Mr. Hirsti was Chief Executive Officer of DSND Subsea ASA (now Subsea 7 S.A.) for a period of six years. He also served as Executive Chairman of the Board of Blom ASA, for eight years. Mr. Hirsti holds a degree in drilling engineering from Tønsberg Maritime Høyskole in Norway. He was elected to DNO’s Board of Directors in 2007 and is a member of the audit and remuneration committees.
Shelley Watson
Director
Shelley Watson began her career as a reservoir surveillance and facilities engineer with Esso Australia in its offshore Bass Strait operation.
Subsequently she held management positions with Novus Petroleum, Indago Petroleum and RAK Petroleum PCL where she served as General Manager until 2014. She was appointed as Chief Operating Officer of RAK Petroleum plc in February 2017 and Chief Financial Officer in May 2017. Ms. Watson holds a First Class Honours degree in chemical engineering and a Bachelor of Commerce degree from the University of Melbourne. She has served on DNO’s Board of Directors since 2010 and is a member of the audit committee.
https://www.hks.harvard.edu/centers/mrcbg/about/mission-history
Born November 30, 1954 is an American economist former Vice President of Development Economics and Chief Economist of the
World Bank 1991 -1993
Senior U.S. Treasury Department official throughout President Clinton's administration Treasury Secretary 1999 - 2001
Former director of the National Economic Council for President Obama 2009 - 2010
Former president of Harvard University 2001 - 2006 (Following the end of Clinton's term, Summers served as the 27th President
from 2001 to 2006. Summers resigned as Harvard's president in the wake of a no confidence vote by Harvard faculty, which resulted in large part from Summers's conflict with Cornel West
financial conflict of interest questions regarding his relationship with Andrei Shleifer where he is currently a Professor and director of the Mossavar-Rahmani Center for Business and Government at Harvard's Kennedy School Government
Born Rhodesia 1953
Mother Ursula Elspeth Pelley (b. Dec. 31, 1921), daughter of Sir Kenneth Raymond Pelly and Elspeth Norna Grant.
Father, exiled South African diplomat Lieutenant Robert George Malloch Brown son of Robert W. Malloch Brown (South African Naval Force)(d. May 11, 1967); wife Patricia Anne Cronam (m. 1989); daughters Maddison Jane (b. 1991), Isabel Anne (b. 1994), Phoebe (b. after 1994), and son George (b. after 1994); Source: Burke's Peerage Nos. 401249, 401250, 401248, 401251, 401253, 401252 , 401254
Honorary President, Lord Malloch-Brown
Afolabi Adekaiyaoja (Chair)
Denise Chau
Meshaal Choudhary
Leonie Jarrett
Muqaddam Malik
Moni Owoade
Aditya Ranjan
Dijana Spasenoska
Nudhara Yusuf (LIMUN: HS 2020 Secretary-General)
Benjamin Santhouse-James (LIMUN: UC 2021 Secretary-General)
While serving as United Nations Development Fund Administrator, Malloch Brown spoke beside Soros in 2002 suggesting that United Nations and Soros's Open Society Institute, as well as other organizations, work together to fund humanitarian functions.
The highest-ranking UK citizen to have served at the UN, Lord Malloch-Brown served as Deputy Secretary-General and Chief of Staff of the UN under Secretary-General Kofi Annan. He joined The United Nations Association - UK as
in February 2017. UNA-UK's Campaigns and Communications Officer, Isabelle Younane, sat down with him to discuss UNA-UK and the future of the UN, the conflict in Syria, and the success of the 1 for 7 Billion campaign.
UNA-UK is, for generations of young Brits wanting to get involved in the UN, a gateway to that engagement, an opportunity to meet UN people and an opportunity to learn a little bit about the current UN and its history. It’s an extraordinary civil society window between what can seem like a rather impenetrable fortress on the East River of New York or Geneva, and young students wanting to find out how to get a foothold, how to find a window into the Organisation and explore whether it’s a career possibility for them.
But UNA-UK is more than a Job Centre. It’s also a place where people who have chosen related or completely different careers can stay engaged with the world – and with thinking about progressive solutions to the world’s problems.
There’s no doubt that the UK will lose tremendous standing globally by leaving the EU. The EU is one of the big blocs at the UN. But the silver lining to that is the determination of British ministers to go for this thing called ‘Global Britain’ and that relates to organisations like the UN and the Commonwealth, which don’t depend on membership of the EU. You’ll see Britain trying to re-double its efforts, ‘punch above its weight’ to use that famous phrase, and really take some stands on issues to get noticed. If you’re a smaller power, you have to be shriller, and Britain will be a smaller power but with one great asset: a permanent seat on the Security Council.
One thing to say is that Britain and France, by the standards of the five permanent members of the Security Council, do get the prize for being the more consistent. But it’s a pretty low standard because in general, unfortunately, permanent members are inclined to preach one thing and behave another way. This has been, over the long-term, extraordinarily undermining of the moral fabric of the UN.
Britain is willing to be a champion of the UN agenda. I had the personal experience of moving from being number two at the UN to being a British minister and was very worried that I’d find dozens of inconsistencies of policy. There were some, but it wasn’t overwhelming because even on something like the arms trade, Britain has taken the lead in trying to control small arms even though it has been much worse on large arms, of which it is a major exporter.
Like anyone who is an ally of the United States, there has been, I’m sorry to say, dramatic inconsistency in the UK’s Middle East position. There is a double standard around Israel versus its neighbours, and a willingness to allow too much leeway to Saudi Arabia and others over their behaviour in Yemen. So, it is, unfortunately, one of the regrettable facts of life in international diplomacy and therefore shows up at the UN. There are double standards. But I hope young UN officials will be as angry about them as I was and fight them as hard.
The Trump Presidency and the likely votes in Europe ahead of us intimate that there is a reorganising of politics in many countries around, what Mr Trump would call, the ‘nationalists’ versus the ‘globalists’.
In many ways, the Brexit victory here in Britain was a victory for the nationalists but the current Government is a globally minded-nationalistic government, if I can put it that way. And so, the extent to which it will lead on universal issues of human rights. on international engagement, on burden-sharing around security, and also on development and social problems, is obviously a very good thing.
I think the question of whether the UN is fit for purpose can be put another way round, which is: are international government relations still fit for purpose? Because, essentially, Syria was about two implacable regional alliances with Iran, Hezbollah and other groups on one side backing the Syrian regime in Damascus, versus Turkey, the Gulf and others on the other side, backing equally implacable supporters of the opposition to Assad. The global players, US, Britain, France, Russia, all piled in behind their side.
The UN is never better than the behaviour of its member states, and they have all behaved abysmally; they put short-term political gain ahead of finding humanitarian solutions – let alone long-term political solutions and resolution of the conflict. So, this certainly shows a UN that has not delivered, but more importantly, it shows a failed international system, of which the UN is just an expression.
Well I think the British public is made up of generally pretty sane-minded, feet-on-the-ground people who are not going to be moved by appeals to distant, disembodied international organisations, of which they occasionally catch footage via large, four-wheel drive cars with UN on the side. That institutional UN is not going to catch their imagination.
What has and always will catch their imagination is the human, campaigning UN. So, when it’s about kids getting to school, or mothers and children surviving childbirth or other health interventions, or about building a decent future for people in less lucky circumstances than Brits back home, there is an infinite imagination and capacity and willingness to help on the side of the British public.
My feeling is, always, strip out the institutional stuff and get to the basic offer, which is about improving the lives of others but also engagement around a global community that is stronger together than apart.
The
was really inspired and I think many people have noted that if there had not been these public hustings in the UN General Assembly, António Guterres may well not have emerged as the new Secretary-General. It was his triumph in that forum which really set an otherwise rather unlikely campaign going. By gender and region, he wasn’t where people had anticipated the choice would finally fall. And so, I think this power to harness social media; this power of a message which pushes against the closed doors of the current UN system, offered two ways forward.
If you look, over the years – whether it’s campaigns against land mines, or for a more open Secretary-General, or against poverty and debt – in each case, it’s a powerful emotional campaign around an issue which is current and meaningful to people, and then a hell of a lot of organising behind it. The earlier ones I mentioned largely preceded social media, but they had in common a network of NGOs and other civil society groups, who were really organising and driving people to sign up and offering them things to do, like writing letters to their MPs.
In all cases, there was the excitement of a mass movement achieving real results. So, in a world which is falling short across the 17 Sustainable Development Goals, there’s plenty of ‘grist for the mill’ for new campaigns.
LONDON INTERNATIONAL MODEL UNITED NATIONS (LIMUN)
Malloch Brown Shadow Founder, Honorary President, United Nations propagandist
LONDON
Baron, of St Leonard's Forest in the County of West Sussex
CONNECTIONS
Burkes Peerage; UK Civ. Reg.,
Privy Council Members, 597, as of Jul. 04, 2018: Abernethy, Lord, 2005; Adonis, Lord, 2009; Aikens, Sir Richard, 2008; Ainsworth, Robert, 2005; Airlie, Earl of, 1984; Aldous, Sir William, 1995; Alebua, Ezekiel, 1988; Alexander, Danny, 2010; Alexander, Douglas, 2005; Amos, Baroness, 2003; Ancram, Michael, 1996 ; Anderson of Swansea, Lord, 2000; Anelay of St Johns, Baroness, 2009; Angiolini, Elish, 2006; Anthony, John Douglas, 1971; Arbuthnot, James, 1998; Archer of Sandwell, Lord, 1977 ; Arden, Dame Mary, 2000; Armstrong of Hill Top, Baroness, 1999; Arthur, Owen, 1995; Ashdown of Norton-sub-Hamdon, Lord, 1989; Ashley of Stoke, Lord, 1979; Ashton of Upholland, Baroness, 2006; Atkins, Sir Robert, 1995; Auld, Sir Robin, 1995 ; Baker of Dorking, Lord, 1984; Baker, Sir Thomas, 2002; Balls, Ed, 2007; Bannside of North Antrim, Lord, 2005; Barnett, Lord, 1975; Barron, Kevin, 2001; Bassam of Brighton, Lord, 2009; Battle, John, 2002; Beckett, Margaret, 1993; Beith, Alan, 1992; Beldam, Sir Roy, 1989; Benn, Anthony, 1964; Benn, Hilary, 2003; Bercow, John, 2009; Birch, Sir William, 1992; Black, Lady Justice, 2011; Blackstone, Baroness, 2001; Blair, Anthony, 1994; Blanchard, Peter, 1998; Blears, Hazel, 2005; Blencathra, Lord, 2001; Blunkett, David, 1997; Boateng, Lord, 1999; Bolger, James, 1991; Bonomy, Lord, 2010; Boothroyd, Baroness, 1992; Boscawen, Robert, 1992; Bottomley of Nettlestone, Baroness, 1992; Boyd of Duncansby, Lord, 2000; Boyson, Sir Rhodes, 1987; Bradley, Lord, 2001; Bradshaw, Ben, 2009; Brathwaite, Sir Nicholas, 1991; Brittan of Spennithorne, Lord, 1981; Brooke of Sutton Mandeville, Lord, 1988 ; Brooke, Sir Henry, 1996; Brown of Eaton-under-Heywood, Lord, 1992 ; Brown, Gordon, 1996; Brown, Nicholas, 1997; Brown, Sir Stephen, 1983; Browne of Ladyton, Lord, 2005; Browne-Wilkinson, Lord, 1983; Bruce, Malcolm, 2006; Burnham, Andy, 2007 ; Burns, Simon, 2011; Burnton, Stanley Jeffrey, 2008; Butler of Brockwell, Lord, 2004; Butler-Sloss, Baroness, 1988; Buxton, Sir Richard, 1997; Byers, Stephen, 1998 ; Byrne, Liam, 2008; Byron, Sir Dennis, 2004; Cable, Vincent, 2010; Caborn, Richard, 1999; Caithness, Earl of, 1990; Cameron of Lochbroom, Lord, 1984; Cameron, David, 2005; Camoys, Lord, 1997; Campbell, Sir Walter Menzies, 1999; Campbell, Sir William Anthony, 1999; Canterbury, The Archbishop of, 2002; Carey of Clifton, Lord, 1991 ; Carloway, Lord, 2008; Carmichael, Alistair, 2010; Carnwath, Sir Robert, 2002; Carr of Hadley, Lord, 1963; Carrington, Lord, 1959; Carswell, Lord, 1993; Casey, Sir Maurice, 1986; Chadwick, Sir John, 1997; Chalfont, Lord, 1964; Chalker of Wallasey, Baroness, 1987; Chan, Sir Julius, 1981; Chartres, Rt. Rev. Richard, The Bishop of London, 1995 ; Chataway, Sir Christopher, 1970; Chilcot, Sir John, 2004; Christie, Perry, 2004; Clark of Windermere, Lord, 1997; Clark, Greg, 2010; Clark, Helen, 1990; Clarke, Charles, 2001; Clarke, Kenneth, 1984; Clarke, Lord, 2008; Clarke, Sir Anthony, 1998; Clarke, Thomas, 1997; Clegg, Nicholas, 2008; Clinton-Davis, Lord, 1998 Lord Clinton-Davis of Hackney ; Clwyd, Ann, 2004; Coghlin, Sir Patrick, 2009; Collins of Mapesbury, Lord, 2007; Cooper, Yvette, 2007; Cope of Berkeley, Lord, 1988; Corston, Baroness, 2003; Cosgrove, Lady, 2003; Coulsfield, Lord, 2000; Cowen, Sir Zelman, 1981; Crawford and Balcarres, Earl of, 1972; Creech, Wyatt, 1999; Crickhowell, Lord, 1979; Cullen of Whitekirk, Hon Lord, 1997; Cunningham of Felling, Lord, 1993; Curry, David, 1996; Darling, Alistair, 1997; Darzi of Denham, 2009; Davies of Oldham, Lord, 2006; Davies, Denzil, 1978; Davies, Ronald, 1997; Davis, David, 1997; Davis, Terence, 1999; Davison, Sir Ronald, 1978; De La Bastide, Michael, 2004; Dean of Thornton-le-Fylde, Baroness, 1998; Deben of Winston, Lord, 1985; Denham, John Yorke, 2000; Denham, Lord, 1981; Dholakia, Lord, 2010; Dixon, Lord, 1996; Dobson, Frank, 1997; Dodds, Nigel, 2010; Donaldson, Jeffrey Mark, 2007; Dorrell, Stephen, 1994; Drayson, Lord, 2008; D'Souza, Baroness, 2009; Du Cann, Sir Edward, 1964; Duncan Smith, Iain, 2001; Duncan, Alan, 2010; Dunn, Sir Robin, 1980; Dyson, Sir John Anthony, 2001; Eassie, Lord, 2006; East, Paul, 1998; Eden of Winton, Lord, 1972; Edinburgh, HRH Duke of, 1951; Edward, Sir David, 2005; Eggar, Timothy, 1995; Eichelbaum, Sir Thomas, 1989; Elias, Dame Sian, 1999; Elias, Sir Patrick, 2009; Elis-Thomas, Lord, 2004 ; Emslie, Lord, 2011 ; Esquivel, Manuel, 1986; Etherton, Sir Terence, 2008; Evans, Sir Anthony, 1992; Eveleigh, Sir Edward, 1977 ; Falconer of Thoroton, Lord, 2003; Farquharson, Sir Donald, 1989; Fellowes, Lord, 1990; Fergusson, Alexander, 2010; Ferrers, Earl, 1982; Field, Frank, 1997; Flint, Caroline, 2008; Forsyth of Drumlean, Lord, 1995 ; Foster of Bishop Auckland, Lord, 1993; Foster, Donald, 2010; Foulkes of Cumnock, Lord, 