Saturday, December 11, 2010

Close to our own backyard


Thanks Cheryl for the wake-up call. I hadn't read about this yet.

From the Boston Globe article:



Tuesday, November 9, 2010

First-ever New England Women's Centers Conference (NEWCC2010)





The first annual New England Women's Centers Conference 2010 took place on Friday, Nov. 5th and Saturday, Nov. 6th in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The event was hosted by Harvard College Women's Center in Boylston Hall, Harvard Yard. The conference gave participants an opportunity for networking, cross institutional collaboration, peer support, and professional development. Over sixty of us gathered on Harvard's epic main campus and quickly got down to work.

Gina Helfrich PhD, Assistant Director for HWC, was instrumental in inspiring and mobilizing the steering committee, which included Lesley's Daphne Strassmann, coordinator of the Women's Center.

Click here to read the Harvard Crimson's report.

Here is a brief overview of our two days:

Conference Schedule

Friday - Nov. 5th
4:00-5:30pm - Check-in and Welcome Reception
5:30-6:30pm - Roundtable Discussion: Women's Centers Best Practices
6:30-7:30pm - Dinner
7:30-9:30pm - Performance of "We All Will Be Received" and post-show talk-back




The performance was incredibly moving and charged with provocative questions about gender and identity. There was some Elvis, even some Dolly Parton, and great cast and premise to tell a story. No messy endings here. The questions were left open but the story resolved. With the multimedia backdrop of the play was both clever and particularly effective in combining all of the themes of this performance. We will try to bring "We will all be received" to our Lesley campus very soon.


Saturday - Nov. 6th

Before breakfast we got a tour of the Harvard Women's Center. This was a great opportunity to see first-hand how other centers operate. We came away inspired by the great work HWC does. The center does a great job with mentoring programs and community outreach whiting the campus. The center is staffed by 12 interns, a director and an assistant director. The HWC also has volunteers and many on-campus groups use the space for meetings, including the weekends. The space itself is welcoming and warm, which is located on the main campus an affiliated with the student life department of Harvard. We poked around the space while the director, Susan Marine PhD, gave us some important background on the center's history and different incarnations.
This was also an important time to ask operational questions about budget, funding, hours and specific events which the center hosts as part of regular programming and also for fund-raising opportunities.

The center frequently showcases artwork of students. The main sitting section is accessible to the kitchen and lounge television area.

Susan Marine shows us a time line which explains the history and different incarnations of the Women's Center in Harvard.


The main kitchen area is open to students during open hours and available for groups to meet and use the space to tailor needs of groups or individuals.


Interns post articles of interest to those who use the center or visit the center on a regular basis.

The main hallway of the center leads to a conference room, the reception desk and offices.

One of the offices

Conference room



Reception area staffed by 12 interns


9:00am-12:00pm - Breakfast, Break-Out Session 1, and Keynote


The Keynote presentation centered around a discussion of inter-generational feminism. Turning on its head the conventional idea of a Keynote speaker, the organizers decided instead to showcase our students. A conversation which directly addressed the recent controversial article American Electra: Feminism's ritual matricide, by Susan Faludi, was the centerpiece of the discussion.


Alice (Ali) Underwood a student intern of the Harvard Women's Center was the first speaker.

Bradley Craig, also a Harvard student intern for the Women's Center continued the discussion.


Bonnie Bryant of Lesley University, Third Wave Feminism club president, and member of the W.C steering committee, wraps up the session.
.



Break-Out Session 1


1a. Let’s Talk About Space – Why Women’s Centers and Women’s Studies programs are important to the college environment

1b. Programmatic Focus: Inclusive Communities – Why Women’s Centers are not just for women




12:00-1:00pm - Lunch

As we grabbed lunch and found places to seat, members from the T.O.P (Theological Opportunities Program) Lecture series, sat down with us for in-depth discussion of Waves of Feminism. T.O.P members are long-time feminists, who were in the forefront of the movement.

1:00-3:30pm - Break-Out Sessions 2 and 3

Break-Out Session 2

2a. Reaching Across Campuses – The necessity of collaboration and how we go about doing it

This session was moderated by our own Daphne Strassmann and Dr. Amy Rutstein-Riley. We had a lively and helpful discussion about cross collaboration within our campuses, outside of them with other institutions as well as collaborations with community organizations.

2b. Programmatic Focus: Preventing violence in our communities and how to raise awareness of the problem

Break-Out Session 3

3a. Going for the Green – Best practices for fundraising and connecting/working with donors

3b. Programmatic Focus: Engaging our Communities – getting students active in the local community


3:30-4:30pm - Conclusion

The conclusion intake was also productive. We provided feedback to Gina Helfrich and Susan Marine and talked about different ways in which to keep in touch. We have plans to work in cross collaboration by maintaining a blog to use as a central communication area for centers to use in publicizing events and staying in touch. Lesley's Women's Center and BU's Women's Center volunteered to head this initiative. We also envision the blog as a place to plan for getting together for the upcoming NEWSA conference in April 2011.

Vagina Monologues. Come audition!



Lesley University student Rachael Cina has been working non-stop to present a production of the Vagina Monologues here in Lesley on February 11 &1 2, 2011.

Auditions Sunday 11/4. Choose from 1pm or 7pm time slots. We're meeting at the conference room tucked behind the student center.

You don't need to prepare anything. Just show up.
More information or to set up a different time to audition.
rcina@lesley.edu

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

The Men, And Women, Of Yale

Thanks to Dr. Amy Rustein-Riley for pointing us to this article.(Via Ms. Magazine blog)

Nearly thirty years ago, in a column in the New York Times Magazine, conservative firebrand William F. Buckley waxed nostalgic about his college days at Yale. He imagined a young Yalie today, at the now-coed, gender integrated, university, longing for “a fraternity house that wouldn’t end:” Read more here...




The Millennial Man’s Field Guide to Feminist Mythbusting



Afraid you can’t hold the door or offer to pay for dinner for fear of insulting a feminist? Fear not, they’re not as scary as they seem. Learn what’s true and what’s a myth in our deconstruction of the modern American Feminist. Read the rest here....

Posted by: Daphne Strassmann

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Subjectified. Screening Thursday 10-21 at the Marran 7pm








Subjectified appealed to me instantly. I admired the sincere delivery of a vital conversation around young women and sex and impressed by director's smooth restraint. When Melissa Tapper Goldman created her film she allowed the women in her documentary voice their stories.

Back in February, I went to the awesome series: Chicks Make Flicks presented by Women in Film & Video New England, and the Program in Women's & Gender Studies at MIT. The room was filled. When the lights came back on hands began shooting up in the air. We all had questions and the director - along with one of the women in the film - took the questions one by one. I was hooked.

Back at the Lesley Women's Center I had just assembled a magnificent panel to lead a discussion and answer questions about sex. Our vision? To become a resource for accurate and honest information about anything that anyone wanted to know about sex. Anything. So as Melissa answered the questions I only thought about bringing the film back to Lesley. During that Q&A her generosity was palpable as she encouraged others in the audience to do the same as she had. Pick up a camera, chase and nurture your passion, look for answers and share the results with the rest of us. A shy young man asked Melissa if young men would speak about sex. Would her documentary project number 2 be the male version of Subjectified? "You go do it!" She told him. "I am serious!" She was. She looked almost ready to continued and added: "Call me and I can talk to you about how I did this."

The film is closely shot and intimate. The conversation is fun and open, but it is also discreet. In the background, Melissa's voice is easy on the ears even when the questions are intimate or venture into areas that even today, with our informal and generous over sharing, could get a bit personal. Truth be told - and it is - the women of Subjectified tell us what we want to know. Melissa Tapper Goldman showcases the voices of the film's subjects and her point of view doesn't stray. Inevitably the audience takes in a narrative of stories that extend beyond sex and these specific women.

The stories the Subjectified women tell, sneak into areas as unique as each woman speaking for Melissa's camera. Some accounts deal with religion, body image, unique desire, experimentation, pregnancy and gender. But today reality and information sharing are omnipresent badges of youth's cultural identity. This is how we live. To read detailed interactions in media and watch 'real' conversations on line happen is, well, the way it is. And in Subjectified the conversations are stripped-down real, not glossy or managed. One doesn't sit in front of the screen and feel as if they are peeping into an embarrassing tale and shouldn't be listening. You don't get that funny pit in the stomach about hearing something you don't want to hear. To be clear in a manner of current speaking. This not over-sharing. In fact a viewer experiences Subjectified like talking comfortably to people you like. So it is easy-listening. Free-flow. These women are real. The stories they tell are real and there is no gimmick. We haven't inadvertently walked into a group-support meeting.

For about three weeks now, Duke University has been on the news, thanks through our friends at Jezebel, and now in traditional news outlets. The 'fuck-list' is all the rage and we, the more grown-ups, educators and parents, are scratching our heads about the significance of the 'hook-up' culture and the influence of alcohol in college campuses around the country, making hooking up and drinking a symbiotic pairing. But back in 1977, as my husband (an MIT grad)reminded me, a similarly infamous list was known on the MIT campus for years. He remembers showing up to his freshman orientation in 1980 where someone handed him a copy of 'Our Bodies Our Selves,' for which I will be eternally grateful. The assumption from a wise future-seeing person was that when you are young and you think about sex, nothing is a sure thing. There are questions. Many of them and some of them will only come into conscious focus when the first sexual experiences begin for young men and women of all ages and genders. So with the utilitarian nature of the search engine available to provide answer to this questions, I quiver. What the return query on a string search that includes the word sex in the Google white box?

Subjectified begins with one question: "Why do girls have sex?" You might have an assumption, a personal opinion, experience, hindsight. You can fill in the blanks and walk away thinking you have got it figured out for yourself, your sister, brother or children. Why do girls have sex? The answers, I promise will enlighten you.

Subjectified: Screening followed by a Q&A
Come by by 6pm and enjoy a reception with a light fare hosted by Alumni Relations
7 pm
Marran Theater Lesley University

Posted by: Daphne Strassmann

Thursday, September 30, 2010

Meryl Streep Speaks Out For The National Women's History Museum

No Women's History Museum for you Ms. Streep!

Coburn, DeMint Block National Women’s History Museum Because ‘Quilters’ And ‘Cowgirl’ Museums Already Exist



and

Two senators put hold on women's museum



And finally...
Take an on-line tour of the museum's virtual exhibit.

If we lived in Germany, we'd be featured in this magazine

Thanks Jezebel for always finding us cool links.





Be sure and scroll through all of the lovely images.

