
Speakers
Who to expect in Bangkok?
At the IACC plenary sessions will involve the audience in a critical and proactive discussion about today’s Global Challenges. World leaders and experts will join the plenary panel to discuss and propose solutions to ensure a sustainable future for all.
Some inspirational speakers include:
Patrick Alley

Patrick Alley is a Co-founder and Director of Global Witness, which focuses on preventing conflict and corruption arising from the use of natural resources. Mr. Alley focuses on tackling the trade in Conflict Resources (natural resource trade that can cause, perpetuate and fund conflict).
In particular Mr. Alley works on the Democratic Republic of Congo, Liberia and Cote d’Ivoire, and also leads Global Witness’ campaign against industrial logging. He has taken part in over fifty field investigations in South East Asia, Africa and Europe.
Alan L. Boeckmann

Alan L. Boeckmann is chairman of the board and chief excutive officer of Fluor Corporation, one of the world’s leading and largest engineering,procurement,construction and maintenance services companies.Prior to assuming his current position in February 2001,Boeckmann served as president and chief operating officer of Fluor since January 2001.
He has served as president and chief executive officer of Fluor Daniel, the engineering and construction unit of Fluor Corporation, and president of Fluor Daniel’s Energy & Chemicals group, Fluor Daniel’s Chemicals,Plastics & Fibers operating company, and the Chemical Processes & Industrial business group. Prior to that, he served as vice president of the company’s business unit that formed its DuPont alliance and as the functional leader of engineering.
Since joining Fluor in 1974 as an engineer, Boeckmann has held various
management positions, including assignments in California, Texas, South
Carolina, South Africa and Venezuela. Active in a variety of business and professional organizations, Boeckmann serves as a director on the boards of BHP Billiton and the National Petroleum Council. He is a member of the Business Roundtable and the World Economic Forum. He also actively supports the United Way and Boys and Girls Clubs of America.
Richard A. Boucher

Ambassador Richard A. Boucher was appointed Deputy Secretary-General of the OECD in November 5, 2009. Ambassador Boucher, a U.S. national, is a senior foreign policy executive who has managed world-wide teams, programs and strategies and brings extensive experience in emerging economies. Over his thirty-year career in foreign policy, he has consistently had challenging assignments and achieved the highest rank in the United States Foreign Service.
From 2006 to 2009, as Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia, Ambassador Boucher was involved in high-level negotiations throughout the region, from Kazakhstan to India. Prior to this, he was Spokesman and Assistant Secretary for Public Affairs for five years, crafting the U.S. public approach on critical world issues for three Secretaries of State. In 1999, he served as the U.S. Senior Official for Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation promoting more open trade and an improved investment climate. From 1993 to 1999, he served consecutive terms as the U.S. Ambassador to Cyprus and Consul General in Hong Kong. For more information, please visit the OECD website’s bio, available here.
Paul Collier

Paul Collier is a world famous expert on economics and development whose 2007 best selling book The Bottom Billion is regarded as one of the most engaging, provocative and persuasive books on political and economical issues in developing countries. Professor Collier asks in this book why poor countries are still failing to develop despite the international support and financial aid that they receive.
He is a professor of Economics and the Director for the Centre for the Study of African Economics at the University of Oxford and is a Fellow at St. Antony’s College. As mentioned on Professor Collier’s website, his work focuses on “causes and consequences of civil war; the effects of aid; and the problems of democracy in low-income and natural-resource-rich societies.” His most recent book, Wars, Guns & Votes: Democracy in Dangerous Places, highlights poverty and violence in the world’s poorest and smallest economies. His work has been lauded by the New York Times, the Guardian, the Economist, and countless other individuals and publications. His new book, The Plundered Planet: Why We Must and How We Can Manage Nature for Global Prosperity is due to be released in April or May of this year.
Claribel B. David

Claribel B. David is currently Vice President of the International Fair Trade Association (IFAT), a global network of 400 fair trade organizations in 70 countries whose mission is to improve the livelihood and well-being of disadvantaged producers in the South.
As a fair trade advocate, she has pioneered various initiatives in the Philippines and the Asia region that has rippled through the entire global fair trade movement. In 2002, she was at the forefront in the formation of the Asia Fair Trade Forum (AFTF), now a strong network of 90 fair trade companies from 11 countries in Asia representing thousands of grassroots producers in the craft and food sectors. Her work involves a wide range of issues from socio-economic development to governance within the context of fair trade. She is specialises particularly in finding solutions to the problems besetting grassroots producers especially in the areas of market access and capacity building amidst the realities of globalization. She has also sat in numerous consultations that resulted in the reshaping of the strategic directions of the global fair trade movement and in bringing small producers closer not only to the market but also to a more equitable system of trading.
Peter Eigen