2002; Fowler, Lord, 1979; Fox, Liam, 2010; Francois, Mark, 2010; Fraser Malcolm, 1976; Fraser of Carmyllie, Lord, 1989; Freedman, Sir Lawrence, 2009; Freeman, John, 1966; Freeman, Lord, 1993; Gage, Sir William, 2004; Garel-Jones, Lord, 1992; Gault, Thomas, 1992; Geidt, Christopher, 2007; George, Bruce, 2000; Gibson, Sir Peter, 1993; Gilbert, Lord, 1978; Gilbert, Sir Martin, 2009; Gill, Lord, 2002; Gillan, Cheryl, 2010; Girvan, Sir (Frederick) Paul, 2007; Glenamara, Lord, 1964; Glidewell, Sir Iain, 1985; Goff of Chieveley, Lord, 1982; Goggins, Paul, 2009; Goldring, Sir John, 2008; Goldsmith, Lord, 2002; Goodlad, Lord, 1992; Gove, Michael, 2010; Gowrie, Earl of, 1984; Graham of Edmonton, Lord, 1998; Graham, Sir Douglas, 1998; Grayling, Chris, 2010; Grieve, Dominic, 2010; Griffiths, Lord, 1980; Grocott, Lord, 2002; Gross, Lord Justice, 2011; Habgood, Rt Rev Lord, 1983; Hague, William, 1995; Hain, Peter, 2001; Hale of Richmond, Baroness, 1999; Hallett, Dame Heather, 2005; Hamilton of Epsom, Lord, 1991; Hamilton, Lord, 2002; Hammond, Philip, 2010; Hanley, Sir Jeremy, 1994; Hanson, David, 2007; Hardie Boys, Sir Michael, 1989; Hardie, Lord, 1997; Harman, Harriet, 1997 ; Harrison, Walter, 1977; Haselhurst, Sir Alan, 1999; Hattersley, Lord, 1975; Hayhoe, Lord, 1985; Hayman, Baroness, 2000; Healey, John, 2008; Healey, Lord, 1964; Heathcoat-Amory, David, 1996; Henry, John, 1996; Herbert, Nick, 2010; Heseltine, Lord, 1979; Heseltine, Sir William, 1986; Hesketh, Lord, 1991 ; Hewitt, Patricia, 2001 ; Higgins, Lord, 1979; Higgins, Sir Malachy (Joseph), 2007; Hill, Keith, 2003; Hirst, Sir David, 1992; Hodge, Margaret, 2003; Hoffmann, Lord, 1992; Hogg, Douglas, 1992; Hollis of Heigham, Baroness, 1999; Hoon, Geoffrey, 1999; Hooper, Sir Anthony, 2004; Hope of Craighead, Lord, 1989; Hope of Thornes, Lord, 1991; Hordern, Sir Peter, 1993; Howard of Lympne, Lord, Michael, 1990; Howarth of Newport, Lord, 2000; Howarth, George, 2005; Howe of Aberavon, Lord, 1972; Howell of Guildford, Lord, 1979; Howells, Kim, 2009; Hughes of Stretford, Baroness, 2004; Hughes, Simon, 2010; Hughes, Sir Anthony, 2006; Huhne, Chris, 2010; Hunt of Kings Heath, Lord, 2009; Hunt of Wirral, Lord, 1980; Hunt, Jeremy, 2010; Hunt, Jonathon, 1989; Hurd of Westwell, Lord, 1982; Hutchison, Sir Michael, 1995; Hutton of Furness, Lord, 2001; Hutton, Lord, 1988; Inge, Lord, 2004; Ingraham, Hubert, 1993; Ingram, Adam Paterson, 1999; Irvine of Lairg, Lord, 1997; Jack, Michael, 1997; Jackson, Sir Rupert, 2008; Jacob, Lord, 2004; Jacobs, Francis, 2005; Janvrin, Sir Robin, 1998; Jay of Paddington, Baroness, 1998; Jenkin of Roding, Lord, 1973 ; Johnson, Alan, 2003 ; Jones, Carwyn, 2010; Jones, Lord, 1999; Jopling, Lord, 1979; Jowell, Tessa, 1998; Judge of Draycote, Lord, 1996; Jugnauth, Sir Anerood, 1987; Kaufman, Sir Gerald, 1978; Kay, Sir Maurice, 2004; Keene, Sir David, 2000; Keith, Sir Kenneth, 1998; Kelly, Ruth, 2004; Kenilorea, Sir Peter, 1979; Kennedy, Charles, 1999; Kennedy, Jane, 2003; Kennedy, Sir Paul, 1992; Kerr of Tonaghmore, Lord, 2003; Khan, Sadiq, 2009; King of Bridgwater, Lord, 1979; Kingarth, Lord, 2006; Kingsdown, Lord, 1987; Kinnock, Lord, 1983; Kirkwood, Lord, 2000; Knight of Weymouth, Lord, 2008; Knight, Gregory, 1995; Lammy, David, 2008; Lamont of Lerwick, Lord, 1986; Lang Sources: Various incl. UK Parliment, Wikipedia, Wayback Machine, Companies House. Page 29
Last Updated Jul. 23, 2018 Mark Malloch-Brown Biography Timeline
Burkes Peerage; UK Civ. Reg., SEC
Dates Organization/ Activity Title / Position (attached *.xlsx contains Citation column D >>>)
Lord, 1980; Grocott, Lord, 2002; Gross, Lord Justice, 2011; Habgood, Rt Rev Lord, 1983; Hague, William, 1995; Hain, Peter, 2001; Hale of Richmond, Baroness, 1999; Hallett, Dame Heather, 2005; Hamilton of Epsom, Lord, 1991; Hamilton, Lord, 2002; Hammond, Philip, 2010; Hanley, Sir Jeremy, 1994; Hanson, David, 2007; Hardie Boys, Sir Michael, 1989; Hardie, Lord, 1997; Harman, Harriet, 1997 ; Harrison, Walter, 1977; Haselhurst, Sir Alan, 1999; Hattersley, Lord, 1975; Hayhoe, Lord, 1985; Hayman, Baroness, 2000; Healey, John, 2008; Healey, Lord, 1964; Heathcoat-Amory, David, 1996; Henry, John, 1996; Herbert, Nick, 2010; Heseltine, Lord, 1979; Heseltine, Sir William, 1986; Hesketh, Lord, 1991 ; Hewitt, Patricia, 2001 ; Higgins, Lord, 1979; Higgins, Sir Malachy (Joseph), 2007; Hill, Keith, 2003; Hirst, Sir David, 1992; Hodge, Margaret, 2003; Hoffmann, Lord, 1992; Hogg, Douglas, 1992; Hollis of Heigham, Baroness, 1999; Hoon, Geoffrey, 1999; Hooper, Sir Anthony, 2004; Hope of Craighead, Lord, 1989; Hope of Thornes, Lord, 1991; Hordern, Sir Peter, 1993; Howard of Lympne, Lord, Michael, 1990; Howarth of Newport, Lord, 2000; Howarth, George, 2005; Howe of Aberavon, Lord, 1972; Howell of Guildford, Lord, 1979; Howells, Kim, 2009; Hughes of Stretford, Baroness, 2004; Hughes, Simon, 2010; Hughes, Sir Anthony, 2006; Huhne, Chris, 2010; Hunt of Kings Heath, Lord, 2009; Hunt of Wirral, Lord, 1980; Hunt, Jeremy, 2010; Hunt, Jonathon, 1989; Hurd of Westwell, Lord, 1982; Hutchison, Sir Michael, 1995; Hutton of Furness, Lord, 2001; Hutton, Lord, 1988; Inge, Lord, 2004; Ingraham, Hubert, 1993; Ingram, Adam Paterson, 1999; Irvine of Lairg, Lord, 1997; Jack, Michael, 1997; Jackson, Sir Rupert, 2008; Jacob, Lord, 2004; Jacobs, Francis, 2005; Janvrin, Sir Robin, 1998; Jay of Paddington, Baroness, 1998; Jenkin of Roding, Lord, 1973 ; Johnson, Alan, 2003 ; Jones, Carwyn, 2010; Jones, Lord, 1999; Jopling, Lord, 1979; Jowell, Tessa, 1998; Judge of Draycote, Lord, 1996; Jugnauth, Sir Anerood, 1987; Kaufman, Sir Gerald, 1978; Kay, Sir Maurice, 2004; Keene, Sir David, 2000; Keith, Sir Kenneth, 1998; Kelly, Ruth, 2004; Kenilorea, Sir Peter, 1979; Kennedy, Charles, 1999; Kennedy, Jane, 2003; Kennedy, Sir Paul, 1992; Kerr of Tonaghmore, Lord, 2003; Khan, Sadiq, 2009; King of Bridgwater, Lord, 1979; Kingarth, Lord, 2006; Kingsdown, Lord, 1987; Kinnock, Lord, 1983; Kirkwood, Lord, 2000; Knight of Weymouth, Lord, 2008; Knight, Gregory, 1995; Lammy, David, 2008; Lamont of Lerwick, Lord, 1986; Lang of Monkton, Lord, 1990; Lansley, Andrew, 2010; Latasi, Kamuta, 1996; Latham, Sir David, 2000; Lauti, Sir Toaripi, 1979; Laws, David, 2010; Laws, Sir John Grant McKenzie, 1999; Lawson of Blaby, Lord, 1981; Leggatt, Sir Andrew, 1990 ; Letwin, Oliver, 2002; Leveson, Sir Brian, 2006; Liddell of Coatdyke, Baroness, 1998; Lidington, David, 2010; Lilley, Peter, 1990; Lloyd of Berwick, Lord, 1984; Lloyd, Sir Peter, 1994; Lloyd, Sir Timothy, 2005; Llwyd, Elfyn, 2011; Longmore, Sir Andrew Centlivres, 2001; Luce, Lord, 1986; Lyne, Sir Roderic, 2009; MacDermott, Sir John, 1987; Macdonald of Tradeston, Lord, 1999; MacGregor of Pulham Market, Lord, 1985; Mackay of Clashfern, Lord, 1979; Mackay of Drumadoon, Lord, 1996 ; Mackay, Andrew, 1998; Maclean, Lord, 2001; Maclennan of Rogart, Lord, 1997; MacShane, Denis, 2005; Major, Sir John, 1987; Malloch-Brown, Lord, 2007; Mance, Lord, 1999; Mandelson, Lord, 1998; Marnoch, Lord, 2001; Marsh of Mannington, Lord, 1966; Martin of Springburn, Lord, 2000; Mason of Barnsley, Lord, 1968; Mates, Michael, 2004; Maude, Francis, 1992 ; Mawhinney, Lord, 1994 ; May, Sir Anthony, 1998 ; May, Theresa, 2003; Mayhew of Twysden, Lord, 1986; McAvoy of Rutherglen, Lord, 2003; McCartney, Ian, 1999; McCollum, Sir Liam, 1997; McConnell of Glenscorrodale, Lord, 2001; McFadden, Patrick, 2008; McFall of Alcluith, Lord, 2004; McGuire, Anne, 2008; McKay, Sir Ian, 1992; McKinnon, Donald, 1992; McLeish, Henry, 2000; McLoughlin, Patrick, 2005; McMullin, Sir Duncan, 1980; McNally, Lord, 2005; McNulty, Anthony, 2007; Meacher, Michael, 1997; Mellor, David, 1990; Michael, Alun, 1998; Milburn, Alan, 1998; Miliband, David, 2005; Miliband, Ed, 2007; Millan, Bruce, 1975; Millett, Lord, 1994; Mitchell, Andrew, 2010; Mitchell, Dr Keith, 2004; Mitchell, Sir James, 1985; Molyneaux of Killead, Lord, 1983; Moore of Lower Marsh, Lord, 1986; Moore, Michael, 1990; Moore, Michael, 2010; Moore-Bick, Sir Martin, 2005; Morgan, Rhodri, 2000; Morgan, Sir Declan, 2009; Morley, Elliot Anthony, 2007; Morris of Aberavon, Lord, 1970; Morris of Manchester, Lord, 1979; Morris of Yardley, Baroness, 1999; Morris, Charles, 1978; Morritt, Sir Robert, 1994; Moses, Sir Alan, 2005; Moyle, Roland, 1978; Mummery, Sir John, 1996; Munby, Sir James Lawrence, 2009; Mundell, David, 2010; Murphy, James, 2008; Murphy, Paul, 1999; Murray, Lord, 1974; Murray, Sir Donald, 1989; Musa, Wilbert, 2005; Mustill, Lord, 1985; Nairne, Sir Patrick, 1982; Namaliu, Sir Rabbie, 1989; Naseby, Lord, 1994; Needham, Sir Richard, 1994; Neill, Sir Brian, 1985; Neuberger of Abbotsbury, Lord, 2004; Neville-Jones, Baroness, 2010; Newton of Braintree, Lord, 1988; Nicholls of Birkenhead, Lord, 1995; Nicholson, Sir Michael, 1995; Nimmo Smith, Lord, 2005; Nott, Sir John, 1979; Nourse, Sir Martin, 1985; O'Brien, Mike, 2009; O'Donnell, Turlough, 1979; Oppenheim-Barnes, Baroness, 1979; Osborne, George, 2010; Osborne, Lord, 2001; Otton, Sir Philip, 1995; Owen, Lord, 1976; Paeniu, Bikenibeu, 1991; Paice, James, 2010; Palliser, Sir Michael, 1983; Palmer, Sir Geoffrey, 1986; Paraskeva, Dame Janet, 2010; Parker, Sir Jonathan, 2000 ; Parker, Sir Roger, 1983; Parkinson, Lord, 1981; Paterson, Owen, 2010; Paton, Lady, 2007; Patten of Barnes, Lord, 1989; Patten, Lord, 1990; Patten, Sir Nicholas, 2009; Patterson, Percival, 1993; Pattie, Sir Geoffrey, 1987; Paul, Lord, 2009; Peel, Lord, 2006; Pendry, Lord, 2000; Penrose, Lord, 2001; Peters, Winston, 1998; Philip, Lord, 2005; Phillips of Worth Matravers, Lord, 1995; Pickles, Eric, 2010; Pill, Sir Malcolm, 1995; Pitchford, Sir Christopher, 2010; Portillo, Michael, 1992; Potter, Sir Mark, 1996; Prashar, Baroness, 2009; Prescott, Lord, 1994; Price, George, 1982; Primarolo, Dawn, 2002; Prior, Lord, 1970; Prosser, Lord, 2000; Puapau, Sir Tomasi, 1982; Purnell, James, 2007; Quin, Baroness, 1998; Radice, Lord, 1999; Raison, Sir Timothy, 1982; Ramsden, James, 1963; Randall, John, 2010; Raynsford, Nick, 2001; Redwood, John, 1993; Reed, Lord, 2008; Reid, George, 2004; Reid, of Cardowan Dr, Lord, 1998; Renton of Mount Harry, Lord, 1989; Richard, Lord, 1993; Richards, Sir Stephen, 2005; Richardson, Sir Ivor, 1978; Riddell, Peter, 2010; Rifkind, Sir Malcolm, 1986; Rimer, Sir Colin, 2007; Rix, Sir Bernard, 2000; Robathan, Andrew, 2010; Roberts of Conwy, Lord, 1991; Robertson of Port Ellen, Lord, 1997; Robinson, Peter David, 2007; Roch, Sir John, 1993; Rodger of Earlsferry, Lord, 1992; Rodgers of Quarry Bank, Lord, 1975; Rooker, Lord, 1999; Roper, Lord, 2005; Rose, Sir Christopher, 1992; Ross, Lord, 1985; Royall of Blaisdon, Baroness, 2008; Ruddock, Joan, 2010; Ryan, Joan, 2007; Ryder of Wensum, Lord, 1990; Sainsbury, Sir Timothy, 1992; Salisbury, Marquess of, 1994; Salmond, Alex, 2007; Sandiford, Sir Lloyd Erskine, 1989; Saville of Newdigate, Lord, 1994; Sawyer, Dame Joan Augusta, 2004; Schiemann, Sir Konrad, 1995; Scotland of Asthal, Baroness, 2001; Scott of Foscote, Lord, 1991; Seaga, Edward, 1981; Sedley, Sir Stephen John, 1999; Selkirk of Douglas, Lord, 1996; Sentamu, Rt Rev John, 2005; Shapps, Grant, 2010; Sheldon, Lord, 1977; Shephard of Northwold, Baroness, 1992; Shiel, Sir John, 2005; Shipley, Jennifer, 1998; Short, Clare, 1997; Shutt of Greetland, Lord, 2009; Simmonds, Kennedy, 1984; Sinclair, Ian, 1977; Slade, Sir Christopher, 1982; Smith of Finsbury, Lord, 1997; Smith, Andrew, 1997; Smith, Dame Janet Hilary, 2002; Smith, Jacqueline, 2003; Smith, of Basildon, Baroness, 2009; Somare, Sir Michael, 1977; Spellar, John, 2001 ; Spelman, Caroline, 2010; St John of Fawsley, Lord, 1979; Stanley, Sir John, 1984; Staughton, Sir Christopher, 1988; Steel of Aikwood, Lord, 1977; Stephen, Sir Ninian, 1979; Stewartby, Lord, 1989; Steyn, Lord, 1992; Strang, Gavin, 1997; Strathclyde, Lord, 1995; Straw, Jack, 1997; Stuart-Smith, Sir Murray, 1988; Sullivan, Sir Jeremy, 2009; Sutherland, Lord, 2000; Swire, Hugo, 2010; Symons of Vernham Dean, Baroness, 2001; Talboys, Sir Brian, 1977; Taylor of Bolton, Baroness, 1997; Tebbit, Lord, 1981; Templeman, Lord, 1978; Thatcher, Baroness, 1970; Thomas, Edmund, 1996; Thomas, Sir Roger John Laugharne, 2003; Thomas, Sir Swinton, 1994 ; Thorpe, John Jeremy, 1967; Thorpe, Sir Matthew, 1995; Timms, Stephen, 2006; Tipping, Andrew, 1998; Tizard, Robert, 1986; Tomlinson, Lord Justice, 2011; Touhig, Lord, 2006; Toulson, Sir Roger, 2007; Trefgarne, Lord, 1989; Trimble, Lord, 1997; Trumpington, Baroness, 1992; Tuckey, Sir Simon, 1998; Ullswater, Viscount, 1994; Upton, Simon, 1999 ; Vadera, Baroness, 2009; Vaz, Keith, 2006; Villiers, Theresa, 2010; Waddington, Lord, 1987; Waite, Sir John, 1993; Wakeham, Lord, Sources: Various incl. UK Parliment, Wikipedia, Wayback Machine, Companies House. Page 30
Last Updated Jul. 23, 2018 Mark Malloch-Brown Biography Timeline
Burkes Peerage; UK Civ. Reg., SEC
Dates Organization/ Activity Title / Position (attached *.xlsx contains Citation column D >>>)
Richards, Sir Stephen, 2005; Richardson, Sir Ivor, 1978; Riddell, Peter, 2010; Rifkind, Sir Malcolm, 1986; Rimer, Sir Colin, 2007; Rix, Sir Bernard, 2000; Robathan, Andrew, 2010; Roberts of Conwy, Lord, 1991; Robertson of Port Ellen, Lord, 1997; Robinson, Peter David, 2007; Roch, Sir John, 1993; Rodger of Earlsferry, Lord, 1992; Rodgers of Quarry Bank, Lord, 1975; Rooker, Lord, 1999; Roper, Lord, 2005; Rose, Sir Christopher, 1992; Ross, Lord, 1985; Royall of Blaisdon, Baroness, 2008; Ruddock, Joan, 2010; Ryan, Joan, 2007; Ryder of Wensum, Lord, 1990; Sainsbury, Sir Timothy, 1992; Salisbury, Marquess of, 1994; Salmond, Alex, 2007; Sandiford, Sir Lloyd Erskine, 1989; Saville of Newdigate, Lord, 1994; Sawyer, Dame Joan Augusta, 2004; Schiemann, Sir Konrad, 1995; Scotland of Asthal, Baroness, 2001; Scott of Foscote, Lord, 1991; Seaga, Edward, 1981; Sedley, Sir Stephen John, 1999; Selkirk of Douglas, Lord, 1996; Sentamu, Rt Rev John, 2005; Shapps, Grant, 2010; Sheldon, Lord, 1977; Shephard of Northwold, Baroness, 1992; Shiel, Sir John, 2005; Shipley, Jennifer, 1998; Short, Clare, 1997; Shutt of Greetland, Lord, 2009; Simmonds, Kennedy, 1984; Sinclair, Ian, 1977; Slade, Sir Christopher, 1982; Smith of Finsbury, Lord, 1997; Smith, Andrew, 1997; Smith, Dame Janet Hilary, 2002; Smith, Jacqueline, 2003; Smith, of Basildon, Baroness, 2009; Somare, Sir Michael, 1977; Spellar, John, 2001 ; Spelman, Caroline, 2010; St John of Fawsley, Lord, 1979; Stanley, Sir John, 1984; Staughton, Sir Christopher, 1988; Steel of Aikwood, Lord, 1977; Stephen, Sir Ninian, 1979; Stewartby, Lord, 1989; Steyn, Lord, 1992; Strang, Gavin, 1997; Strathclyde, Lord, 1995; Straw, Jack, 1997; Stuart-Smith, Sir Murray, 1988; Sullivan, Sir Jeremy, 2009; Sutherland, Lord, 2000; Swire, Hugo, 2010; Symons of Vernham Dean, Baroness, 2001; Talboys, Sir Brian, 1977; Taylor of Bolton, Baroness, 1997; Tebbit, Lord, 1981; Templeman, Lord, 1978; Thatcher, Baroness, 1970; Thomas, Edmund, 1996; Thomas, Sir Roger John Laugharne, 2003; Thomas, Sir Swinton, 1994 ; Thorpe, John Jeremy, 1967; Thorpe, Sir Matthew, 1995; Timms, Stephen, 2006; Tipping, Andrew, 1998; Tizard, Robert, 1986; Tomlinson, Lord Justice, 2011; Touhig, Lord, 2006; Toulson, Sir Roger, 2007; Trefgarne, Lord, 1989; Trimble, Lord, 1997; Trumpington, Baroness, 1992; Tuckey, Sir Simon, 1998; Ullswater, Viscount, 1994; Upton, Simon, 1999 ; Vadera, Baroness, 2009; Vaz, Keith, 2006; Villiers, Theresa, 2010; Waddington, Lord, 1987; Waite, Sir John, 1993; Wakeham, Lord, 1983; Waldegrave of North Hill, Lord, 1990; Wales, HRH Prince of, 1977; Walker of Gestingthorpe, Lord, 1997; Wall, Lord, 2004 ; Wallace of Tankerness, Lord, 2000; Waller, Sir Mark, 1996; Ward, Sir Alan, 1995; Warner, Lord, 2006; Warsi, Baroness, 2010; West of Spithead, Lord, 2010; Wheatley, Lord, 2007; Wheeler, Sir John, 1993; Whitty, Lord, 2005; Wicks, Malcolm, 2008; Widdecombe, Ann, 1997; Wigley, Lord, 1997; Willetts, David, 2010; Williams of Crosby, Baroness, 1974; Williams, Alan, 1977; Williamson of Horton, Lord, 2007; Wills, Lord, 2008; Wilson, Brian, 2003; Wilson, Sir Nicholas, 2005; Wingti, Paias, 1987; Winterton, Rosie, 2006; Withers, Reginald, 1977; Woodhouse, Sir Owen, 1974; Woodward, Shaun, 2007; Woolf, Lord, 1986; Young of Graffham, Lord, 1984; Young, Sir George, 1993; Zacca, Edward, 199