By: Daphne Strassmann

Debrief: Girls' Groups Project - Spring 2010

During the Spring, Assistant Professor Amy-Rutstein Riley organized Lesley's first Service Learning course: Girlhood, Identity, and Girl Culture. The course was designed to combine the theory of Girls' Studies with an experiential learning component. Twenty Lesley undergraduates successfully planned, organized and facilitated two girls' groups for middle school girls from Cambridge.



Group 1, Week 2

Lesley students worked with middle school students in small groups to make media collages. The collages reflected positive vs. negative images that are portrayed about women in the media and was a powerful introduction to media literacy for both Lesley students and the young girls. The girls presented their completed media collages to the larger group.






Group 1, Week 4



At the beginning of our discussion on cliques, the girls were asked to write something mean they have said about someone on a poster. Group members were able to talk about cliques and how it was hurtful to be excluded at school. At the end of the session, the girls ripped up the "mean word" poster to demonstrate progress.







Group 1, Week 4

Skits were created and performed by small groups on the topic of bullying. Scenarios were acted out in front of the larger group on issues like spreading rumors and stereotypes. The skits allowed group members to act as a team toward a common goal and generated discussion about bullying.





Group 1, Week 5



Old shoe boxes, magazine clippings, and glitter were used to create Identity Boxes. The outside of the box was designed to reflect how the girls are perceived on the outside, and the inside of the boxes represented their genuine identities.





Celebration, Week 7


The last meeting was dedicated to celebrating the girls and the work that they had done. The event took place at Alumni Hall and an intimate group from Lesley and Cambridge were invited to attend. The girls' artwork was displayed to form a gallery walk. Both Lesley and middle school girls were asked to speak about their experience. Each girl was presented with a book which had pictures and excepts from the girls'
groups.






By: Marie LaFlamme


Links to Marie's previous project posts:


November 2009:

http://lesleywomenscenter.blogspot.com/2009/11/girlhood-identity-and-girl-culture-new.html


February 2010:

http://lesleywomenscenter.blogspot.com/2010/02/excitement-is-in-air-at-lesley.html


Contact Amy Rutstein-Riley at arutstei@lesley.edu with any questions about this project!

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Oh! some men like their women more '50 years ago-like'




“For me, they were like a princess,” she said. “And I kept those pictures in my mind, and I made a wish that one day I would like to be one of those ladies.” So begins the article. Read more here:


By Daphne Strassmann
Via Jezebel from NYT and The Nation

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Amazing Graceful Intelligent Articulation

I read Jezebel frequently. I actually go to it as many times, if not more, than I do Google news. There are many reasons for parking brain on Jezebel's blog. I get witty Tim Gunnquips from Project Runway, I feast on photo-shopping disasters, get a bit of tabloid trash, but most importantly, I hook on to links that describe a woman's world outside of my living room couch. Today, I found a gem, which I need to share with you. Listen and learn from Melissa Harris Lacewell, while being thankful that women like her have a brain and influence on higher learning.




Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy



Posted by: Daphne Strassmann

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Lesley faculty and staff writer's group returns



It is that time again. We're going to have a wonderful kick-off to our group this fall 2010 semester. Celia Jeffries will be leading the group in a productive workshop which will re-spark your semester's resolutions for all of your writing projects.

The workshop:

Back in the Saddle

Is it time to ‘re-vision’ your writing project? Time to take a closer look, a different perspective, time for a jump-start? In this first session we’ll discuss revision as an on-going part of the writing process and use one or two exercises to begin that process.

About Celia:

Celia Jeffries, MA Brandeis, MFA Lesley University, has an extensive background in education, journalism, and publishing. She is an Amherst Writers and Artists Affiliate and trainer and led workshops in the Boston area for over six years before moving to Western Massachusetts. Her work has appeared in several publications, including the anthology Beyond the Yellow Wallpaper and Westview, Writer's Chronicle and Solsticelitmag.com. Celia is the managing editor of Patchwork Journal, has served in the Writer-in-Residence program at Forbes Library, and on the faculty of Lesley University in Cambridge Massachusetts. She is currently on the faculty of Writers in Progress in Northampton, Massachusetts.

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Big ideas that set us back (and then some)



I just found this via Jezebel and still shaking my head.Really?

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Really? Via Jezebel


By: Daphne Strassmann

Ken's moment of truth. (Still another reason to love Pixar)



By Daphne Strassmann

Memories of the way we didn't want to be.



(Via Consumerist)

It seems to ring true that have come a long way when you see these ads



By: Daphne Strassmann

Sunday, May 9, 2010

Happy Mother's day to all Lesley Community Moms!



The gorgeous movie star-looking woman in the photo above, is my mom Marie Henriquez. Since 2003, I have missed her love, her strength, humor and determination every single day, as have my sisters. Though her presence is steady in how I parent my own children, my only regret is that she couldn't continue to be the awesome and fun grandmother she was already on track to become.

Yes, Hallmark makes a mint on a day like today, but any reminder to celebrate your mom, is usually a good thing. Don't forget the men out there, who parent children on their own, and raise families. Don't forget your grandmas, and godmothers, or any other person who 'mothers' you in any way.

So to everyone:

We hope this is a wonderful, happy and hopeful day!

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Another great post via Jezebel






Recently, one of my photos was submitted to a hateful and fatphobic (transphobic, ageist, etc etc) Facebook group: "There's a weight limit on leggings & skinny jeans."

I have posted photos of myself on the internet for years, and have copped a huge variety of flack (but WAY more compliments!) So I wasn't really upset that someone had taken a photo I had posted to an outfit website, and submitted it to this nasty group, after all it was just a matter of time – and who knows, more of my photos could be posted in any number of bigotry-filled hideyholes online. I have heard so many jabs at my fatness that insults just sound like caricatures of other insults these days, but for many other people it is really upsetting and distressing.

Read more here:

Posted by: Daphne Strassmann

Monday, April 26, 2010

Another great post via Jezebel


Any article that starts by using the words Barbie and abortion in the same sentence is and interesting read:


"I was pretty young when my Barbies started having abortions," said writer Jennifer Baumgardner last night. The event was called "Young Women, Feminism And The Future." I wished for a little bit more of the future stuff.


Posted by: Daphne Strassmann

Friday, March 26, 2010

Iceland: the world's most feminist country

Iceland has just banned all strip clubs. Perhaps it's down to the lesbian prime minister, but this may just be the most female-friendly country on the planet

  • Julie Bindel

Julie Bindel
guardian.co.uk, Thursday 25 March 2010 22.00 GMT

Iceland's Prime Minister Johanna Sigurdardottir

Johanna Sigurdardottir, prime minister of Iceland. Photograph: Bob Strong/REUTERS

Iceland is fast becoming a world-leader in feminism. A country with a tiny population of 320,000, it is on the brink of achieving what many considered to be impossible: closing down its sex industry.

While activists in Britain battle on in an attempt to regulate lapdance clubs – the number of which has been growing at an alarming rate during the last decade – Iceland has passed a law that will result in every strip club in the country being shut down. And forget hiring a topless waitress in an attempt to get around the bar: the law, which was passed with no votes against and only two abstentions, will make it illegal for any business to profit from the nudity of its employees.

Even more impressive: the Nordic state is the first country in the world to ban stripping and lapdancing for feminist, rather than religious, reasons. Kolbrún Halldórsdóttir, the politician who first proposed the ban, firmly told the national press on Wednesday: "It is not acceptable that women or people in general are a product to be sold." When I asked her if she thinks Iceland has become the greatest feminist country in the world, she replied: "It is certainly up there. Mainly as a result of the feminist groups putting pressure on parliamentarians. These women work 24 hours a day, seven days a week with their campaigns and it eventually filters down to all of society."

The news is a real boost to feminists around the world, showing us that when an entire country unites behind an idea anything can happen. And it is bound to give a shot in the arm to the feminist campaign in the UK against an industry that is both a cause and a consequence of gaping inequality between men and women.

According to Icelandic police, 100 foreign women travel to the country annually to work in strip clubs. It is unclear whether the women are trafficked, but feminists say it is telling that as the stripping industry has grown, the number of Icelandic women wishing to work in it has not. Supporters of the bill say that some of the clubs are a front for prostitution – and that many of the women work there because of drug abuse and poverty rather than free choice. I have visited a strip club in Reykjavik and observed the women. None of them looked happy in their work.

So how has Iceland managed it? To start with, it has a strong women's movement and a high number of female politicans. Almost half the parliamentarians are female and it was ranked fourth out of 130 countries on the international gender gap index (behind Norway, Finland and Sweden). All four of these Scandinavian countries have, to some degree, criminalised the purchase of sex (legislation that the UK will adopt on 1 April). "Once you break past the glass ceiling and have more than one third of female politicians," says Halldórsdóttir, "something changes. Feminist energy seems to permeate everything."

Johanna Sigurðardottir is Iceland's first female and the world's first openly lesbian head of state. Guðrún Jónsdóttir of Stígamót, an organisation based in Reykjavik that campaigns against sexual violence, says she has enjoyed the support of Sigurðardottir for their campaigns against rape and domestic violence: "Johanna is a great feminist in that she challenges the men in her party and refuses to let them oppress her."

Then there is the fact that feminists in Iceland appear to be entirely united in opposition to prostitution, unlike the UK where heated debates rage over whether prostitution and lapdancing are empowering or degrading to women. There is also public support: the ban on commercial sexual activity is not only supported by feminists but also much of the population. A 2007 poll found that 82% of women and 57% of men support the criminalisation of paying for sex – either in brothels or lapdance clubs – and fewer than 10% of Icelanders were opposed.

Jónsdóttir says the ban could mean the death of the sex industry. "Last year we passed a law against the purchase of sex, recently introduced an action plan on trafficking of women, and now we have shut down the strip clubs. The Nordic countries are leading the way on women's equality, recognising women as equal citizens rather than commodities for sale."

Strip club owners are, not surprisingly, furious about the new law. One gave an interview to a local newspaper in which he likened Iceland's approach to that of a country such as Saudi Arabia, where it is not permitted to see any part of a woman's body in public. "I have reached the age where I'm not sure whether I want to bother with this hassle any more," he said.

Janice Raymond, a director of Coalition Against Trafficking in Women, hopes that all sex industry profiteers feel the same way, and believes the new law will pave the way for governments in other countries to follow suit. "What a victory, not only for the Icelanders but for everyone worldwide who repudiates the sexual exploitation of women," she says.

Jónsdóttir is confident that the law will create a change in attitudes towards women. "I guess the men of Iceland will just have to get used to the idea that women are not for sale."

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News and Media Limited 2010

By: Daphne Strassmann

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Decades of Art Making



Please join us for the reception for our Alumnae Show, Decades of Art Making. We are delighted to host the artists and invite you to see the wonderful work they create. The Women's Center is sponsoring the event as a celebration of Lesley's Centennial. The work represents several mediums including, oil on silk, quilting, photography and sculpture. We look forward to seeing you.

