Marleine
Bastien is the founder and president of Fanm
Ayisyen Nan Miyami (FANM), a non-profit organization concerned with
the adjustment and socio-economic status of Haitian women in South Florida.
FANM organizes on issues of immigration, unemployment, health education,
social and political empowerment, and cultural diversity. Bastien
has testified on behalf of workers' rights to organize for better working
conditions, salaries, health insurance and retirement benefits. In 1998
FANM implemented the "Haitian Women's Breast Cancer Education Program."
Bastien played a key role in publicizing the plight of hundreds of unaccompanied
Haitian children being held at the U.S. naval base in Guantanamo, and aided
in resettlement efforts. Bastien currently works as a clinical
social worker counseling families and children with sickle cell anemia
at Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami. She has also counseled families
on domestic violence and AIDS. As a member of Sosyete Koukouy, a well known
cultural and literary group in Miami, she plans presentations on Haitian
culture for the community. Bastien has received numerous awards and
recognition for her dedication and service to the betterment of the Haitian
community.
Donna
Brazile joined Al Gore's presidential campaign in October 1999. She has
a reputation as a tenacious political organizer and is the first African
American woman to head a major contender's presidential campaign. Brazile
is a veteran of a number of Democratic presidential campaigns and former
chief of staff and press secretary to D.C.
Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton. She is known as a talented field operative
and grassroots organizer. Brazile is a native of New Orleans, Louisiana.
Her father was a janitor and her mother a domestic worker, and according
to Brazile she grew up literally on the wrong side of the tracks.
After graduating from Louisiana State University, Brazile took an offer
from Coretta Scott King to
help organize the 20th anniversary of the historic March
on Washington. A year later, she joined Jesse Jackson's 1984 presidential
campaign. She is an adjunct professor of political science at the University
of Maryland-College Park. Brazile designed the Voter/Campaign Assessment
Program for the Democratic Congressional
Campaign Committee—a program that was considered crucial in boosting
African American turnout in key congressional districts. She is a founder
and the first executive director of the National Political Congress of
Black Women.
Laura
Liswood established and serves as director of the Council
of Women World Leaders at Harvard
University's John F. Kennedy School of Government. The Council
is composed of women presidents, prime ministers, chiefs of state, and
heads of government, establishing a network of resources for high-level
women leaders and providing a forum for the group to shape important international
issues. Liswood, a nationally recognized speaker, author, and advisor,
has contributed to leadership in the women's community for more than 20
years as a member of the International
Women's Forum, Leadership
America, and the Washington Women's
Political Caucus. She was the owner/publisher of Seattle Woman
and is the founder of Mary's List, a bipartisan political donor network
emphasizing women's leadership in the political arena. As director of the
Women's Leadership Project, Liswood interviewed 15 current and former women
presidents and prime ministers. These are chronicled in her most
recent book, Women World Leaders. Her experience includes executive-level
consulting to Fortune 500 and international companies with the Liswood
Marketing Group. She received the Westinghouse Award of Excellence for
her contribution to all women and men of color in the work place.
Minna
Schrag is the Chair of the Board of the NOW
Legal Defense and Education Fund. She became general counsel for the
Fund's Board in 1993, president in 1997, and chair of the Board this year.
Before becoming a partner at the Proskauer Rose law firm, Schrag spent
six years as an Assistant United States Attorney for the Southern District
of New York, where she focused on white-collar crime. In 1994 and
1995, Schrag served at the United
Nations War Crimes Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia where she was
the senior U.S. staff person for the chief prosecutor. Her articles on
the Tribunal and on international law enforcement have been widely published
and she often speaks on these topics both here and abroad. Since 1998 Schrag
had been a member of the United States delegation negotiating for the establishment
of an international criminal court that will prosecute the most serious
crimes against humanity and other similar crimes. Her responsibilities
on the delegation include vigorous efforts to ensure that crimes of violence
against women in situations of armed conflict will be effectively prosecuted
within the court's mandate. Minna Schrag is the proud mother of three accomplished
children and the even prouder grandmother of two (already feminist) baby
boys.
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