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CWGL Staff

 

Radhika Balakrishnan, Executive Director, and Professor, Women's and Gender Studies, has a Ph.D. in Economics from Rutgers University. Previously, she was Professor of Economics and International Studies at Marymount Manhattan College. She has worked at the Ford Foundation as a program officer in the Asia Regional Program. She is currently the Chair of the Board of the US Human Rights Network and on the Board of the Center for Constitutional Rights. She has published in the field of gender and development. A select list of her publications are listed below: Why MES with Human Rights: Integrating Macro Economic Strategies with Human Rights, 2005; edited The Hidden Assembly Line: Gender Dynamics of Subcontracted Work in a Global Economy, Kumarian Press, 2001; and co-edited Good Sex: Feminist Perspectives from the Worlds Religions, with Patricia Jung and Mary Hunt, Rutgers University Press, 2000. She has also authored numerous articles that have appeared in books and journals.

Bunch
Download print-quality photograph (5" x 7", 1,132KB, 300 dpi, JPEG Image ©2002 Nick Romanenko, Rutgers University)

Charlotte Bunch, Founding Director and Senior Scholar, at the Center for Women's Global Leadership, Rutgers University, has been an activist, author and organizer in the women's, civil, and human rights movements for four decades. A Board of Governor’s Distinguished Service Professor in Women's and Gender Studies, Bunch was previously a Fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies, a founder of Washington D.C. Women's Liberation and of Quest: A Feminist Quarterly. She is the author of numerous essays and has edited or co-edited nine anthologies including the Center’s reports on the UN Beijing Plus 5 Review and the World Conference Against Racism. Her books include two classics: Passionate Politics: Feminist Theory in Action and Demanding Accountability: The Global Campaign and Vienna Tribunal for Women's Human Rights.  

Bunch's contributions to conceptualizing and organizing for women's human rights have been recognized by many and include: her induction into the National Women's Hall of Fame in October 1996; President Clinton's selection of Bunch as a recipient of the Eleanor Roosevelt Award for Human Rights in December 1999; her receipt of the "Women Who Make a Difference Award" from the National Council for Research on Women in 2000; and being honored as one of the "21 Leaders for the 21st Century" by Women's Enews in 2002 and also received the “Board of Trustees Awards for Excellence in Research” in 2006 at Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey . She has served on the boards of numerous organizations and is currently a member of the Advisory Committee for the Human Rights Watch Women's Rights Division, and on the Boards of the Global Fund for Women and the International Council on Human Rights Policy. She has been a consultant to many United Nations bodies and recently served on the Advisory Committee for the Secretary General’s 2006 Report to the General Assembly on Violence against Women.

Papers of Charlotte Bunch at the Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America, Radcliffe Institute: http://oasis.harvard.edu:10080/oasis/deliver/~sch00220
http://oasis.harvard.edu:10080/oasis/deliver/~sch00221

Baruch Margot Baruch, Program Coordinator, began her affiliation with CWGL as an intern in January 2005, working on the Beijing and Beyond campaign, which marked the 10th anniversary of the United Nations World Conference on Women, held in Beijing, China. Currently, she supports and maintains CWGL's work around UN reform and sexual rights issues, attends and documents UN special sessions and meetings, composes the quarterly e-newsletter and provides outreach, networking and design support for major events and ongoing projects. She earned her B.A. in Women's and Gender Studies with a minor in Spanish at Rutgers University in 2005. As a student, Margot served on the board and volunteered with the student-run Womens Center Defense Coalition and also helped to operate the on-campus Womens Center. In 2006, she spent time in El Salvador as a Peace Corps volunteer building cross-cultural relationships with local government and community groups. Presently, she volunteers as a Rape Crisis Advocate, supporting and assisting survivors of rape and sexual assault. She is looking forward to beginning graduate school in the near future.
Daney

Jewel Daney, Administrative Director, has been with the Center for Women’s Global Leadership since 1997. She has been active in social justice and human service issues for over twenty years. Before joining CWGL’s staff, she served as Executive Director for the Housing Coalition of Central Jersey in New Brunswick, one of the most respected non-profit agencies in the country. Concerned with advocacy and education on fair housing matters, the Coalition played a major role in the first federal fair housing suit filed on behalf of women and children living in rental housing. Daney continues her community service as Vice-President of the Board of Trustees for Info Line of Middlesex County, as an officer of the rent leveling board in the borough of Highland Park, and as a facilitator for community dialogues on racism and other prejudices. She has served as an advisor to numerous New Jersey/New York social and housing policy bodies, including the Federal Home Loan Bank in New York City and a New Jersey governor’s task force on discrimination.