Wednesday
March 24
5pm to 7pm
Marran Gallery, Main Campus

By: Daphne Strassmann

Monday, March 22, 2010

A History course with a relevant and unique perspective


Check this out:

This class sounds like it will be an incredible opportunity to learn history from the perspective of a woman and visionary: Edith Lesley Wolfard, (Does the name sound familiar?). Everything about the course seems unique, and you will get an opportunity to learn and understand how to conduct historical research here in Cambridge! Check it out and see if the course matches your degree requirements in any way.

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Women in the world- via the Daily Beast


Read about the amazing conference in NYC showcasing incredible speakers addressing important topics for women all over the world.



From Queen Rania to Hillary Clinton, Meryl Streep, and dozens of activists from around the world, see our complete list of summit speakers and perfomers. Bios written by The Daily Beast.

Author Photo - Queen Rania Her Majesty Queen Rania Al Abdullah, Queen of Jordan

An outspoken advocate for women and children’s rights, Queen Rania Al Abdullah is dedicated to improving education opportunities for adolescent girls, who, she writes, “have the power to turn our world around.” She’s also “the globe’s most tech-savvy monarch,” as Forbes dubbed her last year. Indeed, Queen Rania boasts more than 1.2 million followers on Twitter. She nabbed YouTube’s first Visionary Award for a series of online broadcasts aimed at ending negative stereotyping of Arabs and Muslims. In addition to launching local education initiatives in her home country of Jordan—including the Queen Rania Teachers’ Academy and Madrasati, a public-private partnership to renovate 500 needy public schools—she has supported UNESCO’s Education for All campaign, the United Nations Girls’ Education Initiative, and efforts to achieve the Millennium Development Goals, among other causes. She is UNICEF’s Eminent Global Advocate for Children, as well as a board member of the United Nations Foundation.

Author Photo - Hafsat Abiola Hafsat Abiola, human-rights activist, founder, Kudirat Initiative for Democracy

The week Hafsat Abiola was to graduate from Harvard in 1996, she learned that her mother had been murdered in Lagos, Nigeria. She had been demonstrating for the release of her father, who had been elected president of Nigeria but was imprisoned. He later died in detention. But Abiola was not scared away from activism. She founded of the Kudirat Initiative for Democracy—named for her mother—a nonprofit that provides skills-training and leadership opportunities for young women across Nigeria. She is the founder and CEO of China-Africa Bridge, a company that aids business and cooperation between China and Africa and promotes sustainable development. She is an Ashoka fellow, a World Economic Forum Young Global Leader, and has been in a leader in several of Vital Voices’ Africa Programs. She is portrayed by Stephanie Okereke in The Women in the World reading of SEVEN.

Author Photo - Shohreh Aghdashloo Shohreh Aghdashloo, actress

With the country’s airports ordered closed on the eve of the 1979 revolution, Shohreh Aghdashloo fled Iran in the middle of the night, driving seven hours to the border. She was just 25. Aghdashloo was educated in England, where she continued the acting career she began in Iran. She was nominated for an Academy Award for her performance in the 2003 film The House of Sand and Fog. Aghdashloo’s film The Stoning of Soraya M. was released as pro-democracy protests were violently crushed in Tehran last summer. The movie follows the story of a young woman who was stoned to death in an Iranian village. In the Women in the World reading of SEVEN, Aghdashloo will portray Farida Azizi, an activist who fought the Taliban’s brutal repression of Afghan women.

Author Photo - Madeleine Albright Madeleine K. Albright, former U.S. Secretary of State; chair of Albright Stonebridge Group

When Madeleine Albright became the first female Secretary of State, she also became the then-highest-ranking woman in the history of U.S. government. Serving under President Bill Clinton, Albright advocated for democracy and human rights, and promoted American trade and business, labor, and environmental standards abroad. Prior to her appointment in 1997, she served as U.S. representative to the United Nations. Albright currently works as chairman of Albright Stonebridge Group, a global strategy firm, and chairman of Albright Capital Management LLC, an investment advisory firm focused on emerging markets. She is also a professor at the Georgetown University School of Foreign Service. She chairs the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs and the Pew Global Attitudes Project and serves on the board of the Council on Foreign Relations and is a trustee of the Aspen Institute. She is the author of four New York Times bestsellers, most recently, Read My Pins: Stories from a Diplomat's Jewel Box.

Author Photo - Christiane Amanpour Christiane Amanpour, CNN chief international correspondent, anchor, host of Amanpour

In nearly three decades at CNN, Christiane Amanpour has reported on all the world’s major crises. As The New York Times put it in 2008, she has “hopscotched the world, the very model of a foreign correspondent, turning up at seemingly every war, genocide, famine and natural disaster, slipping through previously closed borders and interviewing even the most recalcitrant of foreign leaders.” Her interview credits are vast, including Iranian Presidents Mohammad Khatami and Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, as well as the presidents of Afghanistan, Sudan, Syria, and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat. She has earned nine news and documentary Emmy Awards, four George Foster Peabody Awards, two George Polk Awards, three duPont-Columbia Awards, the Courage in Journalism Award, and an Edward R. Murrow Award, as well as numerous honorary degrees. In September 2009, Amanpour launched her eponymous 30-minute nightly interview program on CNN International. A recent interview was with Angelina Jolie, in which the two discussed her charity work and visit to post-earthquake Haiti.

Helen Amdemikael, sociologist and gender activist

Helen Amdemikael is the assistant representative for the United Nations Population Fund at the Ethiopia office. Prior to assuming a management position, Amdemikael was coordinating the gender portfolio of the country office and supporting programs addressing inequalities among young girls and women. Amdemikael has a diverse career background in the development sector, ranging from field research experience with international NGOs, advisory experience in the bilateral sector, and working experience in areas of management and advocacy in the multilateral sector.

Author Photo - Farida Azizi Farida Azizi, peace activist

Threats against her life forced Farida Azizi and her family to leave Afghanistan and seek asylum in the U.S. in 2000. Azizi had successfully run a humanitarian aid program for women for five years under Taliban rule. As a peace activist, she has continued to promote the human rights of Afghan women through her advocacy at the international level. While a program officer for the Norwegian Church Aid Afghanistan Program from 1996-2000, Azizi supervised the women’s program, implemented by NCA’s partner organizations. She was one of the founding members of the Cooperation for Peace and Unity, a network committed to developing peace capacities at the grassroots level. Azizi is portrayed by Shohreh Aghdashloo in the Women in the World reading of SEVEN.

Author Photo - Kiran Bedi Kiran Bedi, India’s first and highest-ranking female police officer

After breaking ground as India’s first female police officer—patrolling the country’s streets for 35 years, until she retired in 2007—Bedi took on the role of police adviser to United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan, earning her doctorate along the way. Last year, award-winning Australian filmmaker Megan Doneman released Yes Madam, Sir, a documentary about Bedi’s life (narrated by Academy Award winner Helen Mirren) that has been screened at festivals around the world. In a glowing review of the film, The Hollywood Reporter noted that Bedi's achievements include “single-handedly dispersing 200 sword-wielding rioters when her male colleagues [had fled], cleaning up and bringing order and even peace to the notorious Tihar Prisons, and reorganizing New Delhi's woeful police training school.” Her successes don’t stop there: Bedi is the founder of the NGOs Navjyoti and India Vision Foundation, which provide drug-abuse treatment, schooling for children of prisoners, and community-development aid. She is also the recipient of the prestigious Ramon Magsaysay Award (often called the “Asian Nobel Prize”), as well as the author of several books. In a poll conducted by the news magazine The Week, she was voted India’s most admired woman.

Author Photo - Fatima Bhutto Fatima Bhutto, Pakistan correspondent for The Daily Beast, author, activist

Fatima Bhutto’s history of her family and Pakistani politics, Songs of Blood and Sword, will be published this fall, and what a story that history is. Bhutto was born in Kabul in 1982, while her father, Murtaza Bhutto, was in exile from Pakistan. Murtaza Bhutto was the son of former Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto and was killed in 1996 by police in Karachi. Her aunt, Benazir Bhutto, was prime minister at the time; she was assassinated in 2007. Fatima Bhutto is also a journalist and has written for The Daily Beast, the New Statesman, the Los Angeles Times, and other publications. She has published two other books, Whispers of the Desert and 8:50 a.m. 8 October 2005.


Cherie Blair, founder, the Cherie Blair Foundation for Women

From 1997 to 2007, Cherie Blair served as first lady of the United Kingdom—yet as Time magazine said in 2008, she “always seemed too vivid and spiky for a supporting role.” A human-rights lawyer and judge, Blair has spent more than three decades fighting for equal rights, particularly for the rights of women and children. She is honorary vice president of U.K. children’s charity Barnado's and president of the Loomba Trust, helping to care for widows around the world. In 2008, she founded the Cherie Blair Foundation for Women, aimed at empowering female entrepreneurs in the developing world. She is the author of the memoir Speaking for Myself, touted for its rare honesty and glimpse into life at 10 Downing Street.

Jeff Bolding, founder and director, Sistas of the Flame

Jeff Bolding is a singer, director, arranger, pianist, and actor as well as the 2004 AUDELCO winner for Best Outstanding Ensemble Performance in Great Men of Gospel: Spirit Into Sound. Bolding’s music ministry blends elements from the classical, pop, jazz, and gospel genres. Since 1996, Bolding has been director of the Chancel Choir (renamed The Inspirational Voices of Abyssinian in 2008). Bolding’s work has taken him around the globe, including to Ethiopia with 165 pilgrims from Abyssinian Baptist Church. Bolding is founder and executive director of the Global Community Advisory Resources and Empowerment Project (G-CARE Project), a community and faith-based organization. He will be traveling to Berlin this month, at the invitation of gospel singer Ingrid Arthur.

Author Photo - Marie Brenner Marie Brenner, author and writer-at-large, Vanity Fair

Raised in San Antonio, Texas, celebrated author and investigative journalist Marie Brenner has been riveting national audiences since 1985, when she joined the staff of Vanity Fair. Her investigation into Big Tobacco became the basis for the 1999 film The Insider, starring Al Pacino and Russell Crowe and nominated for seven Academy Awards, including Best Picture. She is the author of five books, most recently Apples and Oranges: My Brother and Me, Lost and Found, which Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Alfred Uhry (Driving Miss Daisy) is adapting for the stage. She is the winner of six Front Page awards for her journalism and the Frank Luther Mott Kappa Tau Alpha Award for research.

