|
|
Home
>> News and Events
>> Headlines and Media >>
Bertini Joins GHF

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Friday, October 24, 2007
Catherine Bertini
Joins New Global Humanitarian Forum
Maxwell professor tapped for board of
organization coordinating efforts to address humanitarian impact of climate
change on world’s poor.
Catherine Bertini, professor of public
administration, has been named as a founding board member of the new Global
Humanitarian Forum launched by former Secretary-General of the United Nations
Kofi Annan on October 17. In an announcement made in Geneva, where the
organization will be based, Annan said the Forum will focus on coordinating
world efforts on climate change and its humanitarian consequences.
Bertini’s experience as a leader in
humanitarian relief and nutrition policy made her a logical selection for this
board, made up of leaders from all sectors and disciplines. Bertini was the
driving force behind reform of the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP),
where she served as the executive director for 10 years. She currently works as
a senior fellow with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation’s Global Development
Program team researching agricultural development in Africa.
According to Bertini, humanitarian crises such as that in Sudan’s Darfur region
are largely rooted in drought and food shortages resulting from changes in
weather patterns. This link between climate change and international
humanitarian issues affecting the poor and most vulnerable will be the primary
focus of the Global Humanitarian Forum.
The organization’s over-arching mission will be to foster dialogue and
partnerships that strengthen the international community’s ability to address
current and future humanitarian challenges. To accomplish its goals, the
organization hopes to promote collaboration among individuals across all sectors
and economic levels. "We are all in the same boat, and we all need to come
together to resolve it," Annan said. "One cannot be secure at the expense of the
other. We need a two-pronged approach and they must move ahead concurrently --
mitigation, that is curbing greenhouse gases, and adaptation -- making sure
vulnerable communities are protected."
Bertini, the 2003 World Food Prize laureate, is joined by 20 others on this
prestigious board, including Muhammad Yunus, 2006 Nobel Peace Prize laureate,
and Dr. Rajendra Pachauri, who heads the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize-winning
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. The first annual meeting will be held
in June 2008.
# # #
The Maxwell School
of Syracuse University is the premier academic institution in the United
States committed to scholarship, civic leadership, and education in public and
international affairs. Maxwell is home to Syracuse University’s social science
departments and to numerous nationally recognized multidisciplinary graduate
programs in public policy, international studies, social policy, and conflict
resolution. Maxwell's graduate program in public administration -- the first of
its kind in the nation -- is ranked consistently the leading graduate public
affairs program in the country.
|