Responsibilty for Africa, Asia and the United Nations
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/onthefrontline/5881753/Lord-Malloch-Brown-interview-This-dangerous-gridlock-that-taints-our-politics.html
WORLD ECONOMIC FORUM
Klaus Schwab - Founder and Executive Chairman
Board of Trustees
Mukesh D. Ambani
Chairman and Managing Director, Reliance Industries
Marc Benioff
Chair and Chief Executive Officer, Salesforce
Peter Brabeck-Letmathe
Vice-Chairman of the Board of Trustees, World Economic Forum
Mark Carney
COP26 Finance Adviser to the Prime Minister and UN Special Envoy for Climate, Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy of the United Kingdom
Laurence D. FinkC
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, BlackRock
Chrystia Freeland
Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Intergovernmental Affairs, Office of the Deputy Prime Minister of Canada
Orit Gadiesh
Chairman, Bain & Company Inc.
Kristalina Georgieva
Managing Director, International Monetary Fund (IMF)
Fabiola Gianotti
Director-General, European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN)
Al Gore
Vice-President of the United States (1993-2001); Chairman and Co-Founder, Generation Investment Management LLP
Herman Gref
Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board, Sberbank
Angel Gurría
Secretary-General, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD)
André Hoffmann
Chairman, Massellaz
Christine Lagarde
President, European Central Bank
Jack Ma
Alibaba Board of Directors, Alibaba Group
Yo-Yo Ma
Cellist, Sound Postings LLC
Peter Maurer
President, International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC)
Luis Alberto Moreno
President, Inter-American Development Bank
Patrice Motsepe
Founder and Executive Chairman, African Rainbow Minerals
H.M. Queen Rania Al Abdullah of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan
Queen of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, Office of Her Majesty Queen Rania Al Abdullah
L. Rafael Reif
President, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
David M. Rubenstein
Co-Founder and Co-Executive Chairman, Carlyle Group
Mark Schneider
Chief Executive Officer, Nestlé
Klaus Schwab
Founder and Executive Chairman, World Economic Forum
Tharman Shanmugaratnam
Senior Minister, Singapore, and Chairman, Monetary Authority of Singapore, Prime Minister's Office, Singapore
Jim Hagemann Snabe
Chairman, Siemens
Feike Sybesma
Chairman of the Managing Board, Royal DSM
Heizo Takenaka
Professor Emeritus, Keio University
Min Zhu Min
Chairman, National Institute of Financial ResearchWorld Economic Forum (WEF)
Relationships: Venkata (Raja Rajamannar) Madabhusi, Humana Inc.; Mona Abdallah Rishmawi, United Nations High Commission for Human Rights (OHCHR); Abdulkhaleq Abdulla, UAE University; Khalid Abdulla-Janahi, Vision 3; Jaime Abello Banfi, FUNDACIÓN NUEVO PERIODISMO IBEROAMERICANO; Helmy Abouleish, Sekem Group; Muna AbuSulayman, Alwaleed Bin Talal Foundation; Viral V. Acharya, Leonard N. Stern School of Business; Ann-Kristin Achleitner, Center for Entrepreneurial and Financial Studies (CEFS); Rob Adams, City of Melbourne; Eli Y. Adashi, Brown University; Aderanti Adepoju, Network of Migration Research on Africa (NOMRA); Taffy Adler, Housing Development Agency (HDA); Rohit T. Aggarwala, C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group; Bertie Ahern, Office of Bertie Ahem; Mubariq Ahmad, University of Indonesia; Masood Ahmed, International Monetary Fund (IMF); A. Vedat Akgiray, Capital Markets Board of Turkey (CMB); Najla Al Awadhi, Dubai Media Incorporated; May Al Dabbagh, Dubai School of Government; Reem Al Hashimy, Ministry of State of the United Arab Emirates; Hessa Al Jaber, Supreme Council for Information and Communication Technology (ictQATAR); Abdullah Al Karam, Knowledge and Human Development Authority; Mohammed Bin Essa Al Khalifa, Bahrain Economic Development Board; Hanan Al Kuwari, Hamad Medical Corporation; Riyad Abdulrahman Al Mubarak, Abu Dhabi Accountability Authority (ADAA); Khaled Bin Zayed Al Nehayan, Bin Zayed Group; Hussain J. Al Nowais, Emirates Holdings; Ohood Al Roumi, Office of the Prime Minister of the United Arab Emirates; Mowaffak Al Rubaie, National Security Council; Fahd Al-Rasheed, Emaar The Economic City; Thomas Alexander Aleinikoff, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR); Mimi Alemayehou, Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC); Alberto Alesina, Harvard University; YvanAllaire, Institute for Governance of Public and Private Organizations (IGOPP); Tony Allan, King's College London; Natalia Allen, Design Futurist SM; George Alleyne, United Nations; Graham Allison, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University; Philip Alston, New York University School of Law; Jose E. Alvarez, New York University School of Law; José MarÃ-a Õlvarez Pallete, Telefónica Latinoamérica; Ala Alwan, World Health Organization (WHO); K. Y. Amoako, African Center for Economic Transformation (ACET); Eric Anderson, Space Adventures Ltd; Matthew Anderson, News Corporation; Peter Anderson, University of Maastricht; Ross Anderson, University of Cambridge; Anthony Andrews, Prospectors & Developers Association of Canada (PDAC); Kwesi Aning, Kofi Annan International Peace Keeping Training Centre (KAIPTC); Paola Antonelli, Museum of Modern Art; Hiroto Arakawa, Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA); Alexei G. Arbatov, Institute of World Economy and International Relations (IMEMO); Louise Arbour, International Crisis Group (ICG); Giles Archibald, Mercer (MMC); Cyrus Ardalan, Barclays Capital; Martin Arévalo de León, Interpeace; David Arkless, Manpower Inc.; Roberto Artavia, VIVA Trust; International Monetary Fund (IMF); A. Vedat Akgiray, Capital Markets Board of Turkey (CMB); Najla Al Awadhi, Dubai Media Incorporated; May Al Dabbagh, Dubai School of Government; Reem Al Hashimy, Ministry of State of the United Arab Emirates; Hessa Al Jaber, Supreme Council for Information and Communication Technology (ictQATAR); Abdullah Al Karam, Knowledge and Human Development Authority; Mohammed Bin Essa Al Khalifa, Bahrain Economic Development Board; Hanan Al Kuwari, Hamad Medical Corporation; Riyad Abdulrahman Al Mubarak, Abu Dhabi Accountability Authority (ADAA); Khaled Bin Zayed Al Nehayan, Bin Zayed Group; Hussain J. Al Nowais, Emirates Holdings; Ohood Al Roumi, Office of the Prime Minister of the United Arab Emirates; Mowaffak Al Rubaie, National Security Council; Fahd Al-Rasheed, Emaar The Economic City; Thomas Alexander Aleinikoff, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR); Mimi Alemayehou, Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC); Alberto Alesina, Harvard University; Yvan Allaire, Institute for Governance of Public and Private Organizations (IGOPP); Tony Allan, King's College London; Natalia Allen, Design Futurist SM; George Alleyne, United Nations; Graham Allison, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University; Philip Alston, New York University School of Law; Jose E. Alvarez, New York University School of Law; José MarÃ-a Õlvarez Pallete, Telefónica Latinoamérica; Ala Alwan, World Health Organization (WHO); K. Y. Amoako, African Center for Economic Transformation (ACET); Eric Anderson, Space Adventures Ltd; Matthew Anderson, News Corporation; Peter Anderson, University of Maastricht; Ross Anderson, University of Cambridge; Anthony Andrews, Prospectors & Developers Association of Canada (PDAC); Kwesi Aning, Kofi Annan International Peace Keeping Training Centre (KAIPTC); Paola Antonelli, Museum of Modern Art; Hiroto Arakawa, Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA); Alexei G. Arbatov, Institute of World Economy and International Relations (IMEMO); Louise Arbour, International Crisis Group (ICG); Giles Archibald, Mercer (MMC); Cyrus Ardalan, Barclays Capital; Martin Arévalo de León, Interpeace; David Arkless, Manpower Inc.; Roberto Artavia, VIVA Trust; Martha C. Artiles, Manpower Inc.; Atul Arya, IHS CERA (Cambridge Energy Research Associates); Joyce Aryee, The Ghana Chamber of Mines; Ruben Atekpe, Merchants Company of West Africa Ltd - MECOWA Group; Jacques Attali, PlaNet Finance; Dorothy Attwood, The Walt Disney Company; Rick Aubry, New Foundry Ventures; Byron Auguste, McKinsey & Company; Lars Espen Aukrust, Embassy of Norway; José Ignacio Avalos Hernández, Un Kilo de Ayuda; Gustavo Averbuj, Ketchum; Khaled Awad, Grenea; Seth Ayers, The Information for Development Program (InfoDev); Azman Mokhtar, Khazanah Nasional Berhad; Henry T. Azzam, Deutsche Bank AG; James Bacchus, Greenberg Traurig LLP; Peter Baccile, JPMorgan Securities Inc.; Rikard Bagun, Kompas Daily; Brian Baird, United States House of Representatives; Rahul Bajaj, Bajaj Auto Ltd; Mitchell Baker, Mozilla Corporation; Pauline H. Baker, Fund for Peace; Raymond Baker, Global Financial Integrity; Richard E. Baldwin, The Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies; Kingsley Bangwell, Youngstars Foundation; Judith Banister, Javelin Investments; Britt D. Banks, University of Colorado; Alicia Bárcena Ibarra, United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC); Taeho Bark, Seoul National University; Thomas P. M. Barnett, Enterra Solutions, LLC; John Barrett, Department for International Development (DFID); David Barth, USAID - US Agency for International Development; Dominic Barton, McKinsey & Company; Katinka Barysch, Centre for European Reform (CER); Raymond J. Baxter, Kaiser Permanente; John Beard, World Health Organization (WHO); Alan Beattie, The Financial Times; Charlie Beckett, London School of Economics and Political Science; Rod A. Beckstrom, Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN); Mark Beer, Dubai International Financial Centre Courts; Bernard Belk, Swiss Reinsurance Company Ltd; Carol Bellamy, Education for All - Fast-Track Initiative (EFA FTI); Daniel W. Bena, PepsiCo International; Regina M. Benjamin, United States Public Health Service Commissioned Corps (PHSCC); Jeremy Bentham, Royal Dutch Shell Plc; Erik Berglöf, European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD); Desmond Bermingham, Save the Children International; Tim Berners-Lee, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT); Ann Bernstein, Centre for Development and Enterprise (CDE); Guido Bertucci, Governance Solutions International; Homi K. Bhabha, Harvard University; Jacqueline Bhabha, Harvard Law School; Neeraj Bharadwaj, Accel India Growth Management Company Pvt. Ltd; Shobhana Bhartia, HT Media Limited; Andrea Bianchi, The Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies; Simon Biggs, University of Melbourne; Betty Bigombe, Betty Bigombe Children of War Foundation; JeanLouis Billon, Groupe Sifca; Brizio Biondi-Morra, AVINA; Nancy Birdsall, Center for Global Development; Fatih Birol, International Energy Agency; Joshua Bishop, International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN); Matthew Bishop, The Economist; Giovanni Bisignani, International Air Transport Association (IATA); Don Blackmore, eWater CRC; Ron Blackwell, AFLCIO; Tony Blair, The Office of Tony Blair; Mario I. Blejer, Banco Hipotecario SA; Richard Blewitt, HelpAge International; David E. Bloom, Harvard School of Public Health; David E. Bloom, Harvard School of Public Health; Adam Bly, Seed; Edward Boateng, Global Media Alliance (GMA); Sara Boettiger, PIPRA; Iris Bohnet, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University; Kjell Magne Bondevik, The Oslo Center for Peace and Human Rights; Emma Bonino, Senate of Italy; Axel Börsch-Supan, Mannheim Research Institute for the Economics of Aging (MEA); Nick Bostrom, Future of Humanity Institute; Frans Bouwen, The Hague Process on Refugees and Migration; Peter Brabeck-Letmathe, Nestlé SA; Catherine Bragg, United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA); Erik Brandsma, E.ON AG; Ian Bremmer, Eurasia Group; Larry Brilliant, Skoll Global Threats Fund; John Briscoe, Harvard University; Jean M. Brittingham, University of Cambridge; Steven Broad, TRAFFIC International; Rosa Brooks, US Department of Defense; J. Frank Brown, INSEAD; Tim Brown, IDEO LLC; Allen Bruford, World Customs Organization (WCO); Jean-Louis Bruguière, European Commission and Ministry of Justice; Peter C. Brun, Vestas Wind Systems A/S; Willem H. Buiter, Citi; Christopher Bunting, International Risk Governance Council (IRGC); Jean-Claude Burgelman, Directorate-General for Research; M. Michele Burns, Mercer Inc. (MMC); Sharan Burrow, International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC); Martin Burt, Fundación Paraguaya; Kathy Bushkin Calvin, United Nations Foundation; Winnie Byanyima, United Nations Development Programme (UNDP); Robert Cailliau, European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN); Charles W. Calomiris, Columbia Business School; Sandro Calvani, ASEAN Regional Center of Excellence on Millennium Development Goals (ARCMDG); James Cameron, Climate Change Capital; Claudio Campagna, Wildlife Conservation Society; Joan Campbell, Chautauqua Institution; Rachel Campbell, KPMG; Richard Caplan, University of Oxford; Mauricio Cárdenas, The Brookings Institution; Marilyn Carlson Nelson, Carlson; Albert Carnesale, University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA); Mark J. Carney, Bank of Canada; David D. Caron, University of California, Berkeley; Laura Carstensen, Stanford Center on Longevity; John A. Casesa, Guggenheim Partners LLC; Andrew Cassels, World Health Organization (WHO); Margaret Catley-Carlson, Global Water Partnership (GWP); Stephen Cecchetti, Bank for International Settlements (BIS); Laura M. Cha, The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited; Chan Yuen-Ying, University of Hong Kong; Nigel Chapman, Plan International; Sonia Chapman, BASF SA; Erik Charas, Charas LDA; Mirai Chatterjee, Self-Employed Women's Association (SEWA); Moncef CheikhRouhou, HEC School of Management; Johnny Chen, Zurich Financial Services; Chen Chunming, Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention; Cheng Siwei, International