Author Photo - Tina Brown Tina Brown, founder, editor in chief, The Daily Beast

Tina Brown was the first woman editor of three leading magazines. At the age of 25, soon after graduating from Oxford University, she edited (and saved) Britain's historic Tatler. She was then invited to the United States to rescue the relaunched Vanity Fair and, after succeeding in that, became the first woman editor of The New Yorker. Subsequently, she hosted the CNBC show Topic A With Tina Brown, and wrote The New York Times No. 1 bestseller The Diana Chronicles. In 2008, she partnered with Barry Diller, chairman and chief executive officer of IAC, in the successful founding of The Daily Beast, a nonpartisan, curated site for news, original reporting, and opinion.

Author Photo - Mika Brzezinski Mika Brzezinski, co-host of Morning Joe and MSNBC anchor

She’s been a major presence in broadcast news for decades, and currently serves as Joe Scarborough’s sidekick on MSNBC’s Morning Joe. With the publication of her New York Times-bestselling book All Things at Once, Mika Brzezinski has also become a major voice in national discussions on women’s work-life balance. “One of my prevailing messages for girls who want to be in any really highly competitive business is, if you intend to have a family, then don’t forget to have kids,” she told The Daily Beast. “Don’t let the most important choice you might make in life—and that’s a partner and the possibility of having children—pass you by because you’re busy trying to climb the ladder.” That said, Brzezinski has climbed high: Before her current post, she was an anchor of the CBS Evening News Weekend Edition, as well as a CBS News correspondent; she frequently contributed to CBS Sunday Morning and 60 Minutes. A native of New York City, she is the daughter of foreign-policy expert and former National Security Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski.

Author Photo - Kathy Buskin Calvin Kathy Bushkin Calvin, CEO, the United Nations Foundation

As CEO of the United Nations Foundation, Kathy Bushkin Calvin has worked to combat child mortality, empower women and girls, create a clean-energy future, and improve U.S.-U.N. relations, among many other causes. Previously, Calvin served as president of the AOL Time Warner Foundation and was the chief architect of the company's corporate-responsibility initiatives. She serves on the board of Internews, an international media development organization, and sits on the boards of the International Women's Media Foundation, the United Nations Association of the United States of America, and other philanthropic organizations. She is also the co-founder of the Stargazer Foundation, which provides free online tools for nonprofits.

Author Photo - Luis CdeBaca Luis CdeBaca, ambassador-at-large, Office to Monitor and Combat Human Trafficking

As director of the State Department Office to Monitor and Combat Human Trafficking, Ambassador-at-Large Luis CdeBaca has the job of battling a scourge that one might think was banished from the U.S. 150 years ago: slavery. Modern slavery is a big, if unseen, business—about 12.5 million people in the world work against their will. CdeBaca pioneered the victim-centered approach to fighting human trafficking, a strategy that focuses on helping victims instead of punishing them for breaking prostitution or immigration laws. CdeBaca has told The Daily Beast that it’s the combination of “hope and spunkiness” of many victims that motivates them to seek out a better life, only to be snared by criminals promising them jobs. It’s the go-getters who are targeted, and they are the people CdeBaca wants to help. “I’ve seen their potential, and once we break the power of the trafficker, I think that’s the thing that drives me.”

Author Photo - Sohini Chakraborty Sohini Chakraborty, dance activist, founder, Kolkata Sanved

The best way to heal the wounds of sexual violence, Sohini Chakraborty believes, is through physical expression, because victims of such torture feel negatively about their bodies. She began her work by volunteering with Sanlaap, a nonprofit that aids children forced to work in the sex industry. Chakraborty encouraged girls to perform simple movements, and gradually they opened up about the trauma they’d experienced. She established Kolkata Sanved in 2004, in the belief that the combination of dance and performance would help victims feel comfortable and part of society. Since then, her organization has helped more than 5,000 former child prostitutes rejoin society.

Juju Chang, news anchor, ABC’s Good Morning America

Juju Chang is an Emmy Award-winning journalist and news anchor for Good Morning America. Chang’s most recent Emmy was for breaking-news coverage of California wildfires. She has won Gracies for a 20/20 story on gender equality in the sciences and a Freddie for a PBS series she hosted, The Art of Women’s Health. From 1999 to 2000, she anchored the early-morning newscasts of ABC News’ World News Now and World News This Morning. Chang previously reported primarily for World News Tonight, covering such stories as the U.S. Embassy bombings in Kenya, Hurricane George, and the anniversary of the Chernobyl nuclear accident. Chang was based in Washington, D.C. from 1996-97 where she covered the White House, Capitol Hill, and the 1996 presidential election for NewsOne, ABC’s affiliate news service. Born in Seoul and raised in California, Chang graduated with honors from Stanford University with a bachelor’s degree in political science and communication.

Author Photo - Shoma Chaudhury Shoma Chaudhury, managing editor, Tehelka

Shoma Chaudhury is the managing editor of the internationally acclaimed Indian news magazine Tehelka. Previously, she worked with several mainstream Indian publications, including The Pioneer, India Today, and Outlook. In 2000, she left Outlook to join Tehelka, and was among the team that launched Tehelka.com. When the nervous government forced Tehelka to shutter its doors after its seminal expose on defense corruption, she was one of four people who stayed on to fight the magazine’s battles and relaunch it as a national newsweekly. Chaudhury has written extensively on urgent contemporary issues in India: religious strife, the Naxal insurgency, and conflicts between the Indian government and its people over land acquisitions.

Author Photo - Wei Sun Christianson Wei Sun Christianson, CEO and managing director, Morgan Stanley China

As head of Morgan Stanley China, Wei Sun Christianson manages all aspects of the firm's China business. Since assuming the role in 2006, she has successfully broadened the firm’s footprint in China and delivered more comprehensive services to clients. Throughout her career, she’s also helped to execute many of landmark privatizations critical to China's economic liberalization process, involving the restructuring and then initial public offerings of state-owned enterprises in New York, London, and Hong Kong. She has been listed on Fortune’s “International Power 50” list of the world’s most powerful women, and the Wall Street Journal’s “50 Women to Watch” List.

Author Photo - Hillary Clinton Hillary Rodham Clinton, 67th Secretary of State

After nearly four decades as a groundbreaking attorney, first lady, and senator, in January 2009, Hillary Rodham Clinton was sworn in as the country’s third female Secretary of State. Since then, she has risen to become a leading voice in global diplomacy, and she continues to be a passionate advocate for women and children’s rights. During her tenure as first lady, Secretary Clinton became a champion for health-care reform, leading successful bipartisan efforts to improve the country’s adoption and foster-care systems, reduce teen pregnancy, and provide health care to millions of children. Her famous speech in Beijing in 1995—when she declared that “human rights are women's rights, and women's rights are human rights”—helped to galvanize a global movement for women. As first lady, she and then-Secretary of State Madeleine K. Albright launched the Vital Voices Democracy Initiative. In 2000, Secretary Clinton became the first first lady elected to the U.S. Senate, and the first female senator to represent New York; in 2007, she began her historic bid for president. She is the author of several bestselling books, including her memoir, Living History and her groundbreaking book on children, It Takes A Village.

Author Photo - Katie Couric Katie Couric, anchor, managing editor, CBS Evening News; correspondent, 60 Minutes

As the first female solo anchor of an American weekday network evening news broadcast, Katie Couric is paving the way for younger generations of women broadcast journalists. Since signing on with CBS Evening News in 2006, she has conducted countless high-profile interviews, including with President Barack Obama. Her 2008 interview series with then-vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin won the Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Award. Prior to joining CBS, Couric spent 15 years as co-anchor of NBC's Today. She has covered nearly every major breaking news event that has taken place during her career, including the 9/11 attacks, the Columbine tragedy, six Olympic Games, and the funeral of Princess Diana. She’s received the George Foster Peabody Award, six Emmy Awards, and the Society of Professional Journalists' Sigma Delta Chi Award, among others. After losing her husband, Jay Monahan, to colon cancer in 1998, Couric helped to launch the National Colorectal Cancer Research Alliance to fund medical research and to encourage the prevention and early detection of the disease.

Author Photo - Anabella De Leon Anabella de Léon, member of the Guatemalan parliament

Anabella de León was born into a poor family, worked her way through a prestigious law school, and then assumed a series of increasingly important legal jobs, including chief counsel in Guatemala City, eventually becoming a member of the Guatemalan parliament. De León spent years fighting corruption and advocating for the rights of women and indigenous peoples. Because of her outspoken political activism, the Organization for American States’ Inter-American Human Rights Commission has requested that the government ensure de León’s safety. She has spearheaded Vital Voices programs to identify and train a new generation of female politicians in Guatemala. Lauren Velez will portray her in the Women in the World reading of SEVEN.

Marietou Diarra, Tostan participant and human-rights activist

Marietou Diarra lost a daughter to female genital-cutting more than a decade ago. Then, despite her horror, Diarra’s younger daughter underwent the procedure as well, because the family was afraid of intense social stigma. Those experiences led her to become involved with the Tostan Community Empowerment Program, and since 1998, she’s been working to end genital-cutting in Senegal by sharing her experience with others in neighboring villages. Diarra’s work has helped stop female genital-cutting in more than 60 villages. She also speaks, village-to-village, against child marriage and violence against women and girls.

Author Photo - Ching Eikenberry Ching Eikenberry, strategic communication coordinator, development outreach and communication, USAID/Afghanistan

Ching Eikenberry takes every opportunity to show a different kind of role for women in Afghanistan. She accompanies her husband Karl Eikenberry, the U.S. ambassador in Kabul, on every trip. “We want to send a message to the Afghan people that we work together as a team," she told the Seattle Times. Eikenberry works as a strategic communication coordinator for USAID in Kabul. Prior to moving to Afghanistan last year, she was an independent consultant for Booz Allen Hamilton, working on environmental issues and disaster management exchange between the U.S. Army and the People’s Liberation Army of China. Eikenberry worked as a reporter for several years and continues to be a freelance journalist.

Nora Ephron, director, author, screenwriter

Nora Ephron, acclaimed essayist, novelist, screenwriter and director, is the author of I Feel Bad About My Neck, Crazy Salad, Scribble Scribble, Wallflower at the Orgy, and Heartburn. She received Academy Award nominations for Best Original Screenplay for When Harry Met Sally…, Silkwood, and Sleepless in Seattle, which she also directed. Her other credits include the films Michael, You’ve Got Mail, and the play Imaginary Friends. She began her writing career at the New York Post and won acclaim as part of the “New Journalism” movement of the 1960s. In her latest film, she tells the parallel stories of famed food writer Julia Child and of a contemporary Manhattan woman who sets out to cook her way through every recipe in Childs’ classic Mastering the Art of French Cooking. The film, Julie & Julia opened in 2009 and stars Ephron’s friend and previous collaborator, Meryl Streep, as Julia Child.

