Gayle E. Smith
Gayle E. Smith "serves as a consultant for many organizations involved in international humanitarian assistance, including Oxfam Canada, USAID, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, and Dutch InterChurch Aid. She is the former Africa Development Program Coordinator for the Development Group for Alternative Policies and has published widely on hunger, war, postconflict reconstruction, and other issues in the Horn of Africa.“ [1]
"A Senior Fellow at the Center for American Progress, Gayle Smith has spent much of her career in international affairs in the field. Smith served as Special Assistant to the President and Senior Director for African Affairs at the National Security Council from 1998-2001, and as Senior Advisor to the Administrator and Chief of Staff of the U.S. Agency for International Development from 1994-1998. In 1999, she won the National Security Council's Samuel Nelson Drew Award for Distinguished Contribution in Pursuit of Global Peace for her role in the successful negotiation of a peace agreement between Eritrea and Ethiopia.
"Smith was based in Africa for almost 20 years as a journalist covering military, economic and political affairs for the BBC, Associated Press, Reuters, Boston Globe, Christian Science Monitor, Toronto Globe & Mail, London Observer and Financial Times. Smith has also consulted for a wide range of NGOs, foundations and governmental organizations including UNICEF, the World Bank, Dutch Interchurch Aid, Norwegian Church Relief, and the Canadian Council for International Cooperation. She won the World Journalism Award from the World Affairs Council and the World Hunger Year Award in 1991.
"Smith is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and served as a member of the Commission on Capital Flows, the Commission on Weak States and National Security and the Council on Foreign Relation’s Africa Task Force. She is a Guest Scholar at the Brookings Institution, where she coauthored The Other War: Global Poverty and the Millennium Challenge Account. In 2005, she served as Director of the Global Poverty track of the Clinton Global Initiative." [2]
"She won the World Journalism Award from the World Affairs Council and the World Hunger Year Award in 1991. Smith has also consulted for a wide range of non-governmental organizations, foundations and international governmental agencies, including UNICEF, the World Bank, Lutheran World Relief, Dutch Interchurch Aid and the Canadian Council for International Cooperation." [3]
Contents
Affiliations
- Former Director, Oxfam USA
- Director, Africa-America Institute
- Advisor, Global Fairness Initiative
- Endorser, Genocide Intervention Network
- Advisory Council, Acumen Fund
- Advisory Committee, Olympic Dream for Darfur [1]
Resources and articles
Related Sourcewatch articles
References
External links
- ”Biography”, Accessed January 2007.