Finance Forum (IFF); Heang Chhor, McKinsey & Company Inc.; Chukwu-Emeka Chikezie, Up! (Sierra Leone) Ltd; Arslan Chikhaoui, Algerian Joint Army College; Mitsuru Claire Chino, Itochu Corporation; H. S. Cho, Hyosung Group; Tejpreet Singh Chopra, Bharat Light and Power; Robert Chote, Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR); Martin Christopher, Cranfield University; Joseph Cirincione, Ploughshares Fund; Susan M. Cischke, Ford Motor Company; Hassane Cisse, The World Bank Group; Andrew Clapham, Geneva Academy of International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights; Frank Clary, Agility; David Cleevely, University of Cambridge; Steve Clemons, New America Foundation; Sanford Climan, Entertainment Media Ventures; John H. Clippinger, Harvard University; Paulo Coelho, Sant Jordi Asociados; Julie Coffman, Bain & Company; Andrew L. Cohen, JPMorgan Private Bank; Jared Cohon, Carnegie Mellon University; Andrea Coleman, Riders for Health; Steve Coll, New America Foundation; Paul Collier, University of Oxford; Brian Collins, COLLINS:; Elisabeth Comstock, General Electric Company; Peggy Conlon, Advertising Council; Kevin M. Conrad, Coalition for Rainforest Nations; Cary Cooper, Lancaster University Management School (LUMS); Richard N. Cooper, Harvard University; Jennifer Corriero, TakingITGlobal; Richard Cotton, NBC Universal Inc.; Pamela Cox, The World Bank; Aron Cramer, Business for Social Responsibility (BSR); Thomas Crampton, Ogilvy Public Relations Worldwide; Susan Crawford, Yale Law School; Martha Crenshaw, Center for International Security and Cooperation; Andrew Crockett, JPMorgan Chase International; Audrey Kurth Cronin, U.S. National War College; Cui Liru, Chinese Institutes of Contemporary International Relations; Daniel Currie, Best Buy Co. Inc.; Gregory Curtin, University of Southern California (USC); Gerald Curtis, Columbia University; Stephen D'Esposito, RESOLVE; Jo da Silva, Arup Group Ltd; Yves Daccord, International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC); Uri Dadush, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace; Richard Dalbello, Intelsat General Corporation; Elizabeth Daley, University of Southern California (USC); Richard Danziger, International Organization for Migration (IOM); Keith T. Darcy, Ethics & Compliance Officer Association (ECOA); Ara Warkes Darzi, St Mary's Hospital; Howard Davies, London School of Economics and Political Science; Stephen Davis, Yale School of Management; Gerald C. Davison, USC School of Gerontology and Andrus Gerontology Center; Hussain Dawood, The Dawood Group; Arnoud De Meyer, Singapore Management University; Cobus de Swardt, Transparency International; Dennis de Tray, The Results for Development Institute (R4D); Roxanne J. Decyk, Shell Oil Company; James Gregory Dees, Duke University; John K. Defterios, CNN International; John J. DeGioia, Georgetown University; Kevin Dehoff, Booz & Company; Mario Martin Delgado Carrillo, Government of Federal District; Deng Yongheng, National University of Singapore; Ozlem Denizmen, Dogus Group; Raghida Dergham, Al Hayat; Kemal Dervis, The Brookings Institution; Eckhard Deutscher, The Development Assistance Committee (DAC); Volker Deville, Allianz SE; Jean-Luc di Paola-Galloni, Valeo; Rafael Diez de Medina, International Labour Organization (ILO); N'Deye Bineta Diop, Femmes Africa Solidarité; Samuel A. DiPiazza, DirecTV Group Inc.; Kuseni Douglas Dlamini, Old Mutual; Steve Dobbs, Fluor Corporation; Neil Doherty, The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania; Don Lam, VinaCapital Group; Michael Donoghue, Department of Conservation; Elaine Dorward-King, Rio Tinto; Charles Doyle, Jones Lang LaSalle; Michael W. Doyle, Columbia Law School; Peter Draper, The South African Institute of International Affairs (SAIIA); Jeffrey M. Drazen, The New England Journal of Medicine; Michael Drexler, Barclays PLC; Jamie C. Drummond, ONE; Tanya Dubash, Godrej Industries Ltd; Christian Dumas, Airbus SAS; Maria Doris Dumlao, Philippines Daily Inquirer; Serge Dumont, Omnicom Group Inc.; Martine Durand, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD); Mallika Dutt, Breakthrough; Soumitra Dutta, INSEAD; Victor J. Dzau, Duke University Medical Center and Health System; Nicholas Eberstadt, The American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research; Luis Echavarri, OECD Nuclear Energy Agency; Elizabeth C. Economy, Council on Foreign Relations; Jack Ehnes, California State Teachers' Retirement System (CalSTRS); Johannes Eigner, Federal Ministry of European and International Affairs of Austria; Stuart E. Eizenstat, Covington & Burling LLP; Klas Eklund, Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken (SEB); Matrice Ellis-Kirk, Heidrick & Struggles Inc.; Bob G. Elton, Powertech Labs Inc.; Tony Elumelu, Heirs Holding Ltd; Jed Emerson, Carstensen, Stanford Center on Longevity; John A. Casesa, Guggenheim Partners LLC; Andrew Cassels, World Health Organization (WHO); Margaret Catley-Carlson, Global Water Partnership (GWP); Stephen Cecchetti, Bank for International Settlements (BIS); Laura M. Cha, The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited; Chan Yuen-Ying, University of Hong Kong; Nigel Chapman, Plan International; Sonia Chapman, BASF SA; Erik Charas, Charas LDA; Mirai Chatterjee, Self-Employed Women's Association (SEWA); Moncef CheikhRouhou, HEC School of Management; Johnny Chen, Zurich Financial Services; Chen Chunming, Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention; Cheng Siwei, International Finance Forum (IFF); Heang Chhor, McKinsey & Company Inc.; Chukwu-Emeka Chikezie, Up! (Sierra Leone) Ltd; Arslan Chikhaoui, Algerian Joint Army College; Mitsuru Claire Chino, Itochu Corporation; H. S. Cho, Hyosung Group; Tejpreet Singh Chopra, Bharat Light and Power; Robert Chote, Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR); Martin Christopher, Cranfield University; Joseph Cirincione, Ploughshares Fund; Susan M. Cischke, Ford Motor Company; Hassane Cisse, The World Bank Group; Andrew Clapham, Geneva Academy of International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights; Frank Clary, Agility; David Cleevely, University of Cambridge; Steve Clemons, New America Foundation; Sanford Climan, Entertainment Media Ventures; John H. Clippinger, Harvard University; Paulo Coelho, Sant Jordi Asociados; Julie Coffman, Bain & Company; Andrew L. Cohen, JPMorgan Private Bank; Jared Cohon, Carnegie Mellon University; Andrea Coleman, Riders for Health; Steve Coll, New America Foundation; Paul Collier, University of Oxford; Brian Collins, COLLINS:; Elisabeth Comstock, General Electric Company; Peggy Conlon, Advertising Council; Kevin M. Conrad, Coalition for Rainforest Nations; Cary Cooper, Lancaster University Management School (LUMS); Richard N. Cooper, Harvard University; Jennifer Corriero, TakingITGlobal; Richard Cotton, NBC Universal Inc.; Pamela Cox, The World Bank; Aron Cramer, Business for Social Responsibility (BSR); Thomas Crampton, Ogilvy Public Relations Worldwide; Susan Crawford, Yale Law School; Martha Crenshaw, Center for International Security and Cooperation; Andrew Crockett, JPMorgan Chase International; Audrey Kurth Cronin, U.S. National War College; Cui Liru, Chinese Institutes of Contemporary International Relations; Daniel Currie, Best Buy Co. Inc.; Gregory Curtin, University of Southern California (USC); Gerald Curtis, Columbia University; Stephen D'Esposito, RESOLVE; Jo da Silva, Arup Group Ltd; Yves Daccord, International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC); Uri Dadush, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace; Richard Dalbello, Intelsat General Corporation; Elizabeth Daley, University of Southern California (USC); Richard Danziger, International Organization for Migration (IOM); Keith T. Darcy, Ethics & Compliance Officer Association (ECOA); Ara Warkes Darzi, St Mary's Hospital; Howard Davies, London School of Economics and Political Science; Stephen Davis, Yale School of Management; Gerald C. Davison, USC School of Gerontology and Andrus Gerontology Center; Hussain Dawood, The Dawood Group; Arnoud De Meyer, Singapore Management University; Cobus de Swardt, Transparency International; Dennis de Tray, The Results for Development Institute (R4D); Roxanne J. Decyk, Shell Oil Company; James Gregory Dees, Duke University; John K. Defterios, CNN International; John J. DeGioia, Georgetown University; Kevin Dehoff, Booz & Company; Mario Martin Delgado Carrillo, Government of Federal District; Deng Yongheng, National University of Singapore; Ozlem Denizmen, Dogus Group; Raghida Dergham, Al Hayat; Kemal Dervis, The Brookings Institution; Eckhard Deutscher, The Development Assistance Committee (DAC); Volker Deville, Allianz SE; Jean-Luc di Paola-Galloni, Valeo; Rafael Diez de Medina, International Labour Organization (ILO); N'Deye Bineta Diop, Femmes Africa Solidarité; Samuel A. DiPiazza, DirecTV Group Inc.; Kuseni Douglas Dlamini, Old Mutual; Steve Dobbs, Fluor Corporation; Neil Doherty, The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania; Don Lam, VinaCapital Group; Michael Donoghue, Department of Conservation; Elaine Dorward-King, Rio Tinto; Charles Doyle, Jones Lang LaSalle; Michael W. Doyle, Columbia Law School; Peter Draper, The South African Institute of International Affairs (SAIIA); Jeffrey M. Drazen, The New England Journal of Medicine; Michael Drexler, Barclays PLC; Jamie C. Drummond, ONE; Tanya Dubash, Godrej Industries Ltd; Christian Dumas, Airbus SAS; Maria Doris Dumlao, Philippines Daily Inquirer; Serge Dumont, Omnicom Group Inc.; Martine Durand, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD); Mallika Dutt, Breakthrough; Soumitra Dutta, INSEAD; Victor J. Dzau, Duke University Medical Center and Health System; Nicholas Eberstadt, The American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research; Luis Echavarri, OECD Nuclear Energy Agency; Elizabeth C. Economy, Council on Foreign Relations; Jack Ehnes, California State Teachers' Retirement System (CalSTRS); Johannes Eigner, Federal Ministry of European and International Affairs of Austria; Stuart E. Eizenstat, Covington & Burling LLP; Klas Eklund, Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken (SEB); Matrice Ellis-Kirk, Heidrick & Struggles Inc.; Bob G. Elton, Powertech Labs Inc.; Tony Elumelu, Heirs Holding Ltd; Jed Emerson, Robert L. Gallucci, MacArthur Foundation; Shubhashis Gangopadhyay, India Development Foundation (IDF); Terry D. Garcia, National Geographic Society (NGS); Javier GarciaMartinez, University of Alicante; Anwar M. Gargash, Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the United Arab Emirates; Timothy Garton Ash, University of Oxford; Peter Gastrow, International Peace Institute (IPI);
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
CONNECTIONS
ECONOMIST DEVELOPMENT REPORT 1983 - 1986
Malloch Brown was the lead international partner at the US-based
communications consultancy from 1986 to 1994;
he ultimately co-owned the Group with three other partners.
The Group was among the first communication consultants to use US-style election campaign methods for foreign governments, companies, and public policy debates.
Malloch Brown "worked extensively on privatisation and other economic reform issues with leaders in Eastern Europe and Russia".
LATIN AMERICA
ACQUIRED BY INTERPUBLIC GROUP 1991
DAVID SAWYER
DAVID MILLER
FOUNDED CORE STRATEGY GROUP
Board Member, Investec plc (banking and asset management)
Board Member, T-Solar Group (power generation)
Chairman and Board Member, SGO Corporation (technology provider)
Director, Seplat Petroleum Development Company plc (oil and gas)
Director, St Leonard's Partners Limited (consultancy; member's company owned jointly with wife; see category 4(a))
Executive Board Member, Kerogen Capital (oil and gas private equity)
Consultant, Geofaber LLC (family wealth management)
Director, Open Society Foundation (honorarium received)
Senior Adviser, Eurasia Group (political risk consultancy)
Senior Adviser, ISquared Capital (infrastructure private equity)
St Leonard's Partners Limited (consultancy)
SGO Corporation (formerly Smartmatic) (technology provider)
Member, BRAC Governing Body (empowering people and communities in situations of poverty, illiteracy, disease and social
injustice)
Chairman of Governors, Marlborough College (interest ceased 1 August 2019)
Chairman, Best for Britain (political campaign)
Board Member, United Nations Foundation
Chair, International Crisis Group
UNITED NATIONS FOUNDATION
BOARD MEMBER
https://unfoundation.org/who-we-are/our-people/type/leadership/
CHECK PARTNERS OUT
MARLBOROUGH COLLEGE
MALLOCH BROWN CHAIRMAN UPTO 2019 VARIOUS POLITICAL LINKS SEE OLD MARLBURIANS
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marlborough_College
BEST FOR BRITAIN
Best for Britain is home to hundreds of thousands of supporters, activists, campaigners, partners and real people across the United Kingdom and beyond.
Our campaigns - both field and digital - owe their success to our dedicated and experienced team of campaign strategists, digital geniuses, fundraisers, researchers, press and media experts and political brains.
We have one clear aim: keep the U.K. strongly connected to our nearest neighbours by campaigning for the closest possible future relationship with Europe.
Our board is chaired by Lord Malloch Brown, a former number two in the United Nations as well as a former British Cabinet and Foreign Office Minister. He now sits in the House of Lords and is active both in business and in the non-profit world. He also remains deeply involved in international affairs.
Mark served as Deputy Secretary-General and Chief of Staff of the UN under Kofi Annan. For six years before that he was Administrator of the UNDP, leading the UN’s development efforts around the world. He was later Minister of State in the Foreign Office, covering Africa and Asia, and was a member of Gordon Brown’s cabinet.
Mark is also a Distinguished Practitioner of the Blavatnik School of Government at Oxford University and was formerly a visiting distinguished fellow at the Yale Centre for the Study of Globalisation. He has a number of honorary degrees.
He was knighted in 2007 for his contribution to international affairs. Mark is the author of “The Unfinished Global Revolution” and continues to write, broadcast and lecture about international issues.
Naomi Smith took the reins as CEO of Best For Britain in June 2019, having previous served as our COO.
Immediately before joining Best for Britain, Naomi was Executive Director of Campaigns at the business lobby group London First where she organised the group's campaign in the Capital to stay in the EU at the 2016 EU Referendum. London voted overwhelmingly to remain.
Prior to focusing on her campaigning work, Naomi spent 15 years working in finance and accounting with the likes of Arthur Andersen, Deloitte, and Chartered Institute of Management Accountants, as well as chairing voluntary groups.
She is an extremely experienced communicator, in both the corporate and political worlds, and co-hosts the very popular Remainiacs podcast.