Author Photo - Andeisha Farid Andeisha Farid, founder, AFCECO and one of Goldman Sachs' 10,000 Women

After her father taught her to read and write in refugee camps near Afghanistan, Andeisha Farid became determined to teach other Afghan children. At age 11, Farid pursued her dream, and while living in Pakistan, she began working with CharityHelp International. That group helped start a child sponsorship program and named Farid program coordinator. She returned to Kabul in 2007 to found the Afghan Child Education and Care Organization, which runs seven orphanages in Afghanistan, two in Pakistan, a girl’s school, and vocational centers. Farid’s aim is to promote tolerance and the value of education among young Afghans.

Author Photo - Thomas Friedman Thomas Friedman, New York Times columnist and Pulitzer Prize-winning author

Thomas Friedman was won the Pulitzer Prize three times for his reporting and commentary for The New York Times. His influential twice-weekly column covering foreign and domestic affairs was awarded in 2002 for “his clarity of vision… in commenting on the worldwide impact of the terrorist threat.” Reporting from Lebanon in 1983 and Israel in 1988 also earned Friedman journalism’s top honor. His 2005 book The World Is Flat is an international bestseller, and President Barack Obama has publicly mentioned reading Friedman’s 2008 bestselling followup, Hot, Flat and Crowded. Friedman has argued for the need to promote women’s rights internationally.

Author Photo - Leymah Gbowee Leymah Gbowee, executive director, Women Peace and Security Network Africa

As war ravaged Liberia, Leymah Gbowee realized it is women who bear the greatest burden in prolonged conflicts. She began organizing Christian and Muslim women to demonstrate together, founding Liberian Mass Action for Peace. They prayed together for peace and conducted a silent protest outside Monrovia’s presidential palace. Charles Taylor agreed to meet with the group, and then to attend cease-fire talks in Ghana. Gbowee’s group followed him there. She has received many awards, including the Blue Ribbon for Peace from Harvard's Kennedy School of Government and the John F. Kennedy Profile in Courage Award, which she accepted on behalf of the women of Liberia. Gbowee’s work was featured in the documentary Pray the Devil Back to Hell.

Bianna Golodryga, correspondent, ABC News

Bianna Golodryga was named correspondent to ABC News’ Good Morning America in July 2007. Since that time, Golodryga has covered the economy and business beat for all of the network’s broadcasts and platforms, including the weekend editions of World News, Good Morning America, and Nightline. Golodryga was the network’s Facebook correspondent during the recent ABC News/Facebook coverage of the 2008 election. Golodryga began her career in television news in 2001 as a bureau producer from the New York Stock Exchange for CNBC. In 2004, Golodryga became a segment producer for The Wall Street Journal Report with Maria Bartiromo, the nation’s most-watched financial-news program. In 2004, Golodryga was named one of the top financial journalists under the age of 30 by the NewsBios/TJFR Group.

Author Photo - Eliza Griswold Eliza Griswold, journalist

Eliza Griswold has reported from around the globe, from the Philippines to Nepal to Pakistan, on the war on terror, human rights and religion. A New America Foundation Fellow, Griswold’s work has appeared in The Daily Beast, The New Yorker, and The New York Times Magazine, among other publications. She received the 2010 Rome Prize and her next book, The Tenth Parallel: Dispatches from the Fault Line Between Christianity and Islam, will be published this year. Wideawake Field, her first book of poems, was published in 2007.

Richard Haass, president of the Council on Foreign Relations

Until June 2003, Richard Haass was director of policy planning for the Department of State as well as U.S. coordinator for policy toward the future of Afghanistan and U.S. envoy to the Northern Ireland peace process. Previously, Haass was vice president and director of foreign-policy studies at the Brookings Institution. He was also special assistant to President George H.W. Bush and senior director for Near East and South Asian affairs on the staff of the National Security Council from 1989 to 1993. Haass is the author or editor of 11 books on American foreign policy. A Rhodes Scholar, he holds a bachelor's degree from Oberlin College and both master’s and Doctor of Philosophy degrees from Oxford University.

Author Photo - Marcia Gay Harden Marcia Gay Harden, actress

Marcia Gay Harden is well-known for her wide range—particularly her ability to submerge into characters that are nothing like her warm Texan personality. It was one such character, Lee Krasner—an artist in her own right and muse to Jackson Pollock—that won Harden a well-deserved Oscar in 2001. Last year she won a Tony Award for Best Supporting Actress for her performance in God of Carnage; she was also seen in the film Whip It and the television series Damages. Harden was nominated for an Oscar for her role in Mystic River and earned an Emmy nomination for her appearance on Law & Order: SVU. In the Women in the World’s opening night production of SEVEN, Harden will play Marina Pisklakova-Parker, who campaigns against domestic violence in Russia.

Author Photo - Edna Adan Ismail Edna Adan Ismail, maternal and child-health activist and former foreign-affairs minister of Somaliland

Edna Adan Ismail is a global leader in the fight against female genital mutilation. Born in the British Somaliland Protectorate, Ismail became, in 1954, the first woman from Somaliland to win a scholarship to Great Britain, where she became a registered nurse and midwife. She returned to Somaliland to train nurses before being recruited in 1965 by the World Health Organization to be a nurse and midwife educator in Tripoli. Two years later, her husband, Mohamed Ibrahim Egal, became Somaliland’s prime minister, and Ismail returned to her homeland to serve as first lady. She became a political prisoner after her country’s coup d’etat in 1969. She returned to nursing once released, and in 1976 was appointed director in the ministry of health, the first woman to hold that title. There, Ismail began her pioneering work against female genital mutilation. After retiring more than 30 years later as the WHO representative to Djibouti, Ismail built the first charity maternity hospital in Somaliland. From 2003 to 2006, she served as Somaliland’s foreign-affairs minister. She continues to deliver babies and teach.

Lorie D. Jackson, director, Women’s Economic Opportunity Initiative, ExxonMobil

Lorie D. Jackson joined ExxonMobil in 1989 and has taken on a variety of responsibilities and challenges. In 1998, she joined ExxonMobil’s public-affairs department, where she served as international representative for Africa, Middle East, and Europe; representative for the U.S. Senate; and most recently, the managedand developed the Women’s Economic Opportunity Initiative, a global program that helps women in developing countries fulfill their economic potential. Lorie earned a bachelor’s degree in economics from Welles­ley College, a master’s degree in public administration from Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government and an MBA from Stanford University.

Victoria Jackson, cosmetics entrepreneur and founder of The Guthy-Jackson Charitable Foundation

Having achieved success as a Hollywood makeup artist, cosmetics entrepreneur, TV infomercial pioneer, and author, Victoria Jackson has worked to improve the self-image of women. When women embrace self-confidence, she says, they learn the key to success, and liking who they see in the mirror is a powerful first step in that transformative process. In addition to her billion-dollar cosmetics brand, Victoria is an active philanthropist. Her current focus is The Guthy-Jackson Charitable Foundation, which isdedicated to funding research to find a cure for Neuromyelitis Optica Spectrum Disease.

Author Photo - Valerie Jarrett Valerie Jarrett, senior adviser to the president of the United States

One of Washington’s new power players, Valerie Jarrett is a senior presidential adviser, as well as chairwoman of the White House Council on Women and Girls. She also oversees the offices of Public Engagement, Intergovernmental Affairs, and the White House Office of Urban Affairs and leads the White House’s business outreach efforts. Previously, Jarrett co-chaired the Obama-Biden presidential transition team and served as a senior adviser to Obama’s presidential campaign—during which she earned nicknames ranging from “First Friend” to “the other half of Obama's brain,” Time reported in 2008. Before taking Washington by storm, Jarrett was a leader in the civic and business communities of Chicago, serving as president and CEO of The Habitat Company and director of several corporate and nonprofit boards. She also served as finance chair for President Obama's 2004 run for the U.S. Senate.

Author Photo - Sallie Krawcheck Sallie Krawcheck, president, Global Wealth & Investment Management, Bank of America

As head of one of the largest wealth-management businesses in the world, Sallie Krawcheck has risen to nearly unprecedented Wall Street heights. “[Among] career-minded women, Krawcheck stands as one of the few who has genuinely punctured the glass ceiling,” Forbes wrote this year. She’s been featured on so many “most powerful” lists, it’s tough to keep track—though some include Fortune’s “Most Powerful Women” in business (seven times) and Forbes’ “World’s 100 Most Powerful Women.” Before joining Bank of America last August, Krawcheck served as CEO and chairman for Citi Global Wealth Management, where she was responsible for the Citi Private Bank, Citi Smith Barney, and Citi Investment Research. She sits on the board of BlackRock Inc. and the board of overseers of Columbia Business School, among others.

Author Photo - Sunita Krishnan Sunitha Krishnan, chief functionary, Prajwala

Shocked by the way rape victims were stigmatized in India, Sunitha Krishnan decided to fight sexual violence in one of its most common forms: prostitution. The nonprofit she co-founded, Prajwala, fights sex-trafficking in India, not only by freeing women and children trapped in brothels and providing survivors with crucial social services, but by educating their own children to prevent second-generation prostitution. Prajwala now runs 17 schools in Hyderabad that educate 5,000 children. Krishnan cultivates sex-industry informants and uses their information to raid brothels. More than 2,500 women have been rescued from prostitution and readied for a new, independent life.

Author Photo - Christine Lagarde Christine Lagarde, French Minister for Economy, Industry, and Employment

The first female finance minister of a G-8 nation, Christine Lagarde is helping to navigate France through one of its worst economic crises since World War II. She has “tirelessly pursued intelligent reforms of the economy with a no-nonsense approach,” U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner wrote last year in Time. “[Her] lightning-quick wit, genuine warmth and ability to bridge divides while remaining fiercely loyal to French interests have been a source of admiration.” In 2005, after years with the international law firm Baker & McKenzie in Chicago, Lagarde became France’s Minister of Foreign Trade; she also briefly served as its Minister for Agriculture and Fisheries. Among Lagarde’s many honors and accolades, she was recently selected as the Financial Times’ top E.U. finance minister and ranked as one of Forbes’ most influential women in the world. In 2000, she was named Chevalier in the Légion d’honneur, France’s highest decoration.

Gayle Tzemach Lemmon Gayle Tzemach Lemmon, journalist and researcher

Gayle Tzemach Lemmon covered presidential politics as a producer at ABC News in Washington. Since 2005, she has been reporting on women entrepreneurs starting small and midsize businesses in post-conflict economies such as Afghanistan, Bosnia and Rwanda. She is working on a book scheduled for 2010 publication by HarperCollins about a young Afghan entrepreneur whose business supported her family and community during the Taliban years.

