UNITED NATIONS
Transcription
UNITED NATIONS
UNITED NATIONS Expert Group Meeting (EGM) Formal/Informal Institutions for Citizen Engagement for implementing the Post 2015 Development Agenda Speakers’ Bios 20 – 21 October 2014 Paris, France www.unpan.org/ceforpost2015 1 Mr. Rodolfo Cordova (Mexico) Mr. Cordova is Project Coordinator at Fundar and at the International Network on Migration and Development; President of the Citizen Council of the National Migration Institute and member of the Consultative Council on migration policies, both in Mexico; member of the Global Civil Society Steering Committee of the High Level Dialogue and the Global Forum on International Migration and Development. He has been promoting human rights and development particularly for migrants and their families for the past 10 years by working for civil society organizations, UN agencies and academic institutions in the Americas and Europe. Dr. Angelita GREGORIO-MEDEL (Philippines) Dr. Gregorio-Medel is currently the Under-Secretary for Institutional Development of the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) of the Philippine Government. She was formerly the Executive Director, Affiliated Network for Social Accountability for East Asia and the Pacific (ANSA-EAP). She holds a PhD in Sociology from the University of Bielefeld, Germany. She lectures at the Ateneo de Manila University and serves as core faculty in the Leadership Programme for the Ateneo School of Government. She has a wide experience in institutional reform and organization development particularly in the area of human resource and performance management, capability building, standards development including the formulation, implementation and assessment of reform initiatives that calibrates the balance needed in running a bureaucracy while pursuing strategic change. She has built her competency in social accountability design, development and implementation in several countries aside from the Philippines (Cambodia, Indonesia, and Mongolia as well as in inter-country networking for social accountability advocacy). Her professional experiences also includes: Country Program Development and Technical Assistance in the area of people’s organization and community association capacity development in livelihood and enterprise development, coalition building, organization development, and policy advocacy. She is often tapped to undertake monitoring and evaluation interventions in assessing projects, programs and other development initiatives of community organizing and development work among the urban poor, fisher folk, farmers, and rural communities. Prof. Mushtaq KHAN (Bangladesh) Professor Mushtaq Khan is currently Professor of Economics in the Faculty of Law and Social Sciences at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, and has been a visiting professor at the University of Dhaka, Bangladesh, and the Chulalongkorn University, Thailand. He received his PhD in economics from Cambridge University. Professor Khan’s research interests lie in the areas of institutional economics, the economics of rent seeking, corruption and clientelism, industrial policy, and State intervention in developing countries. Other interests include South and South-East Asian economic development, with a particular focus on the Indian subcontinent. He is the editor of State Formation in 2 Palestine: Viability and Governance during a Social Transformation (2004) and Rents, Rent Seeking and Economic Development: Theory and Evidence in Asia (2000). He is the author of numerous chapters in books including “Corruption and governance in early capitalism: World Bank strategies and their limitations” (2002), in Reinventing the World Bank; “State failure in developing countries and strategies of institutional reform” (2004), in Towards Pro-Poor Policies: Aid Institutions and Globalization; and “The capitalist transformation” (2005), in The Origins of Development Economics: How Schools of Economic Thought Have Addressed Development. His articles have appeared in many journals including American Economic Review, Economics of Transition, Democratization, Journal of Agrarian Change, New Political Economy, Journal of International Development and The European Journal of Development Research. Apart from his academic career, Prof. Khan has held appointments as a consultant for international institutions focusing on poor countries, including the World Bank, the Department for International Development, UNDP and the Asian Development Bank. Dr. Don LENIHAN (Canada) Dr. Don Lenihan is Senior Associate at the Public Policy Forum in Ottawa, Canada. He is an internationally recognized expert on democracy and public engagement, Open Government and service delivery. He recently served as Chair of the Open Government Engagement Team for the Government of Ontario. Don also recently completed an 18-month, province-wide public engagement initiative for the Government of Ontario to renew the Ontario Condominium Act 1998, which governs the provinces 600,000 condominiums. Don’s latest book, Rescuing Policy: The Case for Public Engagement, was published in January 2012 and is an introduction to the field of public engagement, as well as a blueprint for change. Over the last decade, he has been closely involved in a series of innovative projects. From 2009 – January 2012, Don led the Public Engagement Project (PEP), a research and capacity-building project involving some 500 public servants from nine federal, provincial/territorial and municipal governments, and the Government of Australia. He was a senior advisor on the development of the Canadian Sport Policy, endorsed by federal, provincial and territorial ministers on June 27, 2012 in Inuvik, Northwest Territories. He worked closely with the Government of Nunavut on its Poverty Reduction Project, leading to the creation of the Anti-Poverty Roundtable and legislation to support it. He also advised all three levels of government in Australia to test a “community approach” to improving service delivery. In 2007-2008, at the request of Premier Shawn Graham, he served as advisor to the Government of New Brunswick on public engagement. Don has over 25 years of experience as a project leader, writer, speaker, senior government advisor, trainer and facilitator. He has developed and led research and consultation projects involving senior public servants, academics, elected officials, journalists, and members of the private and third sectors across Canada. He has authored numerous books, articles, studies, and columns. He earned his PhD in political theory from the University of Ottawa. Ms. Snežana MIŠIĆ MIHAJLOVIĆ (Bosnia and Herzogovina) Ms. Snežana Mišić Mihajlović works as an expert for environmental governance in the Centre for Management, Development and Planning and is active member of several think-tanks and NGOs in Bosnia and Herzegovina. She has more than 15 years of experience in managing projects that cover a 3 wide range of topics related to local development, good governance, democracy, and environmental affairs. Her professional interests extend to the academic and policy research related to mechanisms for citizen participation, formal and informal institutions, tools for power analysis and promotion of democracy. Increasingly, she provides advisory and consultancy services to development cooperation agencies and international and local NGOs active in Bosnia and Herzegovina and other countries in the Western Balkan region. She holds an MSc in Environmental Sciences and Policy from the Central European University in Budapest (Hungary) and has completed a policy fellowship on the topic “Citizen Participation in Public Decision-Making: How Sub-national Governments Can Support Citizen Engagement and Institutionalize Participatory Practices” at the Local Government and Public Service Reform Initiative (LGI OSI), Budapest, Hungary. Mr. Robby MUHUMUZA (Uganda) Mr. Robby Muhumuza works as a Management and Communications Consultant with the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) in Uganda in charge of youth engagement programming. He started his career as a Lecturer at Makerere University between 1982 and 1987. In the past, he has worked as Communications Director for World Vision Uganda (1987-1999); National Director for World Vision Uganda (1999-2006); East Africa Regional Director for World Vision based in Nairobi and overseeing World Vision operations in Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, Rwanda, Burundi, Sudan, Somalia and Ethiopia (2006-2009); Adjunct Professor of Leadership and Management with Development Associates International (DAI) in Nigeria, Burundi, Kenya, Uganda, India and Nepal, 2009-2011. He has a Bachelor of Arts (Literature in English) from Makerere University, 1982; Master of Science in Journalism from Ohio University, 1987; and a Master of Arts in Organizational Leadership and Management from Uganda Christian University, Mukono. He is a Director on a number of Boards including Monitor Publications (owners of KFM and Dembe FM radio stations), Power FM Radio Station, Straight Talk Foundation, African Centre for Apologetics Research and Reformed Theological College. Dr. Graham SMITH (United Kingdom) Dr. Graham Smith is currently Professor of Politics at the Centre for the Study of Democracy, University of Westminster, UK. He has written a number of books and essays on democratic theory and practice, environmental politics and the social economy. One of his two main areas of research focus is democratic innovations - institutions designed to increase and deepen citizen participation in the political decisionmaking process. This work builds on the theoretical approach initially developed in his book Democratic Innovations: Designing Institutions for Citizen Participation (Cambridge University Press: 2009). He is active in the development of Participedia, a global knowledge platform for democratic innovations www.participedia.net with colleagues in Universities of Harvard and British Columbia. Also he is on the Executive Committee of Participedia and a Trustee of the Foundation for Democracy and Sustainable Development. 4 Mr. Anthony ZACHARZEWSKI (United Kingdom) Mr. Anthony Zacharzewski is the director of the Democratic Society, a British non-profit organisation that promotes democracy, good debate and new models of participative government. The Society is involved in a range of projects designing new democratic spaces, including NHS Citizen and the United Kingdom Government’s Open Policymaking programme. In his earlier career, he was a senior civil servant in the British Cabinet Office and worked on strategy and policy in HM Treasury, the Privy Council Office, Brighton & Hove City Council and the Department of Health. 5