BRAC
http://www.brac.net/who-we-are
I SQUARED CAPITAL
Senior Advisor
Managing Partner Sadek Wahba
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I_Squared_Capital
http://www.isquaredcapital.com/
Boutros Boutros - Ghali Senior Advisor Johnson Cox the chairman of the UK's Water Services Regulation Authority
Tom J Donhue President & CEO of the United States Chamber of Commerce
Ginger Lew , former Senior Counsel to White House on Economic Policy
EURASIA GROUP
Senior Advisor
https://www.eurasiagroup.net/our-people
OPEN SOCIETY FOUNDATION
DIRECTOR (HONORARIUM RECEIVED)
https://www.opensocietyfoundations.org/
Various incl. UK Parliment, Wikipedia, Wayback Machine,
Open Societies Foundation Relationships: Adrian Arena, Adriana Mejía Hernández, Ahmed Bawa, Alex Cooley, Alexander Soros, Alicia Wilson, Alma Guillermoprieto, Andrea Soros Colombel, Andy Stern, Anne Perkins, Anya Schiffrin, Arturo Sarukhan, Ashkan Soltani, Ava Lias-Booker, Bryan Stevenson, Catharine Stimpson, Catherine Gicheru, Catherine Mumma, Cecilia Muñoz, Chetan Bhatt, Claudio Grossman, Dawn Fitzpatrick, Deepak Bhargava, Denis Kadima, Diego García-Sayán, Eli Pariser, Ethan Nadelmann, Federico Fubini, Fernando Rodrigues, Filomena Silva, Fionnuala Ní Aoláin, Francois Crepeau, Gay McDougall, George Soros, Gerison Lansdown, Gerry Salole, Giorgi Gogia, Hagar Taha, Harsh Mander, Hirokazu Yoshikawa, Holly Cartner, Imelda Nicolas, Ireena Vittal, Isidore Obot, Ivan Sigal, Ivan Vejvoda, Jacek Kucharczyk, James DeGraffenreidt, Jamie McDonald, Janine Gibson, Jeremy Weinstein, Joanna Erdman, John Meyerhoff, John Trainor, Jok Madut Jok, Jose Roberto Alampay, Joseph Jones, Joyce Malombe, Karin Lissakers, Katherine Acey, Kinga Göncz, Kofi Adjepong-Boateng, Kofi Marfo, Lord Mark Malloch-Brown, Larry Moscow, Leon Botstein, Leonard Benardo, Lucia Nader, Luiz Soares, Luther Ragin Jr., Maina Kiai, Mario Tascon, Mark Sealy, Mary Young, Meena Seshu, Michael Anderson, Michael Kennedy, Michel Kazatchkine, Michèle Pierre-Louis, Mildred Solomon, Monique Goyens, Naila Kabeer, Nargis Kassenova, Neville Gabriel, Nicu Popescu, Niva Elkin-Koren, Oluwafunmilayo Olonisakin, Oscar Vilhena Vieira, Pablo de Greiff, Pasi Sahlberg, Patricia Sellers, Patrick Gaspard, Patrick Weil, Patriuck Gaspard, Paul Seabright, Pedro Aguilera, Philip Leach, Phyllis Magrab, Redzep Ali Cupi, Reginald Chua, Reginald Matchaba-Hove, Remzi Lani, Richard Atterbury, Robert Conrad, Roberto Dañino, Robin Wood, Rosa Brooks, Rukmini Bhaya Nair, Ruth Dreifuss, Shalini Randeria, Silvio Waisbord, Simon Woolley, Soledad Alvear, Sonja Licht, Stephen Greenblatt, Sunil Abraham, Susan Leviton, Sylvia Tamale, Taryn Higashi, Thierno Kane, Tinde Kovac Cerovic, Vera Songwe, Vivien Stern, Widney Brown, William F. Wendler, Willy Mutunga, Yamini Aiyar, Yasmin Carrim, Yasmin Sooka, Yochai Benkler, Yoeri Albrecht, Yvonne Mokgoro
GEOFABER LLC
INTERNATIONAL CRISIS GROUP
NATHALIE DEPAPALME
AHMED CHARAI
Chairman and CEO of Global Media Holding
MO IBRAHIM
Executive Director and Board Member of the Mo Ibrahim Foundation
GARETH EVANS
Former Foreign Affairs Minister of Australia
GEORGE J MITCHELL
Former U.S. Senate Majority Leader
MARTTI AHTISAARI
Former President of Finland
WANG JISI
Member, Foreign Policy Advisory Committee of the Chinese Foreign Ministry; President, Institute of International and Strategic Studies, Peking University
HELLE THORNING-SCHMIDT
CEO of Save the Children International; Former Prime Minister of Denmark
LAWRENCE H SUMMERS
Former Director of the US National Economic Council and Secretary of the U.S. Treasury; President Emeritus of Harvard University
JAKE SULLIVAN
Former Director of Policy Planning at the U.S. Department of State, Deputy Assistant to President Obama, and National Security Advisor to Vice President Biden
ONAS GAHR STORE
Leader of the Labour Party and Labour Party Parliamentary Group; Former Foreign Minister of Norway
ALEXANDER SOROS
Deputy Chair of the Global Board, Open Society Foundations
GEORGE SOROS
Founder, Open Society Foundations and Chair, Soros Fund Management
WENDY SHERMAN
Former U.S Under-Secretary of State for Political Affairs and Lead Negotiator for the Iran Nuclear Deal
JUAN MANUEL SANTOS CALDERON
Former President of Colombia; Nobel Peace Prize Laureate 2016
AHMED RASHID
Author and Foreign Policy Journalist, Pakistan
THOMAS R. PICKERING
Former U.S. Under Secretary of State and Ambassador to the UN, Russia, India, Israel, Jordan, El Salvador and Nigeria
MEGHAN O'SULLIVAN
Former U.S. Deputy National Security Adviser on Iraq and Afghanistan; Professor of Practice, Harvard University
AYO OBE
Chair of the Board of Gorée Institute (Senegal); Legal Practitioner (Nigeria)
MARTY NATALEGAWA
Former Minister of Foreign Affairs of Indonesia, Permanent Representative to the UN, and Ambassador to the UK
SAAD MOHSENI
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of MOBY Group
FEDERICA MOGHERINI
Former Vice President of the European Commission and High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy
NAZ MODIRZADEH
Director of the Harvard Law School Program on International Law and Armed Conflict
SHIVSHANKAR MENON
Former Foreign Secretary of India; Former National Security Advisor
WILLIAM H. MCRAVEN
Retired U.S. Navy Admiral who served as 9th Commander of the U.S. Special Operations Command
SUSANA MALCORRA
Former Foreign Minister of Argentina; Former Chef de Cabinet of the UN Secretary-General
HELGE LUND
Former Chief Executive BG Group (UK) and Statoil (Norway)
TZIPI LIVNI
Former Foreign Minister and Vice Prime Minister of Israel
IVAN KRASTEV
Chairman of the Centre for Liberal Strategies (Sofia); Founding board member of European Council on Foreign Relations
ANDREY KORTUNOV
BERT KOENDERS
Former Dutch Minister of Foreign Affairs and Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations
NASSER AL-KIDWA
Chairman of the Yasser Arafat Foundation; Former League of Arab States Special Representative for Libya; Former Joint Deputy Representative for Syria; Former Minister of Foreign Affairs, Palestinian Authority; Former Permanent Observer of Palestine to UN
WADAH KHANFAR
Co-Founder, Al Sharq Forum; Former Director General, Al Jazeera Network
ELLEN JOHNSON SIRLEAF
Former President of Liberia
HU SHULI
Editor-in-Chief of Caixin Media; Professor at Sun Yat-sen University
MARIA LIVANOS CATTAUI
Former Secretary-General of the International Chamber of Commerce
EMMA BONINO
Former Foreign Minister of Italy and European Commissioner for Humanitarian Aid
CHERYL CAROLUS
Former South African High Commissioner to the UK and Secretary General of the African National Congress (ANC)
CARL BILDT
Former Prime Minister and Foreign Minister of Sweden
GERARD ARAUD
Former Ambassador of France to the U.S.
STEPHEN HADLEY
Former U.S. Assistant to President George W. Bush for National Security Affairs (2005-2009); Principal of RiceHadleyGates LLC
SIGMAR GABRIEL
Former Minister of Foreign Affairs and Vice Chancellor of Germany
ROBERT FADEL
Former Member of Parliament in Lebanon; Owner & Board member of the ABC Group
HUSHANG ANSARY
Chairman, Parman Capital Group LLC; Former Iranian Ambassador to the U.S and Minister of Finance and Economic Affairs
FOLA ADELOA
Founder and Chairman, FATE Foundation
HAILEMARIAM DESALEGN
Former Prime Minister of Ethiopia
ALISTAR DOWNER
Former Australian Minister of Foreign Affairs and High Commissioner to the United Kingdom
FRANK GIUSTRA
Frank Giustra is President and CEO of the Fiore Group, a private firm managing a broad portfolio of private equity investments and companies, specialising in food and lifestyle, art and entertainment, and natural resources. Mr. Giustra's entrepreneurial success includes founding Lionsgate Entertainment, and since then is a major shareholder of Thunderbird Entertainment Group. Mr. Giustra is a strong believer in philanthropy, and devotes much of his time to a variety of causes both locally through The Giustra Foundation and globally with Acceso. Since 2005, Mr. Giustra has been an active Board Trustee with the International Crisis Group. Mr. Giustra sits on a variety of non-profit, private and public boards.
LORD MALLOCH BROWN
President & CEO Robert Malley
KEROGEN CAPITAL
Executive Board Member
https://beta.companieshouse.gov.uk/company/07629141
2 PERSONS WITH SIGNIFICANT CONTROL NOT LISTED MALLOCH?
SEPLAT PETROLEUM
Dr. A.B.C. Orjiako is the Chairman of Seplat which he co-founded in 2009. He is qualified as an orthopaedic and trauma surgeon. Dr. Orjiako ventured into business and has developed extensive experience in the Nigerian oil and gas sector, having established and managed various companies in the upstream, downstream, and oil services sectors through companies such as: Abbeycourt Trading Company Ltd, Abbeycourt Energy Services Ltd, Zebbra Energy Ltd and Shebah Exploration and Production Company Ltd. Dr. Orjiako is also the Chairman of Neimeth Pharmaceutical International Plc, which is listed on the Nigerian Stock Exchange (‘NSE’). By invitation of the London Stock Exchange, he became a founding member of the London Stock Exchange Group’s Africa Advisory Group (‘LAAG’), a select group working to resolve the commercial and social issues affecting Africa.
He has received numerous awards and recognitions for his service to humanity and his entrepreneurial achievements. Some of these notable awards include the Distinguished Alumnus Award and Doctor of Sciences (D.Sc. Honoris Causa) by the University of Calabar, Nigeria in 2001; Platinum Award of the West African College of Surgeons in 2006; National Honours as an Officer of the Federal Republic (‘OFR’), conferred on him by the President of Nigeria in 2012; the coveted Zik (Nnamdi Azikiwe) Prize in the Professional Leadership category by the Public Policy Research and Analysis Centre (‘PPRAC’); and African Business Executive of the Year 2014, by the Oil and Gas Council.
Dr. Orjiako brings a wealth of sector experience in the Nigerian oil and gas sector having managed several companies including Abbeycourt Trading Company Ltd, Abbeycourt Energy Services Ltd, Zebbra Energy Ltd and Shebah Exploration and Production Company Ltd.
Mr. Avuru is a co-founder of Seplat and became CEO on 1 May 2010. A geologist by background, Mr. Avuru spent 12 years at the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, where he held various positions including Well Site Geologist, Production Seismologist and Reservoir Engineer. In 1992, he joined Allied Energy Resources in Nigeria, a pioneer deep water operator, where he served as Exploration Manager and Technical Manager.
In 2002, Mr. Avuru established Platform Petroleum Ltd and held the role of Managing Director until 2010, when he left to take up the CEO position at Seplat.
Mr. Avuru has over 38 years’ experience, working in the Nigerian Oil and Gas Sector in increasingly senior technical and management roles. He has spent the last 16 years in CEO roles at Platform Petroleum and Seplat Petroleum, and has built up a strong reputation as a reference resource professional on the Nigerian Oil and Gas Industry play.
Mr. Brown joined Seplat as Chief Financial Officer in 2013. With a background in finance, he is a qualified Chartered Accountant with the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Scotland and also a member of Association of National Accountants of Nigeria.
Mr. Brown has over 25 years’ experience in the financial sector, primarily focused on emerging markets with extensive experience in structuring energy and infrastructure transactions on the African continent. Prior to joining the Company, he held the position of Managing Director of Oil and Gas EMEA for Standard Bank Group.
Mr. Brown brings to Seplat extensive financial, accounting, M&A, debt and equity capital markets experience in the emerging markets space, and in particular the African oil and gas sector. He has advised on some of the largest and highest profile transactions that have occurred in Nigeria in recent years.
Mr. Effiong Okon joined Seplat in January 2018 as Operations Director and brings 26 years’ experience in upstream and integrated oil and gas operations across Africa, Europe, the Middle East, and Nigeria. He is primarily a Petroleum Reservoir Engineer but combines this with experience across all aspects of the E&P sector including petroleum engineering, exploration, front end development studies, project execution, and production and asset management.
Prior to joining Seplat, Mr. Okon was most recently General Manager Deepwater Production for Shell Nigeria. Previous appointments at Shell also include Deputy Vice President Technical and Manager North Field Wells and Reservoir during the commissioning, start-up and early production phase of mega projects Qatar Shell Pearl GTL and Qatar Gas LNG Trains 7 & 8.
Mr. Okon brings extensive experience in project managing and safely running significant and complex oil and gas upstream and midstream operations in the onshore and offshore sectors of a diverse range of geographies, successfully leading multi-disciplinary teams, managing service providers and controlling significant budgets.
Mr. Okon graduated from the University of Benin with a B.Eng. in Petroleum Engineering in 1991. He is also is a member of several professional organisations, including the Society of Petroleum Engineers (‘SPE’).
Mr. Alexander was appointed to the Board in 2013. He spent 25 years at BP Plc in various roles and was Chief Executive Officer of British Energy Group Plc between 2003 and 2005. Prior to that he was an Executive Director of Centrica Plc having held a number of senior positions within British Gas Plc, including Commercial Director of British Gas Exploration & Production.
Over the course of his wide-ranging career, Mr. Alexander has acquired considerable experience in executive leadership roles specifically within the energy sector, and more recently he has held a number of non-executive directorships and associated committee roles allowing him to bring wide-reaching international board and corporate governance experience to Seplat.
Mr. Omiyi’s career spans 40 years at Royal Dutch Shell, during which time he occupied a number of senior roles in Nigeria and Europe, including Managing Director of Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Limited and Country Chairman of Shell Companies, Nigeria. Mr. Omiyi also holds board positions in a range of other companies including as Chairman of a Banking and Financial Services company as well as Chairman of a Real Estate Company.
In 2011, he was awarded the National Honour of Commander of the Order of the Niger by the President of Nigeria for pioneering Nigerian leadership in the oil and gas sector.
Mr. Omiyi has extensive insight into and experience in the global oil and gas industry and in particular brings a detailed knowledge and understanding of the Nigerian oil and gas sector together with senior management expertise gained in a large-scale multinational organisation.
Lord Malloch-Brown is a former Deputy Secretary General of the United Nations as well as a previous Administrator of United Nations Development Programme. He has also served in the British Cabinet and Foreign Office. He is active both in business and in the non-profit world. He also remains deeply involved in international affairs. Lord Malloch-Brown is a former Chair of the Royal Africa Society.
Lord Malloch-Brown brings a great deal of knowledge and experience on international and external affairs, and particularly the promotion of business and commerce in African economies, including Nigeria, within a global context. He also brings extensive experience on corporate responsibility and governance systems to the Board.
Dr. Okeahalam is a co-founder of AGH Capital Group, a private equity and diversified investment holding company based in Johannesburg, with assets in several African countries. Prior to co-founding AGH Capital Group in 2002, he was a Professor of Financial Economics and Banking at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg. His other roles have included advising a number of African central banks and government ministries, the World Bank and the United Nations. He has held several board positions and is a former non-executive chairman of Heritage Bank Limited, Nigeria. Since March 2016 he has served as the non-executive chairman of the Nigeria Mortgage Refinance Company.
Dr. Okeahalam brings extensive corporate finance and capital markets expertise to the Board, and in particular detailed knowledge of African financial markets, economies and the investment industry.
Mrs. Okauru is the Managing Partner of Compliance Professionals Plc, a Compliance Consulting firm. She is also a Commissioner in the Independent Commission for the Reform of International Corporate Taxation (‘ICRICT’). She serves as an Independent Director in other Nigerian public companies and is a founding member of the Board of Trustees of DAGOMO Foundation Nigeria Ltd/Gte. Previously, she worked as Chief Responsibility Officer for ReStraL Ltd, a company she founded and before that, had spent 12 years at Arthur Andersen & Co. where she became National Partner of the firm’s strategy practice. She has served as Executive Chairman of Nigeria’s Federal Inland Revenue Service, Chairman of Nigeria’s Joint Tax Board, and part-time member of the United Nations Committee of Experts on International Cooperation in Tax Matters. Mrs. Okauru received a Master of Public Administration degree from Harvard Kennedy School, Harvard University in 2014; a Master of Science, Management Science from Imperial College, University of London in 1986; and a Bachelor of Science (First Class), Accounting from the University of Lagos in 1983. She is a Fellow of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (‘FCA’), 2001 and a Fellow of the Chartered Institute of Taxation of Nigeria (‘FCTI’), 2007. She was awarded a Member of the Order of Nigeria (‘MON’) in 2000, and a Member of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (‘MFR’) in 2006.