Dao Tuyet Lien, businesswoman, former trafficking victim

Born in Hanoi during the tumult of 1974, Dao Tuyet Lien was a victim of human trafficking in Vietnam. She later broke free of this practice and earned two college degrees, in business management and Korean culture and language. She has worked as an interpreter and project executive for several large companies and now runs a business providing wire hangers to dry cleaners. She married in 2006 and has a daughter.

Author Photo - Ann Livermore Ann Livermore, executive vice president, HP

Named one of Fortune’s “50 Most Powerful Women” in 2008, Ann Livermore has been calling shots at HP for more than a decade. She is executive vice president of the company’s Enterprise Business, a $54 billion division serving clients in more than 170 countries. Since 2004, she’s also led its Technology Solutions Group. Livermore joined the company in 1982, climbing the ranks in marketing, sales, research and development, and business management, before ascending to its top echelons. In 1997, she was elected to the board of UPS.

Katherine Lucey, founder and executive director, Solar Sister

After a 20-year career as an investment banker with expertise in the energy sector, Lucey retired from banking to spend time with her family. In the space that opened up in her life, she turned her attention to finding a sustainable solution to the energy poverty that causes suffering to a quarter of the world’s population. Having seen the inability of large-scale international power projects to address the needs of the rural poor, Lucey determined that a practical, grassroots, locally generated solution was needed. In addition to Solar Sister, she has served as chief of operations for Arzu Inc., a nonprofit organization working to empower women in Afghanistan by providing employment and social benefits. She serves on the board of Solar Light for Africa, a nonprofit that brings solar energy to rural communities in East Africa, as well as several local charitable committees supporting education and the environment. She holds an MBA from Georgia State University and a bachelor’s degree in Journalism from the University of Georgia.

Susan Lyne, CEO, Gilt Groupe

Susan Lyne was named CEO of luxury goods e-tailer Gilt Groupe in 2008. From 2004 until 2008, she was president and CEO of Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, where she led the company’s recovery and return to profitability. Before joining MSLO, Lyne served eight years as an executive at the Walt Disney Co., principally as president of ABC Entertainment, where she oversaw the development of such hits as Desperate Housewives, Lost, and Grey’s Anatomy. Before joining ABC, she was managing editor of New Times and the Village Voice and, in 1987, created and launched Premiere magazine. Named one of The Wall Street Journal’s 50 Women to Watch, Lyne is a director of AOL.

Author Photo - Mukhtar Mai Mukhtar Mai, women's rights, education activist

When her brother allegedly committed a crime in her Pakistani village in 2002, Mukhtar Mai was punished for it—by gang rape. In Pakistan, a culture of shame hangs over rape victims, but Mai, also known as Mukhtar Bibi, did not hide. She did not kill herself, as was customary. Instead, she turned to the law, suing her attackers. Mai hopes to drive sanctioned violence against women from the country’s laws, and her battle is ongoing. Though she received no formal education as a child, she has become a powerful international voice in support of women’s rights. She was given money by Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf and used it to build a school, because, as she told The New York Times, ''This way the money is helping all the girls, all the children.'' She has founded Mukhtar Mai Women's Welfare Organization to educate Pakistani women and girls and will be portrayed by Archie Panjabi in the Women in the World reading of SEVEN.

Author Photo - Somaly Mam Somaly Mam, founder, AFESIP and the Somaly Mam Foundation

Born into the poverty and chaos of Cambodia in the 1970s, Somaly Mam was sold into sexual slavery as a young teenager, forced into the daily humiliation and torture of life as a brothel worker. After witnessing the murder of a close friend, Mam gathered the courage to escape. And while others who have escaped never look back, she has made rescuing other girls and young women from lives of sexual slavery her life’s work. In 1997, she and her ex-husband, Pierre Legros, created the non-governmental organization AFESIP (Agir pour les Femmes en Situation Précaire / “Acting for Women in Distressing Circumstances”), which employs holistic victim services and sustained mentorship to rescue, rehabilitate, and reintegrate girls who are forced into prostitution. Mam courageously shares her personal story with the world while advocating for strengthened criminal laws, increased services for survivors, and greater cooperation among advocates and officials. Today, AFESIP has expanded to Thailand, Vietnam, and Laos, and in 2007, Mam launched the Somaly Mam Foundation to further advocate for victims on the international stage.

Author Photo - Inez McCormack Inez McCormack, Irish social activist

Inez McCormack began organizing Irish women in the 1960s, urging them to unionize at work amid a violent civil war. McCormack became the first female president of the Irish Congress of Trade Unions, and her reputation for crossing sectarian lines and national boundaries was built when she played a critical role in the run-up to the Good Friday Agreements. She told the BBC, "I have had the privilege of spending a lifetime at the service of warm strong women, who challenged injustice not just for themselves but for the people and communities they cared for and whose only affirmation has been that of their own conscience." She helped Vital Voices design the Women Leaders Building Peace & Prosperity program for Northern Irish women, Jewish and Arab women leaders from Israel, and women from South Africa. McCormack will be played by Meryl Streep in the Women in the World reading of SEVEN.

Jane McGonigal, director of games research & development, Institute for the Future

Jane McGonigal is a world-renowned game designer. She is the director of games research & development at the Institute for the Future in Palo Alto, California, and has created and deployed games and missions in more than 30 countries. She has appeared at The New Yorker Conference and the TED Conference, and keynoted SXSW Interactive, the Game Developers Conference, the Idea Festival, and more. She has a Ph.D. from the University of California at Berkeley in performance studies, and has consulted and developed internal game workshops for leading technology companies, as well as more than a dozen Fortune Global 500 Companies. Her book, Reality Is Broken: Why Games Make Us Happy and How They Can Help Us Change the World, will be published by Penguin Press in January 2011.

Author Photo - Molly Melching Molly Melching, founder, Tostan

Tostan means “breakthrough” in the Wolof language, and Molly Melching’s organization has done just that. Since its founding in 1991, Tostan’s groundbreaking programs in western Africa have helped end female genital mutilation as well as forced and child marriage—more than 4,500 communities have committed to ending the harmful traditions. Melching, who has lived in Senegal since 1974, has also helped reduce the infant mortality rate, increase school and birth registration, and get more women into positions of power. Among many honors, Tostan won the prestigious Conrad N. Hilton Humanitarian Prize in 2007.

Author Photo - Emiline Michel Emeline Michel, singer-songwriter

“Queen of Haitian Song” Emeline Michel has been beloved by her countrymen for more than two decades, thanks to her unique combination of traditional rhythms with social and political themes. Michel has performed on three continents and for President Bill Clinton. Her nine albums have brought her international acclaim. The Boston Globe described her as “the elegant, jubilant voice of her island nation, finding the beauty in a country most often characterized by political upheaval and social unrest.” Of her intricate, timely lyrics, Michel said, “'People are attracted to anything that will make them dance. And while they're dancing you can get a message across.”

Anchee Min, memoirist and novelist

Anchee Min is the author of the bestselling memoir Red Azalea, the story of her childhood in communist China. At the age of 17, Min was sent to a labor camp near the East China Sea. She endured mental and physical hardships, which included a severe spinal cord injury. In 1984, with the help of a friend overseas, Min left China for America. She spoke no English when she arrived in Chicago, but within six months had taught herself the language in part by watching Sesame Street and Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood. Since the completion of Red Azalea, Min has written four works of historical fiction. The books attempt to re-record histories that have been falsely written. Her novel, The Last Empress, was published in April 2007. Her next novel, Pearl of China, will be published in this spring by Bloomsbury; it is a fictional account of the 40 years that writer Pearl S. Buck spent in China.

Author Photo - Dambisa Moyo Dambisa Moyo, economist and author of Dead Aid: Why Aid Is Not Working and How There Is a Better Way for Africa

Dambisa Moyo is the author of the bestseller Dead Aid, a book that provoked discussion around the globe about why traditional aid has had limited success in Africa. She has an intimate knowledge of the subject, having been born and raised in Zambia. Moyo holds a Ph.D. in economics from Oxford University and a master’s degree from Harvard. She worked for eight years for Goldman Sachs. Last year, Moyo was nominated to the World Economic Forum’s Young Global Leaders Forum and named by Time magazine as one of the 100 most influential people in the world. Moyo is involved in several charitable organizations, including Room to Read, an international education charity, and Absolute Return for Kids. Her next book, How the West Was Lost: Fifty Years of Economic Folly—and the Stark Choices, will be published this year.

Author Photo - Denis Mukwege Dr. Denis Mukwege, head of the Panzi Hospital of Bukavu

Denis Mukwege decided to become a doctor when he was a child, after seeing bleeding women travel to his father’s clinic on horseback after problematic childbirths. He went to medical school in Angers, France, and now heads the Panzi Hospital of Bukavu in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where each day he treats the wounds of women who’ve been victims of gang rape by Congolese soldiers. In what Dr. Mukwege has described as “sexual terrorism,” women are raped in front of their families and neighbors, tortured, mutilated, and left for dead. Dr. Mukwege has tended to some 21,000 women and children, but many, many more need medical care. On entering a village, he says, “It is awful to see 300 women in need of help… and you have to take 10 because the ambulance can only take 10.”

Author Photo - Alyse Nelson Alyse Nelson, president and CEO, Vital Voices Global Partnership

For more than a decade, Alyse Nelson has empowered women around the globe as a co-founder of Vital Voices—an organization that supports emerging female leaders and social entrepreneurs. Named one of Washingtonian’s “Ten Women to Watch” in 2006, the magazine described her work as providing women with “a kind of bulletproof vest” by giving them “legitimacy in communities where they might be persecuted for running for office or starting a business.” Before taking on her current post as Vital Voices president, Nelson rose through her organization’s ranks: As deputy director of the Vital Voices Global Democracy Initiative at the State Department, she helped then-first lady Hillary Clinton and Secretary of State Madeleine Albright promote women’s rights as a foreign-policy goal. She is a term member of the Council on Foreign Relations.

Davia Nelson, producer, NPR’s Hidden Kitchens

Davia Nelson is one half of The Kitchen Sisters, the producers of the duPont-Columbia Award-winning NPR series Hidden Kitchens, as well as two Peabody Award-winning NPR collaborations, Lost & Found Sound and The Sonic Memorial Project, and the authors of Hidden Kitchens: Stories, Recipes, and More. They are dedicated to creating intimate, provocative, and sound-rich documentaries that bring seldom-heard voices to the air, mentoring young producers, and building community through storytelling. Their new NPR series, premiering this spring, is an international multimedia collaboration exploring the secret life of girls around the world and the women they become.