Kinose Mika Kinose, Office Manager, has been with CWGL since April 2002 and assumed the position of Office Manager in December 2002. She provides key administrative support including the daily activities in accounting, payroll, and university relations. She also assists the executive director with her speaking engagement scheduling. Kinose has a wealth of business and international experience, having worked for the Bank of Tokyo in New York and for nine years with an import/export company in Kobe, Japan. Kinose graduated from Douglass College in 1984, majoring in Spanish Literature with a certificate in Latin American Studies. Currently, she is learning more about the work of CWGL and hopes to continue her education at Rutgers.
Keely Swan Keely Swan, Project Coordinator, joins CWGL after recently returning from a year in Mumbai, India where she studied Gender and Development at the Tata Institute of Social Sciences on a Rotary Ambassadorial Scholarship. While in India, much of her research focused on violence against women and related legal issues, and she had the opportunity to observe women's organizations working in these areas. Swan previously served as a legal intern at Manavi in New Brunswick, NJ, an organization dedicated to empowering South Asian women in the US and working against domestic violence. She received her Bachelor's degree in International Studies from Franklin & Marshall College (PA), where she was involved with the work of Amnesty International, Oxfam, the International Club, and the International Studies Department. She also spent a semester in Geneva on a course about International Organizations and Social Justice. Swan will manage the 16 Days of Activism Against Gender Violence Campaign sponsored by the Center for Women's Global Leadership.
Vidal

Lucy V. Vidal, Information Manager, has been with CWGL since 1996. Previously, she worked at the Center for Social and Legal Research as Senior Assistant Editor of their newsletter, Privacy & American Business, coordinator of their national conference and as a researcher. Vidal has had various duties at CWGL. She coordinated logistics for the 1998 Women's Global Leadership Institute, the 1998 Global Tribunal to Celebrate and Demand Women's Human Rights and was part of the onsite facilitation team at the 1998 Feminism in the Muslim World Leadership Institute in Istanbul, Turkey. She then went on to manage CWGL's work in information and communication technologies. Vidal currently handles the Center's publications and archives, maintains the website and resource center and serves as the United Nations liaison. She graduated from Rutgers College, Rutgers University, with a B.A. in Political Science and recently completed a Master's Degree in Library and Information Science.

  Beth Applegate, Applegate Consulting, has provided consulting services for over 15 years to nonprofit organizations, governmental agencies and socially responsible for-profit corporations. She brings a rich and diverse portfolio of experience and a solid grounding in theory pertaining to organizational behavior, management, political science and grassroots organizing. Beth has served in executive staff and board leadership positions with statewide and national organizations and understands how to put sound theory into practice in order to build sustainable enterprises.
Margi Nathalie Margi, Program Assistant, first joined CWGL as an intern in January 2008 during her graduate studies. Currently, she supports CWGL’s fundraising and programmatic work, in particular on UN reform. Nathalie earned a Master’s Degree in Women’s and Gender Studies from Rutgers University with a concentration in International Human Rights. A dedicated activist, she has been involved in a range of issues, from HIV/AIDS prevention to women’s political participation. Originally from France, Nathalie campaigned for Segolene Royal, the female socialist candidate during the 2007 French presidential elections. She also worked on women’s economic rights issues with a grassroots women’s NGO in Lebanon.
Rothschild Cynthia Rothschild, Senior Policy Advisor, is currently consulting with CWGL on areas related to the United Nations, HIV/AIDS and sexual rights. She is the former Program Officer in International Policy for the International Women's Health Coalition, where her work focused on UN advocacy related to sexual and reproductive health and rights, and on youth leadership. Rothschild has worked for various AIDS service organizations and the United Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM). She is the author of Written Out: How Sexuality is Used to Attack Women's Organizing, a publication of CWGL and the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission. Rothschild has worked with Amnesty International and in the human rights movement for close to 20 years, primarily to foster attention to violations related to sexuality, gender, health and HIV/AIDS. She is a former member of Amnesty International USA's Board of Directors, and is currently a policy advisor to the coordinating team of Amnesty's international lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender network. Rothschild is a workshop trainer on a range of issues, including human rights, advocacy within the UN, HIV/AIDS and human rights, and on sexual rights. In addition to Written Out, Rothschild is the co-author of Amnesty's Crimes of Hate, Conspiracy of Silence: Torture and Ill-Treatment Based on Sexual Identity, and has written a number of recent articles on human rights reporting related to sexuality, and on the US administration, conservative extremists and the human rights implications of "abstinence only until marriage" programs.
  Julie Rajan is a Visiting Assistant Professor in Women’s and Gender Studies at Rutgers University. She has published and presented in the areas of South Asian women writers, feminist theory and women’s human rights, colonial/postcolonial resistance writing, and modernism. Rajan is an editor of several anthologies, including: Violence and Gender in the Globalized World: The Intimate and the Extimate, prefaced by Charlotte Bunch (Ashgate Press, forthcoming); The Home and the World: South Asia in Transition (Cambridge Scholars Publishers, 2006); and Violence and Subjectivity in South Asia, prefaced by Veena Das.
Russo Anahi Russo Garrido, Graduate Assistant, is a Mexican-Quebecois-Canadian who holds an MA in Social and Cultural Anthropology from Concordia University, Canada, where she researched on gender and sexuality in Latin America. She has worked as a research assistant on feminist organizational strengthening and movement building with the Association for Women's Rights and Development (AWID). Prior to that she formed part of the Women's Institute of the Mexico City local government in a program focused on gender equality and youth. She also actively took part in the organizing committee of the 6th Lesbian Feminist Encounter of Latin America and the Caribbean, which took place in 2004 and is now participating in preparations for the 11th Feminist Encounter of Latin America and the Caribbean. She is the co-editor of Building Feminist Movements and Organizations: Global Perspectives, published in 2007 with Zed Books.
  Norma Tan, Principal, Cora Group, has over ten years of research experience, and a strong background in both qualitative and quantitative research methodologies. She has a wealth of experience in performance measurement, survey development, document analysis, and focus groups. Dr. Tan earned her Doctorate Degree in Sociology from Columbia University. She is the founder and Managing Director of Cora Group, a New York-based organization development consulting firm.
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