Mrs. Omoigui Okauru brings extensive experience in finance, accounting and tax to the Board together with a great deal of experience in management consulting, strategy and change management.
Mr. Dodo a renowned lawyer has acted and continues to act for a wide range of major Nigerian corporations, governmental and regulatory bodies across a number of business sectors and has served on a number of panels and commissions in Nigeria, including the NNPC Commission of Inquiry and the Governing Board of the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons. He currently chairs the National Lottery Regulatory Commission. In 2001, Mr. Dodo was awarded Nigeria’s highest legal practice rank of Senior Advocate of Nigeria (‘SAN’). In 2011, he was awarded the National Honour of Officer of the Order of the Federal Republic of Nigeria by the President of Nigeria. Mr. Dodo has also recently been awarded fellowship by the Nigerian Institute for Advanced Legal Studies. In 2017, Mr. Dodo was appointed a Fellow of the Nigerian Chartered Institute of Arbitrators; a Member of the Taraba State Judicial Service Commission; and a member of the Body of Benchers. He is also an alumnus of the Said Business School of the University of Oxford, an alumnus of the IMD Business School, Lausanne, Switzerland; an associate of the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators in London; a Member of the Institute of Directors; a member of the Nigerian Institute of International Affairs; and a member of the International Working Group on the Reform of Investment Laws in Nigeria.
Mr. Dodo brings an extensive legal expertise and knowledge base to the Board together with a firm understanding of relevant regulatory regimes and corporate governance.
Madame Delapalme was appointed to the Board on 18 July 2019. She is an Independent Director on the Board of Directors of Maurel et Prom and has acted as an alternate to Maurel et Prom’s nominee, Mr. Michel Hochard since 30th June 2014. She is also an Executive Director of the Mo Ibrahim Foundation. Madame Delapalme served the French Government as an Inspector of Finance at the Ministry of Economy and Finance, an advisor for the Finance and Budgetary Commission in the French Senate, and an advisor for Africa and Development in the offices of various Foreign Affairs Ministers. She remains deeply involved in governance and leadership in Africa and continues to provide strong support to the Company’s CSR Board Committee.
Mr. Langavant was appointed to the Board as a nominee of Maurel et Prom. Mr. Langavant is presently the Chief Executive Officer of Maurel et Prom. Prior to that position, most of his career has been spent with the Total Group which he joined in 1981. He started as a Reservoir Engineer, holding positions in France, Congo, the United States and Colombia, before being appointed Senior Vice President, Operations in the Netherlands. Mr. Langavant was then Deputy Managing Director of Total E&P Angola from 1998 to 2002 during which time he was heavily involved in the early development phase of the Deepwater Girassol field. Following this post, he was appointed Managing Director of Total E&P Myanmar.
In 2005, Mr. Langavant returned to Angola as Managing Director of Total E&P Angola, a position he held until 2009. Upon leaving Angola in 2009, Mr. Langavant was appointed Senior Vice President, Finance, Economics & Information Systems of Total's Exploration Production (E&P) branch.
On 1 March 2011 Mr. Langavant took up the position as Senior Vice President E&P Strategy, Business Development and R&D which he held until 28 February 2015. Starting 1 March 2015, Mr. Langavant was appointed Senior Vice President Asia Pacific. Mr. Langavant became member of the Total Group Management Committee (thereafter Performance Group committee) in January 2012. Mr. Langavant holds an engineering degree from the National school of Mines of Paris (1978).
SGO CORPORATION CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICR 2014
In 2014, Smartmatic’s CEO Antonio Mugica and British and Lord Malloch Brown announced the launching of the SGO Corporation Limited, holding company based in London whose primary asset is the election technology and voting machine manufacturer. Lord Malloch-Brown became chairman of the board of directors of SGO since its foundation, while Antonio Mugica remained as CEO of the new venture. They were joined on SGO’s board by Sir Nigel Knowles Global CEO of DLA Piper, entrepreneur David Giampaolo
and Roger Piñate, Smartmatic’s CEO and co-founder.
The aim of SGO, according to its CEO was "to continue to make investments in its core business (election technology), but it is also set to roll out a series of new ventures based on biometrics
online identity verification, internet voting and citizen participation, e governance and pollution control
,
T-SOLAR GROUP BOARD MEMBER?
INVESTEC PLC INDEPENDENT NON EXCECUTIVE DIRECTOR 2014
BOARD MEMBER
https://www.marketscreener.com/INVESTEC-GROUP-1413372/company/
https://beta.companieshouse.gov.uk/company/03633621/officers
https://www.investec.com/en_gb/welcome-to-investec/about-us/corporate-structure.html
Renumeration committee
Philip Hourquebie (Chairman)
Charles Jacobs
Zarina Bassa
Perry Crosthwaite
Investec Ltd Group Audit
D Friedland (Chairman) (Director of Investec Ltd & Investec Bank Limited)
ZBM Bassa (Director of Investec Ltd & Investec Bank Limited)
LC Bowden (Director of Investec Ltd)
KL Shuenyane (Director of Investec Ltd & Investec Bank Limited) PRS Thomas (Director of Investec Ltd & Investec Bank Limited)
Audit Committee plc
ZBM Bassa (Chairman)
KL Shuenyane
PA Hourquebie
DLC Board Risk Capital Committee
List of Permanent Members
D Friedland (Chairman)
S Koseff SE Abrahams (representative of Investec Bank Limited only)
GR Burger
H Fukuda
B Kantor
PRS Thomas
F Titi
ZBM Bassa
B Stevenson
KL Shuenyane
ST LEONARDS PARTNERS
This firm is widely known as St Leonard's Partners Limited. The firm was founded 10 years ago and was registered with 07197180 as its reg. no. The headquarters of the company is based in Ashford. You may find them at 5th Floor Ashford Commercial Quarter, 1 Dover Place. This business's Standard Industrial Classification Code is 74909 meaning Other professional, scientific and technical activities not elsewhere classified. The most recent financial reports were submitted for the period up to 2018-03-31 and the latest annual confirmation statement was submitted on 2019-03-22.
Presently, this particular business is led by a solitary managing director: George M., who was arranged to perform management duties 10 years ago. To provide support to the directors, the business has been utilizing the expertise of Patricia M. as a secretary since 2010.
George M. is the individual with significant control over this firm, owns over 3/4 of company shares and has 3/4 to full of voting rights
https://beta.companieshouse.gov.uk/company/07197180
Lord Mark Malloch‐Brown is a former number two in the United Nations as well as having served in the British Cabinet and Foreign Office. He is active both in business and in the non-profit world, and also remains deeply involved in international affairs.
He is currently Chairman of SGO. He is on the Boards of Investec and Seplat, which are listed on the London as well as Johannesburg and Lagos stock markets respectively. He is also on the board of Kerogen, an oil and gas private equity fund. He is Co‐chair of a new Global Commission on Business and Sustainable Development. He previously led FTI Consulting's EMEA practice.
He served as Deputy Secretary‐General and Chief of Staff of the UN under Kofi Annan. For six years before that he was Administrator of the UNDP, leading the UN's development efforts around the world. He was later Minister of State in the Foreign Office, covering Africa and Asia, and was a member of Gordon Brown's cabinet. Other positions have included Vice‐President at the World Bank and the lead international in a political consulting firm. He also has served as Vice-Chairman of the World Economic Forum. He began his career as a journalist at The Economist.
Lord Malloch-Brown is also a Distinguished Practitioner of the Blavatnik School of Government at Oxford University and was formerly a visiting distinguished fellow at the Yale Centre for the Study of Globalisation. He has a number of honorary degrees. He was knighted in 2007 for his contribution to international affairs.
He is the author of “The Unfinished Global Revolution” and in 2005 Time Magazine put him on its list of the 100 most influential people in the world. He continues to write, broadcast and lecture about international issues.
Antonio is the founder and CEO of the SGO group. He grew its core business, Smartmatic, from a startup in 2000 into the global company it is today, leading the electronic voting industry.
Since those small beginnings, Antonio has been responsible for Smartmatic’s long-term business strategy. He has managed mergers and acquisitions in the US, South America, Europe and Asia that have been the key driving forces behind the company’s growth. He has positioned Smartmatic as a trusted partner to electoral commissions and empowered people all over the world to participate in technology-enabled citizen engagement. Committed to continuous product innovation, Antonio also oversees four R&D centres in the Americas, Europe and Asia.
Antonio has been responsible for many Smartmatic’s significant achievements, from the world’s first fully verifiable automated election to the world’s fastest biometric registration project. Antonio holds 13 issued patents in the United States, with more under way.
Antonio complements his work with other interests, such as music and writing. His children’s book Hukiti-Tukiti-Ta has been awarded the prestigious Moonbeam Children's Book Gold Medal in the Spanish Language category. As a Trustee for the Smartmatic Foundation, Antonio is committed to philanthropy alongside his entrepreneurial activities.
He holds an electronic engineering degree from the Simon Bolivar University in Caracas (Venezuela).
A co-founder of Smartmatic and an inspiring source of its vision, Roger is responsible for the execution of strategic efforts and key operational functions worldwide. This encompasses business units, sales, marketing, information technology and other service areas.
His experience and skills contribute to improve Smartmatic’s operational focus and enhance the company’s performance across all business areas. Roger also plays a key role in the continued development of the strategic relationship with Smartmatic’s customers and guides the many important initiatives that are advancing the company’s Mission.
He also sets the production strategy and industrial design processes for Smartmatic’s products. He supervises all the projects and services that Smartmatic offers around the world and has been responsible for carrying out successful projects in the USA, Latin America, the Caribbean and Asia.
Roger has a degree in Electronic Engineering from the Simon Bolivar University.
Sir Nigel Knowles is Chairman of global legal business DWF.
He is former Global Co-Chairman and Senior Partner of DLA Piper, having served as Global Co-CEO and Managing Partner for nearly twenty years before.
Sir Nigel originally joined the Yorkshire firm, Broomheads, as a trainee in 1978 and quickly moved into the management sphere, becoming Managing Partner in 1996. Since that time, Sir Nigel led the firm through a host of successful mergers, expanding from the UK into Continental Europe, Asia, Australia and the Middle East.
Sir Nigel's leadership was instrumental in effecting the single largest transatlantic law firm merger in recent history, when DLA integrated with US-based Piper Rudnick and Gray Cary Ware & Freidenrich LLP in 2005. In the same year Sir Nigel was named Partner of the Year by Legal Week and DLA Piper was named Global Law Firm of the Year at The Lawyer Awards and Law Firm of the Year at the Legal Business Awards.
He received a knighthood in 2009 in recognition of his services to the legal industry.
In 2015, Legal Business awarded Sir Nigel an exclusive "Lifetime Achievement Award". In 2016 Sir Nigel was given the Financial News "Editor's Choice" award for lifetime achievement and children's charity Variety presented him with the "Legends of Industry Award".
Sir Nigel has a small and complementary portfolio of non-executive appointments. He was most recently appointed Chairman of Sheffield City Region LEP. He held the Office of High Sheriff of London from 2016-2017, the non-political and oldest Royal appointment.
Sir Nigel is a Fellow of Harris Manchester College, University of Oxford, and is Visiting Professor of the University of Sheffield. He received an Honorary Doctorate of Civil Law from the University of Sheffield in July 2011.
Furthermore, Sir Nigel is spearheading research, in association with Populus, the research house, and Saïd Business School, University of Oxford, into trust. They are specifically looking to analyse and understand the breakdown of trust between business, politics and the media and, ultimately, find solutions to help rebuild it.
https://www.smartmatic.com/about/our-history/
TODAY
VSAP Debuts in Los Angeles
More than 1.6 million residents of Los Angeles County participate in the first-ever vote using the
Voting Solutions for All People (VSAP) system
. In an
, 87.1% of voters rate the overall experience as “excellent” or “good.”
2019
Smartmatic facilitates participation in European Union elections
Smartmatic continued its
groundbreaking deployment of secure voting technology
to Estonia, Belgium and Bulgaria during the elections to the European Parliament.
The Philippines conducts 4th national automated election
Smartmatic provided the infrastructure for transmission of the results, the ballot boxes and batteries. In 2018, the Philippines had purchased 92,509 Smartmatic optical scanners to automate vote counting.
Estonia’s online voting system sets new participation record
Online participation reached 44,4% of all votes cast
during the recent Estonian elections. The Parliamentary Elections held from February 21 - March 3 saw an increase of 40% in online participation over the same elections in 2015.
The Argentine Postal Office selected Smartmatic as a technology provider
Smartmatic will provide a technology solution to facilitate results consolidation
during the elections to be held in 2019.
2018
Smartmatic and CGI to deliver election technology for London
Smartmatic and CGI will provide an electronic solution for the accurate counting of voter marks on ballot papers and declaration of results for
three elections taking place in May 2020.
Our technology helps deliver timely results in Belgian local elections
Our customized election solution allowed
to broadcast timely results during the local elections held across the country.
Modernizing elections in Los Angeles County
The
Los Angeles County selects Smartmatic
to help election authorities manufacture and implement the County’s new system for 2020.
Founding member of the US DHS Council to protect election integrity
Smartmatic joined the
United States Department of Homeland Security’s Sector Coordinating Council
, (SCC) for the Election Infrastructure Subsector
Online voting participation reaches 85% in Norway
Voters in the northernmost province in Norway –Finnmark-
used the Smartmatic-Cybernetica online voting solution
during a referendum. 85% of participants preferred voting online.
Smartmatic – Cybernetica awarded European Commission blockchain research project
The European Commission
granted Smartmatic – Cybernetica
a new research award to continue advancing the development of cryptographic protocols for online voting.
The Philippines continues to modernize its elections with Smartmatic
The Philippine Commission on Elections acquired some 92,509 Smartmatic vote counting machines to continue modernizing its elections.
Smartmatic begins to provide election technology and services in Denmark
Smartmatic was awarded a multiannual contract in Denmark to help authorities organize future elections.
2017
Italy's first fully automated election
To organize such crucial vote,
authorities relied on us as technology and services provider
. 24,700 touch screen voting machines were deployed across the entire region to capture the vote of the 7,895,484 eligible voters.
Our biometric technology is successfully deployed in Argentina
in the provinces of Chaco, Corrientes, Jujuy, Formosa, Misiones and Salta, and in 14 municipalities of the Greater Buenos Aires.
Estonia sets new record for online participation
Online turnout reached a historic 31% during the local elections held in October.
Using a new online voting system designed by Smartmatic and Cybernetica, Estonian voters were able to verify that their vote was counted accurately.
Efficient voter management in Armenia
We deployed more than 4,000
VIU-800 devices to authenticate voters biometrically at the polls
during the Parliamentary Elections held in April. Our technology also helped operators manage polling stations.
Voter registration in Sierra Leone
Our biometric technology helped authorities in Sierra Leone
to register voters across the entire country ahead of the 2018 national elections.
2016
Modernizing elections in Oman
Authorities from the Sultanate of Oman deployed Smartmatic vote counting machines in each polling station, bringing technology closer to the voters, and making the process more efficient and transparent.
Streamlining results transmission in Brazil
During the municipal elections, Brazilian authorities relied on Smartmatic to facilitate data and voice communications from the 15 most remote states.
Novel ePen solution helps Californian electoral authorities
The
Electoral authorities in the Los Angeles county used the ePen
to simplify and accelerate different phases of the electoral system.
This innovative technology improves the speed, accuracy and integrity of the counting process. The electoral solution was put to use in Malibu, Littlerock and Downey.
Record turnout and results delivery in the Philippines
For the third consecutive time we supplied our technology
and services to guarantee trustworthy elections in the Philippines.
Only 4 hours after the polls closed, over 80% of the results had been transmitted, setting a record for speed.
Voters praise Internet voting in Utah
Our
had a welcome effect: the Republican Party in Utah witnessed an increased voter turnout during their primaries. 80.07% of the voters who registered online cast their votes from 45 different countries.
94% described the experience as good and 97% stated they would prefer voting online in the next elections.
Biometric technology in use during Ugandan elections
We deployed 30,500 biometric devices to authenticate, with utmost accuracy, the identities of voters taking part in the
from the voters who used this technology.
2015
Our i-voting and e-voting technology empower citizens in Chile
Chileans from the Commune of Maipu had the opportunity
to cast a ballot either online or to vote in person
in precincts equipped with our electronic voting machines. Citizens voted to decide on how to allocate public funds among 225 projects proposed by the community.
Electronic voting plays crucial role in Venezuelan elections
Our secure
guaranteed the flawless results of the nation’s Parliamentary vote. This represented our 14th national election in Venezuela.
Smartmatic brings end-to-end electronic voting to Kyrgyzstan
We deployed an end-to-end solution encompassing biometric authentication and electronic voting to help conduct the student senate elections at the American University of Central Asia (AUCA) in the city of
.