Author Photo - Jacqueline Novogratz Jacqueline Novogratz, founder, Acumen Fund

A well-known social investor, Jacqueline Novogratz took the skills she acquired as a Wall Street banker and founded Acumen Fund, which invests in companies that work to alleviate poverty. The nonprofit manages nearly $40 million in investments in South Asia and East Africa, all focused on delivering affordable health care, water, housing, and energy to the poor. She is the author of a bestselling book, The Blue Sweater: Bridging the Gap Between Rich and Poor in an Interconnected World. One of Foreign Policy’s “Top 100 Global Thinkers,” Novogratz is a member of two World Economic Forum Global Agenda Councils, on social entrepreneurship and water. She is an Aspen Institute Henry Crown fellow, a Synergos Institute senior fellow, and was recently honored with the 2009 CASE Leadership in Social Entrepreneurship Award.

Author Photo - Kakenya Ntaiya Kakenya Ntaiya, founder, Kakenya’s Center for Excellence

When she was just a girl in a small village in western Kenya, Kakenya Ntaiya rejected an arranged marriage and convinced village elders to instead send her to school in the U.S. Ntaiya then went to college and is now completing her Ph.D., but she has not waited to complete her education before helping young girls get theirs. In 2009, Ntaiya opened Kakenya’s Center for Excellence, the first children’s boarding school in her part of the country, where underprivileged girls from age 8 to 14 will be given more opportunities than are typical for their peers, many of whom undergo genital-cutting and arranged marriage in their preteens. Ntaiya hopes to build a high school and then a university, so other young women can help their Maasai community.

Author Photo - Stephanie Okereke Stephanie Okereke, executive director of Del-York International, filmmaker

Stephanie Okereke won acclaim as one of the best actresses in Nigeria’s Nollywood, but after starring in dozens of films and winning many awards, Okereke was ready to move behind the camera and help create more space in the industry for women. She traveled to the U.S. and studied at the New York Film Academy, creating her own production company, Next Page Productions. The film Through the Glass was truly hers—she served as writer, director, and producer. Okereke will portray fellow Nigerian and human-rights activist Hafsat Abiola in SEVEN.

Author Photo - Maria Otero María Otero, U.S. Undersecretary for Democracy and Global Affairs

Born and raised in La Paz, Bolivia, María Otero is the first Latina undersecretary in U.S. history, and is the highest-ranking Hispanic official at the State Department. Before taking office, she was lauded for her work as president and CEO of ACCION International, where she became one of the world’s leading experts on microfinance, helping entrepreneurs in 25 countries launch small businesses. In her current role, she oversees and coordinates U.S. foreign relations on issues ranging from development and poverty to the environment and human trafficking. Dubbed one of the country’s “20 most influential women” by Newsweek in 2004, she is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations.

Maria Pacheco, Founder, Wakami World

Maria Pacheco is the founder of Wakami World, an organization dedicated to linking rural communities to markets as a way to generate prosperity in the remote villages of Guatemala and in other countries in the future. Pacheco co-designed a National Program for Economic Development, which was an IDB/World Bank loan of $60 million for Guatemala. This program is designed to provide 300 rural groups with the assistance and public infrastructure required for national and international success. Maria has also been a consultant for the United Nations Foundation, developing a program to generate sources of income for communities living in or around natural World Heritage Sites. A Fulbright scholar with a masters degree in agriculture from Cornell University, Maria served as co-founder and first female president of the Guatemalan Rural Entrepeneurship Association (AGER), and is part of the Aspen Institute Global Leadership Network. Last June, Maria with other Aspen fellows, launched the Vital Voices Central American Network.

Author Photo - Suraya Pakzad Suraya Pakzad, founder, Voice of Women Organization

Suraya Pakzad managed to keep her women’s rights organization, Voices of Women, running even under the brutal regime of the Taliban. Founded in 1998, the group taught women to read in secret until the Taliban fell, when Pakzad became able to work openly. Voice of Women gives shelter to women fleeing abusive relationships and those who have been released from jail. Her work is dangerous—many female activists have been murdered by extremists in Afghanistan in recent years. Pakzad was honored with the 2008 International Women of Courage Award and was named by Time magazine as one of the 100 most influential people in the world in 2009.

Author Photo - Archie Panjabi Archie Panjabi, actress

As in-house investigator Kalinda Sharma on the CBS hit drama The Good Wife, Archie Panjabi plays an unpredictable, street-smart woman who’s maybe also a bit of a misanthrope. Sharma is honored to play the complicated character—as she told the Los Angeles Times, “It’s very, very challenging to play her, and I feel quite privileged. It’s tough to get a good role on a good show. They are rare gems.” Panjabi won international attention for her performance in 2002’s Bend It Like Beckham, and her first American role was in the Oscar-winning film The Constant Gardener. Panjabi played a reporter in A Mighty Heart, a film about the disappearance of journalist Daniel Pearl. Her turn in that film nabbed her the Chopard Trophy for Female Revelation of the Year at the Cannes Film Festival. In SEVEN, Panjabi will portray the courageous Pakistani activist for women’s rights Mukhtar Mai.

Author Photo - Marina Pisklakova Marina Pisklakova-Parker, founder, Center ANNA

As the Soviet empire crumbled, Marina Pisklakova-Parker noticed that economic reforms were not stopping the domestic violence that plagued many homes in Russia. So in 1993, she founded Center ANNA, the first Russian domestic-violence hotline and crisis-counseling center. When she began this work, Marina was alone and isolated; Russian law did not prohibit domestic violence. But she created a personal connection with survivors. Beginning in 1999, Vital Voices gave her management training and connections to resources, enabling her to expand ANNA into a network of 170 counseling centers throughout Russia, serving 100,000 women each year. She has authored two books and represents Vital Voices in international coalitions to halt the trafficking of women and girls from Eurasia. She is portrayed by Marcia Gay Harden in the Women in the World reading of SEVEN.

Author Photo - Dina Powell Dina Powell, global head of corporate engagement, Goldman Sachs

Since joining Goldman Sachs in 2007, Dina Powell has helmed its global charity and activist campaigns. As president of the Goldman Sachs Foundation and head of corporate engagement, she manages the 10,000 Women program, a global initiative to provide business-school training for women in the developing world. Before joining the firm, Powell served as assistant secretary of State for Educational and Cultural Affairs and as deputy undersecretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs, as well as assistant to the president for presidential personnel in the White House. She serves as a member of the J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board and the Vital Voices Global Partnership Board, and a Term Member of the Council on Foreign Relations and a Young Global Leader at the World Economic Forum.

Author Photo - Annie Rashidi Mulumba Annie Rashidi-Mulumba, consultant on human-rights for the United Nations in Cameroon

Annie Rashidi-Mulumba fights for human rights, political freedom, and refugees in West Africa. Rashidi-Mulumba served as legal officer to the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights and as situation liaison officer in the Democratic Republic of the Congo for the Coalition for the International Criminal Court. In the Congo, she provided legal aid to victims of the devastating civil war. Rashidi-Mulumba graduated from Université Libre de Kinshasa and earned her master’s degree in international human-rights law at Notre Dame. She is a board member of Groupe Lotus, a nonprofit that serves war victims in the northeastern part of Congo, and is a consultant on the human-rights issues involved in the border dispute between Cameroon and Nigeria.

Author Photo - Salbi Zainab Zainab Salbi, founder and CEO, Women for Women International

Fueled by the belief that “stronger women build stronger nations,” Zainab Salbi has been fighting for women rights for nearly two decades. In 1993, using money intended to pay for a honeymoon, a newly-wed Salbi established Women for Women International to help female survivors of war move “from crisis and instability to self-reliance and active citizenship.” Since then, the organization has served more than 153,000 women in nine countries, providing financial help and jobs skills. A survivor of war herself, Salbi grew up in Baghdad, where her father served as Saddam Hussein’s personal pilot. As a teenager, she was sent to the U.S. to enter into an arranged (and ultimately abusive) marriage. She eventually left the relationship, forging a new life as a public activist. In 1995, then-President Bill Clinton honored Salbi for her work in Bosnia and Herzegovina. She serves as a Young Global Leader for the World Economic Forum; she’s also a member of the International Women's Forum and the Council of Foreign Relations. She’s the author of the memoir Between Two Worlds: Escape From Tyranny: Growing Up in the Shadow of Saddam and the book The Other Side of War: Women's Stories of Survival and Hope.

Diane Sawyer, ABC News anchor

Diane Sawyer is anchor of ABC News’ flagship World News broadcast. She is also the network’s principal anchor for breaking news, election coverage, and special events. Sawyer has traveled the globe delivering in-depth and breaking-news reports and has conducted interviews with almost every major newsmaker of our time. Prior to joining ABC News, Sawyer spent nine years at CBS News. There she made history as the first female correspondent of 60 Minutes. Sawyer’s reporting has been recognized with numerous awards, including Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Awards, Emmy Awards, George Foster Peabody Awards, the grand prize of the premier Investigative Reporters and Editors Association, an IRTS Lifetime Achievement Award, and the USC Distinguished Achievement in Journalism Award. In 1997, she was inducted into the Television Academy of Hall of Fame.

Nikki Silva, Producer, NPR’s Hidden Kitchens

Nikki Silva is one half of The Kitchen Sisters, the producers of the Alfred I. duPont-Columbia Award-winning NPR series, Hidden Kitchens, as well as two Peabody Award-winning NPR collaborations, Lost & Found Sound and The Sonic Memorial Project, and authors of the New York Times Notable Book, Hidden Kitchens: Stories, Recipes, and More. They are dedicated to creating intimate, provocative, and sound-rich documentaries that bring seldom heard voices to the air, mentoring young producers, and building community through storytelling. Their new NPR series is an international multimedia collaboration exploring the secret life of girls around the world. It will premiere on NPR this spring.

Author Photo - Mu Sochua Mu Sochua, member of Cambodian parliament and human-rights advocate

After 18 years of exile and a successful career in the U.S. as a social worker, Sochua returned to Cambodia in 1989, finding that her country had been transformed into what Time magazine called “a pervert’s paradise.” Working in the sex industry had become common for women and girls, but Sochua has been working to reverse that. She has been called “one of Cambodia’s “precious gems” by the Jakarta Post, and as Cambodia’s Minister of Women’s Affairs, Sochua negotiated an agreement with Thailand allowing Cambodian women trafficked as sex workers there to return to their home country in lieu of being jailed. She pioneered the use of frank television commercials to spread the word about trafficking to vulnerable children. When Vital Voices honored her in Washington, Sochua called for more international attention on government corruption and human-rights abuses in her home country, conditions she says create a climate where traffickers flourish. She is portrayed in the Women in the World reading of SEVEN by Julyana Soelistyo.