Streamlining election results transmission in Sierra Leone
Our technology and services enabled election authorities in the remote coastal town of Bonthe in Sierra Leone to streamline result transmission. For added transparency, authorities were also able to certify the results via biometrics.
City of Richmond tests groundbreaking election technology
The City of Richmond, Virginia
during the November 3 General Elections. This ground-breaking new technology allowed officials to significantly streamline the reporting process and transmission of results.
Three Mexican states modernize its elections with Smartmatic
July marks
in a Mexican election after assisting authorities in Campeche and Tabasco earlier in June. This time, we helped Chiapas election authorities to streamline preliminary results during the local elections.
Our first election in Argentina
We conduct our first major
. The electronic voting
solution implemented in the cities of La Falda and Marcos Juarez, delivered official results only 45 minutes after polls closed.
Updating Zambia’s electoral register
The Election Commission of Zambia (ECZ) partners with us to continue developing the biometric electoral register we helped create in
. We provide 2000 enrolment devices to register new voters and update existing information of the voting population across all 11 provinces.
We are certified by ISO
Our company is awarded an ISO 9001 Quality Management System Certification as well as an ISO 14001 Environmental Management System Certification, reflecting our commitment to excellence and a compromise to continuous improvement.
Empowering participatory democracy in Chile
We helped citizens from the Buin commune in Chile to move towards a more
participatory model of democracy
during the seventh edition of the "I opine" citizen initiative.
Improving public safety in the Philippines
The Philippine Province of Bataan inaugurates a state-of-the-art Command Center powered by our technology, which will help authorities improve public safety and emergency management, serving as the command center for the Metro Bataan Development Authority and Provincial Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council.
Estonia continues to lead the way in i-voting
The i-voting solution developed together with Cybernetica is used in Estonia to elect a new parliament. I-voting turnout increases by 25% compared to the previous parliamentary election in 2011, continuing its growing trend of adoption.
We establish the International Election Advisory Council, a body within our corporate structure to advise our leadership as they assist election commissions worldwide with election technology solutions.
2014
Achieving social impact through technology-enabled solutions
We launch
, a new venture committed to helping governments to better serve their citizens, starting with the areas of elections, government efficiency, pollution control, and identity and privacy management.
Our technology is used to expedite presidential election results in Brazil
Also in October, Brazil uses our technology to facilitate efficient voice and data communication services for 15 of the country’s most remote states during their general elections.
Modernising UK elections
The ‘ePen’ (a digital pen to improve the speed, accuracy and integrity of the traditional ballot counting process) is used for the
first time in a local election in the UK
.
We create in Estonia the Centre for Excellence to advance Internet voting
The multidisciplinary
centre of research and development
will study and develop the process of voting over the Internet on a global scale.
Belgians vote for three elections on the same day
Belgium conducts the first European Union Parliamentary election ever to use a voter verified e-voting solution, with our technology.
Successful electronic voting election in Ecuador
We deliver auditable and secure results in record-breaking time.
2013
We partner with Haiti’s National Identification Office to update its civil registry system
By creating a better database,
we can help Haiti provide its citizens with better services
Smartmatic helps Filipinos register 766,672,141 votes in their midterm elections on 13 May
Our voting technology and services helped 52,333,801 eligible voters fill 18,022 positions
. A more transparent voting process continues to help build greater political stability. Ratings agencies respond by raising the country to investment grade status.
Venezuela organises its
Presidential elections in record time (34 days)
, thanks to our voting technology and services
As they’re completely auditable and accurate, they also help the country trust in results where the two main candidates were separated by just 1.49%. All parties audit the voting platform no less than 15 times.
2012
Our technology is used in the USA
President Obama votes on a Smartmatic voting machine in Chicago
The system is secure, accurate and accessible – and provides a voter-verified paper audit trail (VVPAT).
We open our new HQ in London
We are now 600 people in 15 offices around the world.
Belgium chooses us to design and manufacture its election hardware and software for the next 15 years
We deploy the first batch of 20,000 machines and in October, Belgium has a successful automated election – our first in Europe.
Election services for Brazil
We set up a staggering 500,000 voting machines
– and hire and train technical support staff for over 400,000 voting centres. We also configure and deploy 1,320 BGAN Sabre satellite terminals to transmit election results reliably and securely.
A glowing reference from one of the world's most respected elections observers
Jimmy Carter, whose Carter Center has observed over 95 elections, calls our election solution for Venezuela ‘
the best voting system in the world
.’ It’s the first time an election has featured voting sessions initiated by biometric voter authentication. Because it relies on unique personal characteristics, such as fingerprints, it deters identity theft and ensures each voter can only vote once.
2011
A smarter transport system for Cartagena
We win an 18-year contract to implement and operate an automated fare collection and fleet management system in Cartagena, as part of this Colombian city’s new integrated mass transport system.
We continue to grow and invest in research and development
We open our third R&D centre in Panama – and new offices in New Delhi.
2010
A new voter register for Zambia
The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) chooses Smartmatic to biometrically register Zambia’s citizens for voting. The number of Zambians registered to vote increases by 40%.
.
We help deliver the largest fully outsourced automated election in history
A staggering 50 million voters take part in the Philippines general election, all of whom are able to see the results in less than a day, despite being spread over more than 7,000 islands.
A massive earthquake hits Haiti
We send in people and equipment to help improve public services by registering its population.
2009
The world's fastest biometric registration programme
We break another record, this time for the fastest biometric voter registration in the world – five million Bolivians in under 75 days.
Mexico's biometric registration
We take biometric registration to Mexico, allowing the government to begin issuing its citizens with national identity cards. Our rugged, portable kits provide everything you need to capture biometric data, even in the remotest areas.
2008
We run the Philippines’ first fully automated elections
We win a complex bid to provide a pioneering voting solution for Mindanao province that increases voter participation and delivers results in record time.
We continue to grow in the Far East and South America
We open offices in Manila, the Philippines, Buenos Aires, Argentina – and Sao Paulo, Brazil.
2007
We organise and run Curacao’s elections in record time
Over 76,000 citizens take part in the most populated island of the Dutch Antilles' Insular Council elections. Our secure voting technology platform is easy to use and completely auditable. As a result, all parties accept the results' validity.
Next generation command and control. Saving lives and money
We deliver an emergency response centre for Caracas. Latin America’s most advanced yet, it will monitor around 3,000 variables concerning the city in real time – and will enable operators to handle over 1,000 emergencies a day.
2006
Helping America vote securely, transparently and reliably
Our technology features in elections throughout 17 US states – and in Washington DC, the nation’s capital.
The USA's only encrypted election results transmission – in the country's third biggest jurisdiction
We provide technology and services to the City of Chicago, the only jurisdiction in the US with encrypted results transmission. It’s the third biggest, after LA and NYC.
2005
Validation from people who matter
The Carter Center, founded by Jimmy Carter to advance human rights, and the European Union validate our voting technology as secure, reliable and auditable.
We launch our technology in the US markets
They're ready to benefit from our secure voting technology platform that offers people auditable elections that deliver rapid results.
We open our R&D centre in Taipei.
2004
Our first automated election and the first in the world to feature a paper trail
After a few years trying e-counting, the Venezuelan National Electoral Council brokered a competitive tender to provide e-voting technology that would guarantee total accuracy, efficiency and transparency by automating the entire election. We won and began conducting the Venezuelan elections in 2004. It was the first election in the world to feature a paper trail – what’s called a VVPAT – a voter-verified paper audit trail. This feature has now become a de facto standard worldwide. Why? Because it allows voters to verify that the machine has properly recorded their choices. It also enables audits and recounts.
Our HQ moves to Amsterdam in the Netherlands.
2003
We launch our advanced automation platform, NEA
Enabling hyper-secure connection between devices, it’ll form the basis of our future election platform.
We develop our first voting machine.
2002
We launch our bank branch automation solution, based on our Smartnet platform, to increase security for key customers in the Mexican banking sector.
We file our first 20 utility patents in the USA.
2001
We launch Smartnet -one of the earliest platforms to enable the 'Internet of Things'- a solution designed to make online protocols highly secure.
2000
The 'hanging chad' incident in Florida inspires Smartmatic to start research on voting technology.
Smartmatic founded
Smartmatic was founded in Palm Beach County, Florida, USA.
https://www.crisisgroup.org/support-us/our-supporters/individuals-corporations/crisis-group-councils
Sources: Various incl. UK Parliament, Wikipedia, Wayback Machine, Companies House. Page 8
Last Updated Jul. 23, 2018
Burkes Peerage; UK Civ. Reg., SEC
Director, with Lawrence H. Summers, Facebook, Sheryl K. Sandberg, Open Society Foundation, Ebay, BEA, Google, Goldman Sachs Foundation, Obama National Security Advisors, Trilogy, IMF, Spinnacker, Kazowitz LLP, Robert Mosbacher, Jr. OPIC, Rachel Pritzker (Penny Pritzker Commerce Department), U.S. Statement Departmen [3] Centre for Global Development (CGD) relationships: Abby Newbold; ABS Ventures; Absolute Return for Kids (Ark); ACON Investments LLC; Adam S. Posen; Adam Waldman; Aduro Biotech; African Development Bank; African Development Bank Group (The); Alan Gelb; Alex Ezeh; Amanda Glassman; Amanda Leverett; Amartya K. Sen; Andrew Steer; Andrew Stober; Andy Sumner; Anit Mukherjee; Anita Käppeli; Ann Mei Chang; Anne Krueger; Annie Malknecht; Antoinette Monsio Sayeh; Arvind Subramanian; Asad Sami; Ashley West; Association of Public and Land-grant Colleges (APLU); Australian Department of Foreign Affairs & Trade; Barbara Bruns; BEA Systems; Belinda Stronach; Ben Leo; Bernard Aronson; Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation; BioGems Initiative; Bobby J. Pittman; Brad Horwitz; Brin Datema; Brooking Institution; Brown University; Bruns Grayson; C. Boyden Gray; C. Fred Bergsten; Caitlin McKee; Canadian Department of Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development; Canadian International Development Research Centre; Carol Graham; Carol Lancaster; Caroline Atkinson; Cassandra Baker; Cassandra Nemzoff; Center for a New American Security; CGD Partners Council; Chalres Fisher-Post; Charles Kenny; Charlie Rong; Chobani Foundation; Cindy Huang; CityQuicker; Clay Lowery; Clinton Health Access Initiative; Colgate Palmolive; Columbia University; Comcast; Cordelia Kenney; Cornell University; Dani Rodrik; Danial Muhammad; Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs; David Bloom; David F. Gordon; David Gergen; David Lindauer; David Park; DB Investments; Deepa Narayan; Denizhan Duran; Deutsche Bank Global Equity Derivatives; Dina Habib Powell; Donald Kaberuka; Drew D'Alelio; Earth Institute (The); Ebay; Edward Miguel; Edward Scott; Ella Stelter; Ellen Mackenzie; Emily Oster; Emily Schabacker; Endeavor Group; Enrique V. Iglesias; Eric Werker; Erin Collinson; Ernest Stern, Jr.; Ernesto Zedillo; Esther [3] CGD relationships: Duflo; Euan Ritchie; European Union Affairs; Eward E. McNally; Export-Import Bank; ExxonMobil Foundation; Facebook; Federal Reserve Bank of New York; Felice Apter; Fistula Foundation; Ford Foundation; Ford Foundation; Gailyn Portelance; George Washington University; Georgetown University; Ghana; Gina Lambright; Global Affairs Canada; Goldman Sachs Foundation; Good Ventures; Google; Hamdi Ulukaya; Hamilton Place Strategies; Hanna Petros; Hannah Timis; Harmon & Co; Harvard School of Public Health; Hauke Hillebrandt; Henrietta Holsman Fore; Holly Shulman; Holsmann International; Homeland Security Council; Ian Mitchell; Imani LaTortue; Imperial College London; Imperial College of Science, Technology and Medicine; Inter-American Development Bank (IDB); International Growth Center; International Initiative for Impact Evaluation; J. Bryan Hehir; Jacob Kincer; Jacqueline Craig; James Gustave Speth; James Harmon; Jane Nelson; Janeen Madan Keller; Jeffrey Sachs; Jennifer Oppenheimer; Jere Behrman; Jeremy Gaines; Jeremy Konyndyk; Jessica Gottlieb; Jessica P. Einhorn; Jessie Lu; Jimmy Graham; Joanna Macrae; Joanna Redhead; Johan Zambrano; John L. Hennessy; John Lipsky; John Polcari; John T. Reid; Johnattan Garcia; Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies; Johns Hopkins University; Johnson & Johnson; Jonathan Morduch; Jose Angel Gurria Teveiño; Joseph E. Stiglitz; Justin Sandefur; Kalipso Chalkidou; Kassahun Kebede; Kate Gough; Kazowitz LLP; Kelsey Ross; Kemal Dervis; Kenneth Prewitt; Kenneth Rogoff; Kevin Conry; Kevin Watkins; Kimberly Ann Elliott; Kupanda Capital; Kwesi Botchwey; Kyle Navis; Lakeshore Foundation; Lant Pritchett; Lawrence H. Summers; Lee Robinson; Liesi Schnabel; Liliana Rojaz-Suarez; Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts; Lorcan Clarke; Luke Easley; M. Peter McPherson; Macalester College; Madison Handy; Magna International Inc.; Mallika Snyder; Marhyam Akmai; Mark MallochBrown; Mark Plant; Marlaine Lockheed; Masood Ahmed; Maureen White; Maya Forstater; Mayra Buvinic; Mead Over; Merck; Michael Anderson; Michael Brown; Michael Clemens; Michael Pisa; Michigan State University; Mikaela Gavas; MIPS Technologies; MIT; Multilaterla Investment Fund at Inter-American Development Bank; Nabil Hashmi; Nancy Birdsall; Nancy Lee; Nathan Cummings Foundation; Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC); New York University; Ney Flores; Ngaire Woods; Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala; NICE International; Nichael Pisa; Nicolas van de Walle; Nicole Cassou; Nora Lustig; Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation (NORAD); Obama National Security Advisor; Olivia Nesbit; Omidyar Network (Ebay); Open Philanthropy Project; Open Society Foundation; Overseas Private Investment Corporation (SES - OPIC); Owen Barder; Oxford Policy Management; Oxford University; Panton Capital Group; Patty Stonesifer; Paul O'Neill, Jr.; Paul Revill; Peterson Institute for International Economics; Philadelphia Mayor; Pranab Bardhan; Priscilla Atansah; Pritzker Innovation Fund; Q. Munir Alam; Rachel Siverman; Rakesh Rajani; Raymond Robertson; Rebecca Thornton; Reynold Levy; Rima Khalaf Hunaidi; Robert McCarthy; Robert Mosbacher, Jr.; Robin Kraft; Rocco Friebel; Rockefeller Foundation; Ross Rhuotte; Rozanne Oroxom; Ruth Lopert; S. Daniel Abraham Center for Middle East Peace; S. Jacob Scherr;
[2] International Crisis Group (ICG) relationships: Alexander Soros; Andrey Kortunov; Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade; Austrian Development Agency; Carl Bildt; Carnegie Corporation of New York; Celso Amorim; Cheryl Carolus; Core Alpha Bond Fund; Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs; Emma Bonino; European Commission; Federal Republic of German Foreign Office; Fola Adeola; Foundation to Promote Open Society (Open Society Foundation); Frank Giustra since July 1, 2006; French Development Agency ; French Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Development; Gareth Evans; George Soros; Germany - Gesellschaft fur Internationale Zusammendarbeit (GIZ); Global Alpha Tilts Fund B; Helge Lund; Helle Thorning-Schmidt; Humanity United; Hushang Ansary; Irish Aid; Ivan Krastev; Javier Solana; Joanne Leedom-Ackerman; Jonas Gahr Støre; Karim Raslan; Kim Beazley; Lawrence Summers; Liechtenstein; Luxembourg Ministry of Foreign Affairs; Malloch-Brown, Madison; Malloch-Brown, Lord George Mark; Maria Livanos Cattaui; Marty Natalegawa; Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Finland; Mo Ibrahim; Nahum Barnea; Naz Modirzadeh; New Venture Fund; New Zealand Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade; Oak Foundation; Olympia Snowe; Open Society Initiative for West Africa; Pär Stenbäck; Paul Reynolds; Ploughshares Fund; Plusec-Pluralism Human Security and Sustainability Centre; President Emeritus; Radcliffe Foundation (Frank Giustra); Ricardo Lagos; Robert Bosch; Roza Otunbayeva; S&P GSCI Commondities Fund B; Saad Mohseni; Sheila Coronel; Shivshankar Menon; Swedish Ministry for Foreign Affairs; Swiss Federal Department of Foreign Affairs; Thomas R. Pickering; U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID); U.S. Department of State; U.S. Treasury Inflation Protected Securities Fund B; Wadah Khanfar; Wang Jisi; Wellspring Philanthropic Fund; Wesley Clark; Wim Kok; Wolfgang Ischinger; Yoriko Kawaguchi, Ritchie; European Union Affairs; Eward E. McNally; Export-Import Bank; ExxonMobil Foundation; Facebook; Federal Reserve Bank of New York; Felice Apter; Fistula Foundation; Ford Foundation; Ford Foundation; Gailyn Portelance; George Washington University; Georgetown University; Ghana; Gina Lambright; Global Affairs Canada; Goldman Sachs Foundation; Good Ventures; Google; Hamdi Ulukaya; Hamilton Place Strategies; Hanna Petros; Hannah Timis; Harmon & Co; Harvard School of Public Health; Hauke Hillebrandt; Henrietta Holsman Fore; Holly Shulman; Holsmann International; Homeland Security Council; Ian Mitchell; Imani LaTortue; Imperial College London; Imperial College of Science, Technology and Medicine; Inter-American Development Bank (IDB); International Growth Center; International Initiative for Impact Evaluation; J. Bryan Hehir; Jacob Kincer; Jacqueline Craig; James Gustave Speth; James Harmon; Jane Nelson; Janeen Madan Keller; Jeffrey Sachs; Jennifer Oppenheimer; Jere Behrman; Jeremy Gaines; Jeremy Konyndyk; Jessica Gottlieb; Jessica P. Einhorn; Jessie Lu; Jimmy Graham; Joanna Macrae; Joanna Redhead; Johan Zambrano; John L. Hennessy; John Lipsky; John Polcari; John T. Reid; Johnattan Garcia; Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies; Johns Hopkins University; Johnson & Johnson; Jonathan Morduch; Jose Angel Gurria Teveiño; Joseph E. Stiglitz; Justin Sandefur; Kalipso Chalkidou; Kassahun Kebede; Kate Gough; Kazowitz LLP; Kelsey Ross; Kemal Dervis; Kenneth Prewitt; Kenneth Rogoff; Kevin Conry; Kevin Watkins; Kimberly Ann Elliott; Kupanda Capital; Kwesi Botchwey; Kyle Navis; Lakeshore Foundation; Lant Pritchett; Lawrence H. Summers; Lee Robinson; Liesi Schnabel; Liliana Rojaz-Suarez; Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts; Lorcan Clarke; Luke Easley; M. Peter McPherson; Macalester College; Madison Handy; Magna International Inc.; Mallika Snyder; Marhyam Akmai; Mark MallochBrown; Mark Plant; Marlaine Lockheed; Masood Ahmed; Maureen White; Maya Forstater; Mayra Buvinic; Mead Over; Merck; Michael Anderson; Michael Brown; Michael Clemens; Michael Pisa; Michigan State University; Mikaela Gavas; MIPS Technologies; MIT; Multilaterla Investment Fund at Inter-American Development Bank; Nabil Hashmi; Nancy Birdsall; Nancy Lee; Nathan Cummings Foundation; Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC); New York University; Ney Flores; Ngaire Woods; Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala; NICE International; Nichael Pisa; Nicolas van de Walle; Nicole Cassou; Nora Lustig; Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation (NORAD); Obama National Security Advisor; Olivia Nesbit; Omidyar Network (Ebay); Open Philanthropy Project; Open Society Foundation; Overseas Private Investment Corporation (SES - OPIC); Owen Barder; Oxford Policy Management; Oxford University; Panton Capital Group; Patty Stonesifer; Paul O'Neill, Jr.; Paul Revill; Peterson Institute for International Economics; Philadelphia Mayor; Pranab Bardhan; Priscilla Atansah; Pritzker Innovation Fund; Q. Munir Alam; Rachel Siverman; Rakesh Rajani; Raymond Robertson; Rebecca Thornton; Reynold Levy; Rima Khalaf Hunaidi; Robert McCarthy; Robert Mosbacher, Jr.; Robin Kraft; Rocco Friebel; Rockefeller Foundation; Ross Rhuotte; Rozanne Oroxom; Ruth Lopert; S. Daniel Abraham Center for Middle East Peace; S. Jacob Scherr; Sam Reyes; Sandy Spring Friends School; Sandy Stonesifer; Sanjeev Gupta; Sarah Allen; Sarah Rose; Sarah Vaugeouis; Schroder Wertheim & Co; Scott Morris; Sebastian Bauhoff; Selvin Akkus; Sentinel Dome Partners; Shanta Devarajan; Sharea Gordon; Sheryl K. Sandberg; Simon Johnson; Sir Colin Lucas; Smita Singh; Sonal Shah; Spinnaker Capital Group; Stephan Kyburz; Stephanie Brown; Stephen T. Isaacs; Stronach Group; Sulayman Gibba; Susan B. Levine; Swedish Ministry of Foreign Affairs; Tanvi Jaluka; Tent Foundation; The Cowen Group; Thomas Gibian; Timonthy Geithner; Timonty D. Adams; Todd Moss; Toni G. Verstandig; Tony Fratto; TRG Management LP; Trilogy International Partners; Tulane University; U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs, 1989-93; U.S. Department of State; U.S. National Economic Council; U.S. Treasury; U.S. Treasury Department; UBS AG; UBS Optimus Foundation; UK Department for International Development; UK Institute of Health and Care Excellence; UK Minister of State at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office; United National Development Programme; University of California, Berkeley; University of Chicago; University of Illinois; UPenn; US EPA; USAID; Vijaya Ramachandran; W. Gyude Moore; Wellesley College; White House Council of Economic Advisors; William and Flora Hewlett Foundation (The); William Eaterly; William Ruckelshaus; William Savedoff; World Bank Group; World Resource Institute; World Resources Institute (WRI); Yale University, Study of Globalization
https://informationcradle.com/judy-woodruff/
Executive Vice President, S. Daniel Abraham Center for Middle East Peace
CHAIR, MIDDLE EAST PROGRAMS, THE ASPEN INSTITUTE
Toni G. Verstandig is chair of the Aspen Institute’s Middle East Programs and senior vice president at the S. Daniel Abraham Center for Middle East Peace. At Aspen she oversees the Secretariat for the recently launched Partners for New Beginning (PNB) which constitutes a group of distinguished American leaders who are committed to using their expertise, relationships and access to resources to build a collection of public-private partnerships which broaden and deepen engagement between the United States and local communities on issues of economic opportunity, science and technology, education and exchange to help advance President Obama’s Cairo vision.
From November 1994 until January 2001, Verstandig served as deputy assistant secretary of Near Eastern Affairs at the US Department of State. She is a graduate of Boston University and Stephens College, and also holds an Honorary Doctor of Laws from Seton Hill College. She is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. She serves on the Board and Executive Committee of Children’s National Medical Center, the Board of the University of Denver Korbel School for International Affairs, the National Advisory Board for the Catholic Center for the Study of the Holocaust, the Board of Trustees of the American Friends of the Yitzhak Rabin Center, and that of the Center for Global Development.
SHUBHI RAO
Shubhi Rao joined the CGD Board of Directors in April 2019. Ms. Rao was previously the Chief Financial Officer at Dosh in Austin, Texas. Prior to her arrival at Dosh, Ms. Rao was Vice President, Treasurer at Alphabet, Inc. in Mountain View, California, where she oversaw all aspects of asset management, financial business risk management and global liquidity and equity management for the company. Before Alphabet, Inc., Ms. Rao was based in London where she was Group Treasurer for Tesco PLC. For over a decade, she worked for The Ford Motor Company in Michigan, holding a variety of treasury roles, and she also previously worked at PwC and Tyco International.
Ms. Rao is an honoree member of the Federal Reserve San Francisco and also serves on the Board of Directors of the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW).
Ms. Rao holds a bachelor’s degree in computer science engineering from Michigan State University in 1990 and an MBA from the University of Michigan in 1997.
SMITA SINGH
Smita Singh was the founding director of the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation's Global Development Program. While she was director, the Program carried out extensive international grant making and started several new initiatives, including the Think Tank Initiative; the Transparency and Accountability Initiative; and the partnership for Quality Education in Developing Countries. Ms. Singh helped create the International Initiative in Impact Evaluation (3ie), a new international agency devoted to improving the measurement of results in development interventions. She also initiated the Foundation's efforts to reform development assistance policy and practices which included seeding the Modernizing Foreign Assistance Network (MFAN) and the International Aid Transparency Initiative. Before joining the Foundation, Ms. Singh was a scholar at the Harvard Academy of International and Area Studies. Her research interests focus on the comparative political economy of developing countries, and she has lived and worked in several countries in Africa, Asia and Latin America. She has also worked for the Commission on National and Community Service (now called the Corporation for National Service) where she was responsible for developing the commission's higher education initiatives and funding strategies for dispersing grants to community service and service-learning projects at over 200 colleges and universities. Before joining the commission, Ms. Singh worked at ABC News “Nightline” and prior to that, with community-based women's organizations in India. Ms. Singh sits on the governing boards of Oxfam America, Revenue Watch Institute, Twaweza and the Center for Global Development. She is a member of the Aspen Strategy Group.
Bobby is a co-founder and the Managing Partner of Kupanda Capital, a platform to create, capitalize and scale pan-African companies. He has helped found numerous companies, including Nithio and Fraym, where he currently serves as Chairman.
Prior to Kupanda, he was Vice President of Infrastructure, Private Sector and Regional Integration at the African Development Bank (AfDB). There he managed one of the largest portfolios in Africa, including more than $25 billion in active projects across 52 African countries.
He served as the Special Assistant to the President and Senior Director for African Affairs in the White House from 2006 to 2009. He was the President's lead advisor on Africa issues as well as the President’s Africa Personal Representative (APR) to the G8.
Bobby also served as Deputy Assistant Secretary for International Development Finance and Debt at the Department of the Treasury from 2004 to 2006. He was a key architect and the lead U.S. negotiator of the 100 percent debt relief proposal endorsed by the G8 at the Gleneagles Summit in July 2005. To date, this effort has delivered over $40 billion in debt stock cancellation for the world’s poorest countries.
Africa Fund Manager magazine named Bobby to its inaugural 'Power 50' list of industry leaders who are shaping investment trends in Africa.
NOW U.S. International Development Finance Corporation
http://www.spinnakercapital.com/page/home/introduction
https://www.afdb.org/en/about/mission-strategy
https://www.aduro.com/about/leadership/
https://www.trilogy-international.com/
https://www.hamiltonplacestrategies.com/team/
https://www.merckformothers.com/who-we-are.html
General George W. Casey, Jr. is a four-star general who served the US Army for 41 years. He is an accomplished soldier and an authority on strategic leadership. As the Army Chief of Staff, he led one of the nation's largest and most complex organizations during one of the most extraordinary periods in US history. He is widely credited with restoring balance to a war-weary Army and leading the transformation to keep it relevant in the 21st Century. Prior to this, from July 2004 to February 2007, he commanded the Multi-National Force – Iraq, a coalition of more than 30 countries where he guided the Iraq mission through its toughest days.
Currently, General Casey serves as a Distinguished Visiting Lecturer of Leadership at the S.C. Johnson College of Business at Cornell University and as a Rice Family Professor of Practice at the Korbel School within the University of Denver. He serves on corporate boards and numerous boards of organizations that support servicemen and women, veterans, and their families. General Casey served as a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council. He received his master’s degree in international relations from Denver University and his bachelor’s from Georgetown University School of Foreign Service.
Afsaneh Beschloss joined the CGD Board of Directors in October 2018. She is founder and CEO of RockCreek. Previously, she was Managing Director and Partner at the Carlyle Group and President of Carlyle Asset Management. She was also Treasurer and Chief Investment Officer of the World Bank and worked at Shell International and J.P. Morgan, and she has advised governments, central banks, and regulatory agencies on global public policy and financial policy.
She is on the boards of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, the World Resources Institute, the American Red Cross, and is the Vice-Chair of the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS). She is on the Visiting Committee at the Center for Development Economics at Williams College and is a member of the World Economic Forum’s Investor Governors and the Council of Foreign Relations. Beschloss is a past Trustee of the Ford Foundation, where she chaired the Investment Committee.
She is a recipient of the Institutional Investor Lifetime Achievement Award and the Robert F. Kennedy Ripple of Hope Award. She was also recognized as one of American Banker’s Most Powerful Women in Banking.
She holds an MPhil (Honors) in Economics from the University of Oxford, where she taught international trade and economic development. She is the co-author of The Economics of Natural Gas and author of numerous journal articles on energy and finance.
Most recently, Caroline Atkinson was Head of Global Policy for Google, where she advised Google’s leadership on policy issues and led Google’s work with policy makers, government officials, and key political stakeholders.
Prior to joining Google, Caroline served as President Barack Obama’s Deputy National Security Advisor for International Economics. As the President’s senior international economic advisor, Caroline supported the President at major international economic summits and coordinated the policymaking process for international economic affairs. During her tenure, she was the US “sherpa” at G7 and G20 summits, and helped to drive global agreement on a diverse set of issues, including global trade, employment, climate change and the response to the Ebola crisis.
Before working directly for President Obama, Caroline held senior roles at the International Monetary Fund, the U.S. Treasury Department, and the Bank of England, and worked as a journalist for The Washington Post, The Economist, and The Times of London. She holds a B.A. in politics, philosophy and economics (PPE) from Oxford University.
Mr. Alam is the founder of Sentinel Dome Partners, LLC. Previously, he was Co-Portfolio Manager and Managing Member of Watershed Asset Management LLC, a San Francisco-based investment firm that manages discretionary capital for institutional investors, primarily endowments, and foundations. Prior to joining Watershed, he was at Nautic Partners LLC, a middle-market private equity firm. Prior to Nautic, Mr. Alam was an investment banker in the media and telecommunications group of Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette.
Mr. Alam received an M.B.A. from the Harvard Business School where he was named a Baker Scholar. He received a B.A., summa cum laude, in economics with a minor in physics, from Middlebury College.
Timothy Dees Adams joined the Institute of International Finance as President and Chief Executive Officer in January 2013. He was previously the Managing Director of the Lindsey Group, a DC-based economic advisory firm with expertise in global macroeconomic affairs, founded by Lawrence Lindsey (former Assistant to the President and Director of the National Economic Council at the White House). Mr. Adams was the Under Secretary for International Affairs at the Department of the Treasury from August 2005 to February 2007. As Under Secretary, Mr. Adams was the Administration’s point person on international financial issues, including exchange rate policy, G-7 meetings, and IMF and World Bank issues. He regularly interacted with counterparts in key emerging markets including China, India, and Brazil and traveled extensively throughout Asia, the Middle East, and Europe.
From 1989 to January 1993, during the presidency of George H. W. Bush, Mr. Adams took several finance-related positions, working briefly at the Export-Import Bank, the Treasury Department, and the Office of Management and Budget. His longest assignment began in late 1990 in the White House Office of Policy Development, where he worked on economic issues. In 1993, Mr. Adams went into private consulting, co-founding the G-7 Group, a political and economic research and advisory firm. He later headed their Washington operation as Managing Director. In 2000, he left to begin working full-time in Austin, Texas, for George W. Bush, in his successful campaign for the White House. Adams served as a senior member of the Bush-Cheney campaign policy staff, directing policy operations for Dick Cheney, and, after the election, leading the Treasury transition operations for the incoming Bush team.
At that point, he became Chief of Staff at Treasury, starting in January 2001 and serving up to December 2003 for both Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill and Treasury Secretary John Snow. He was promoted to the undersecretary position in part because of his service in the George W. Bush presidential campaign of 2004. In that campaign, he was policy director for Bush-Cheney 2004.
Mr. Adams holds a B.S. in Finance and a Masters in Public Administration and an M.A. in International Relations from the University of Kentucky. He is a Board member for the Atlantic Council of the United States and a member of the Atlantic Council Business and Economics Advisor Group and a former member of the Board of OPIC.
President, Center for Global Development
Masood Ahmed is president of the Center for Global Development. He joined the Center in January 2017, capping a 35-year career driving economic development policy initiatives relating to debt, aid effectiveness, trade, and global economic prospects at major international institutions including the IMF, World Bank, and DFID.
Ahmed joined CGD from the IMF, where he served for eight years as director, Middle East and Central Asia Department, earning praise from Managing Director Christine Lagarde as a “visionary leader.” In that role, he oversaw the Fund's operations in 32 countries, and managed relationships with key national and regional policy makers and stakeholders. In previous years, he also served as the IMF's director of External Relations, and deputy director of the Policy Development and Review Department.
From 2003-2006, Ahmed served as director general, Policy and International at the UK government's Department for International Development (DFID). In that role, he was responsible for advising UK ministers on development issues and overseeing the UK's relationship with international development institutions such as the World Bank.
Ahmed also worked at the World Bank from 1979-2000 in various managerial and economist positions, rising to become Vice President, Poverty Reduction and Economic Management. In that role he led the HIPC (heavily indebted poor countries) debt relief initiative, which has to- date brought relief from debt burdens to 36 of the world's poorest nations.
Born and raised in Pakistan, Ahmed moved to London in 1971 to study at the LSE where he obtained a BSc Honors as well as an MSc Econ with distinction. He is a UK national.
Ahmed is a leading expert on Middle East economics, having served on the Advisory Board of the LSE Middle East Center, as well as on the World Economic Forum's Global Agenda Council on the Middle East and North Africa.
Founder, BEA Systems, Inc.; Co-Founder and Chair, Center for Global Development; Co-Founder, DATA (Debt, Aid and Trade for Africa); Founder and Chairman, Friends of the Global Fight