Author Photo - Julyana Soelistyo Julyana Soelistyo, actress

Julyana Soelistyo was nominated for a Tony Award for her 1998 performance—described as “magical” by The New York Times and “luminous” by the San Francisco Chronicle—in Golden Child on Broadway, for which she was also honored with a Clarence Derwent Award. The Sumatra-born actress played the title roles in three plays for the Seattle Children’s Theatre from 1995 to 1997. Among Soelistyo’s many credits include appearances in On the Town, The Glorious Ones, All’s Well that Ends Well, and the Martin Scorsese film Bringing Out the Dead. Soelistyo will perform in the reading of SEVEN on Friday evening of the Women in the World summit, in which she plays Mu Sochua, the opposition member of the Cambodian parliament and grassroots organizer for women’s rights.

Jane Spencer, managing editor of The Daily Beast

Jane Spencer has been managing editor of The Daily Beast since its launch in 2008. Previously, she was a foreign correspondent for The Wall Street Journal in Hong Kong, covering environmental issues and technology in Asia. She was part of a team of reporters that won a Pulitzer Prize in 2007 for coverage of China’s “Naked Capitalism,” a series looking at the devastating health, social, and environmental consequences of China’s rapid economic growth. Before joining the Journal in 2002, she worked for Newsweek, The Nation, and The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer on PBS. She graduated from Brown University in 1999, and is originally from Portland, Maine.

Lesley Stahl, correspondent, 60 Minutes

Lesley Stahl has been co-editor of CBS’s 60 Minutes since March 1991. This season marks her 19th on the broadcast. Prior to joining 60 Minutes, Stahl served as CBS News White House correspondent during the Carter and Reagan presidencies and part of the term of George H.W. Bush. Her reports appeared frequently on the CBS Evening News and on other CBS News broadcasts. She also served as moderator of Face the Nation, CBS News’ Sunday public-affairs broadcast (September 1983-May 1991). She has been honored by the Radio-Television News Directors Association with an Edward R. Murrow Award for Overall Excellence in Television and received a Matrix Award for Broadcasting, presented by New York Women in Communications Inc. She was also the recipient of the Dennis Kauff Journalism Award for lifetime achievement in the news profession. She serves on the board of the New York City Ballet.

Author Photo - Meryl Streep Meryl Streep, actress

Since her first nomination for The Deer Hunter in 1979, Meryl Streep has been nominated for 16 Oscars, including her portrayal last year of Julia Child in Julie & Julia. “It is barely an exaggeration to say that you can’t have an awards season without Ms. Streep,” The New York Times raved this year. Streep is not just respected, but beloved as one of the best screen actresses in the world. She’s been honored for both her dramatic and comedic turns, for roles in films as diverse as Kramer vs. Kramer, Sophie’s Choice, Heartburn, Out of Africa, The Devil Wears Prada, and Julie & Julia. Streep will portray Irish civil-rights activist Inez McCormack in the Women in the World reading of SEVEN.

Author Photo - Diana L. Taylor Diana Taylor, managing director, Wolfensohn & Co.

As New York state superintendent of banks from 2003 to 2007, Diana Taylor overhauled the State Banking Department and cracked down on check-cashing companies that preyed on low-income New Yorkers. Taylor is also half of one of the most prominent power couples in New York City—thanks to her relationship with Mayor Michael Bloomberg, she’s known as the unofficial first lady of the city. Taylor joined Wolfensohn & Co. in 2007 after working for several Wall Street banks. She also served as chief financial officer of the Long Island Power Authority. She sits on the board of many charitable organizations, including the microfinance-focused ACCION International, which she chairs, and the New York Women's Foundation, which she vice-chairs.

Author Photo - Julie Taymor Julie Taymor, director

Julie Taymor is the first woman to win the Tony Award for directing a musical—The Lion King—for which she also won Best Costume Design. She has directed the feature films Titus, Frida, and Across the Universe. Her next film, The Tempest, starring Helen Mirren, will be released this year. Her next next project is a Broadway musical of Spiderm-man: Turn off The Dark, with music and lyrics by Bono and The Edge. Taymor lived in Indonesia in the 1970s, an experience that significantly shaped her view of art and its place in the world. She received a Genius Award from the MacArthur Foundation in 1991.

Author Photo - Frances Townsend Frances Townsend, former assistant to President George W. Bush for Homeland Security and Counterterrorism

Possessing “a tough efficiency” and “a bit of a swagger”—Frances Townsend has been lauded for her “meteoric” rise to become, in 2005, President George W. Bush’s adviser on homeland security and counterterrorism and chair of the Homeland Security Council. A former mob prosecutor and the first person in her family to graduate high school, Townsend bridged party lines in ascending to the role—morphing from confidante of Democratic Attorney General Janet Reno to valued adviser to the 43rd president, a Republican. From 2003 to 2004, Townsend served as deputy assistant to the president and deputy National Security Adviser for combating terrorism, before becoming Bush’s assistant, a position she held until 2008. Today, Townsend is a partner at the law firm Baker Botts, as well as an expert contributor to CNN and other cable and network television outlets.

Author Photo - Lauren Velez Lauren Vélez, actress

Lauren Vélez stars as Lt. Maria Laguerta in Showtime’s Dexter, but she began her career in a more humble role: as the titular character in a Groundhog Day play for her Queens elementary school. Vélez has had roles in Ugly Betty, Oz, and New York Undercover. Her late father served in the NYPD for 13 years, perhaps inspiring her portrayal of police characters. Vélez has been nominated for eight ALMA awards and won a Vision Award in 2007 for her role in Dexter. In the Women in the World reading of SEVEN, Vélez will perform as Anabella de León, who advocates for the rights of women and indigenous peoples in Guatemala.

Author Photo - Melanne Verveer Melanne Verveer, ambassador-at-large for global women’s issues, U.S. Department of State

For more than three decades, Melanne Verveer has pioneered women’s initiatives around the world. Last year, President Barack Obama named her the country’s first-ever ambassador-at-large for global women’s issues and director of the newly formed U.S. Office of Global Women’s Issues—tasking her with coordinating efforts to advance women’s political, economic, and social status worldwide. Since taking office, she’s worked to improve women’s and girls’ access to education and health care, and to combat violence, among other issues. Prior to becoming ambassador, Verveer served as chair and co-CEO of Vital Voices Global Partnership, and as assistant to former President Bill Clinton and chief of staff to then-first lady Hillary Clinton. She also led the effort to establish the President’s Interagency Council on Women. She is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, Women’s Foreign Policy Group, and numerous other organizations.

Author Photo - Diane Von Furstenberg Diane von Furstenberg, fashion designer and philanthropist

Born in Belgium, Diane von Furstenberg arrived in New York in 1972 with a suitcase full of wrap dresses—the seed of what is today a fashion house of international renown. By 1976, von Furstenberg had sold millions of her iconic dresses, and her name had become synonymous with feminine confidence and freedom. Over the next decade, von Furstenberg built and sold a cosmetics company, launched a home collection, and received the New York Mayor’s Liberty Medal for citizens of the world who have achieved the American dream. Today, with headquarters in New York’s Meatpacking District, she runs what has become a global lifestyle luxury brand, with 32 freestanding Diane von Furstenberg boutiques in major cities around the world. In June 2005, von Furstenberg was awarded the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Council of Fashion Designers of America for her impact on fashion, and a year later, was elected the CFDA’s president. She sits on the board of Vital Voices, and she was actively involved in the campaign to refurbish New York’s historical High Line as a public park. She is a director of the Diller-von Furstenberg Family Foundation and recently created the first DVF Awards to honor female social activists in America and around the world. Each winner received $50,000 to continue their work on issues ranging from fighting sex trafficking to providing education for girls in Afghanistan.

Author Photo - Barbara Walters Barbara Walters, creator, co-host, and executive producer, ABC’s The View; correspondent, ABC News

The first woman to co-host network news, Barbara Walters is a broadcast-journalism legend. Since taking up her post at ABC News in 1976, she has interviewed every American president and first lady since Richard Nixon’s administration. For 25 years, she co-hosted ABC News’ 20/20, and since 1993 her Barbara Walters Specials have brought in top ratings. Prior to joining ABC, she appeared on NBC’s Today show for 15 years, eventually becoming the program’s first female co-host. In 1997, she created and became co-host and co-executive producer of the award-winning daytime talk show The View. Some of Walters’ many honors include lifetime achievement awards from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences and the International Women’s Media Foundation; a Daytime Emmy award; and the Overseas Press Club’s highest honor, the President’s Award. She has been inducted into the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences’ Hall of Fame and the Museum of Television and Radio in Los Angeles. She is the recipient of several honorary degrees. She is the author of a memoir, Audition.

Author Photo - Sheryl WuDunn Sheryl WuDunn, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist; president of TripleEdge social investing firm; co-author of Half the Sky

Sheryl WuDunn is the first Asian American to win a Pulitzer Prize, as well as a bestselling author and business executive. She’s president of TripleEdge, a social investing firm. With her husband, Nicholas D. Kristof, she is co-author most recently of Half the Sky: Turning Oppression Into Opportunity for Women Worldwide, a New York Times bestseller about the challenges women face around the globe. WuDunn also leads the Half the Sky multimedia effort, which includes which includes a documentary series and TV special. Previously, she worked at The New York Times as an executive, editor, and foreign correspondent in Tokyo and Beijing. WuDunn is the recipient of the Dayton Literary Peace Prize for Lifetime Achievement and several journalism prizes, including the George Polk Award and Overseas Press Club awards.

Author Photo - Lauren Zalaznick Lauren Zalaznick, president, NBC Universal Women and Lifestyle Entertainment Networks

A still-rising titan in cable television, Lauren Zalaznick has spent the past decade revolutionizing women’s programming. In her current role, she oversees Bravo Media, Oxygen Media, iVillage, as well as NBC Universal’s health and wellness program. Under her watch, Bravo has become the top-ranked entertainment cable network for “upscale, educated, and engaged television viewers.” It’s also claimed numerous records and “firsts,” including several consecutive best years ever and the most critical recognition in the history of the channel, including the most Emmy Award nominations ever in 2008 and a Peabody Award. Zalaznick is co-chair of Peacock Equity, a joint investment fund of GE Capital's Media, Communications & Entertainment business and NBC Universal. She also chairs the Women@NBCU advisory board, made up of senior executive women across the advertising, finance, fashion, digital, sports, media, and entertainment businesses. In 2009, Zalaznick was named one of Time magazine's 100 World’s Most Influential people, Vanity Fair chose her for its “New Establishment” list, and Fortune included her in its “50 Most Powerful Women” issue.