Prof. Dr. Peter Eigen is a lawyer by training. He has worked in economic development for 25 years, mainly as a World Bank manager of programs in Africa and Latin America; from 1988 to 1991 he was the Director of the Regional Mission for Eastern Africa of the World Bank. Under Ford Foundation sponsorship, he provided legal and technical assistance to the governments of Botswana and Namibia.
In 1993 Eigen founded Transparency International (TI), a non-governmental organization promoting transparency and accountability in international development. From 1993 to 2005 he was Chair of TI and is now Chair of the Advisory Council. In 2005, Eigen chaired the International Advisory Group of the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) and became Chair of EITI in 2006. In 2007 he founded the Berlin Civil Society Center and chairs its Board.
Eigen has taught law and political science at the universities of Frankfurt Main, the John F. Kennedy School of Government/ Harvard, SAIS/ Johns Hopkins, University of Washington and Bruges College of Europe. Since 2002, he is teaching as an Honorary Professor of Political Science at the Freie Universität, Berlin. In 2000, he
was awarded the ‘Honorary Doctor’ degree at the Open University, UK, in 2004, the Readers Digest Award “European of the Year 2004″ and in 2007 the Gustav Heinemann Award.
Eigen is member of the board of the NGOs Kabissa, building the capacity of African non-profits, and the Center for International Environmental Law (CIEL), providing environmental legal services. Since 2007 Eigen is a member of Kofi Annan’s Africa Progress Panel (APP). In 2009 he joined the Management Board of the African Legal Support Facility of the African Development Bank.
Gareth Evans

Professor the Hon Gareth Evans AO QC is Chancellor of the Australian National University (since January 2010), an Honorary Professorial Fellow at The University of Melbourne (since July 2009), and Co-Chair of the International Commission on Nuclear Non-Proliferation and Disarmament (since June 2008). He is President Emeritus of the Brussels-based International Crisis Group (Crisis Group), the independent global independent global conflict prevention and resolution organisation of which he was President and Chief Executive Officer from January 2000 to June 2009.
Gareth Evans was one of Australia’s longest serving Foreign Ministers, best known internationally for his roles in developing the UN peace plan for Cambodia, bringing to a conclusion the international Chemical Weapons Convention, founding the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum and ASEAN Regional Forum (ARF), and initiating the Canberra Commission on the Elimination of Nuclear Weapons.
It was announced in January 2010 that Gareth Evans was the recipient of the 2010 Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt Institute/Roosevelt Stichting Four Freedoms Award for Freedom from Fear, citing his pioneering work on the Responsibility to Protect concept and his contributions to conlfict prevention and resolution, arms control and disarmament. He was Australian Humanist of the Year in 1990, won the ANZAC Peace Prize in 1994 for his work on Cambodia, was made an Officer of the Order of Australia (AO) in 2001, and was awarded Honorary Doctorates of Laws by Melbourne University in 2002, Carleton University in 2005 and Sydney University in 2008. In the United States he received in 1995 the $150 000 Grawemeyer Prize for Ideas Improving World Order for his Foreign Policy article “Cooperative Security and Intrastate Conflict”. His other international awards include the Chilean Order of Merit (Grand Cross), given in 1999 primarily for his work in initiating APEC. For more information, please see the bio section of Gareth Evan’s website, available here.
Geraldine Fraser-Moleketi

Ms. Geraldine Fraser-Moleketi joined UNDP in January 2009 as the Democratic Governance Practice Director in the Bureau for Development Policy (BDP).
She served in the South African Government for over 14 years in various positions, most recently as Minister for Public Service and Administration and Member of the South African Parliament. Prior to this, she was Minister of Welfare and Population Development. She has also served in a number of leadership roles within Parliament, including as Chairperson of the Sub-Committee on Rules of the National Assembly of the Parliament of South Africa.
She began her career in politics in 1980 when she left South Africa for Zimbabwe to join the African National Congress in exile where she worked in its political and military structures. During her period in exile, she worked in the areas of administration, communications and development. She returned to South Africa in 1990 to contribute to South Africa’s transition to democracy. She is a Member of the United Nations Committee of Experts on Public Administration, has published various works on public administration, and has delivered numerous papers at both national and international conferences. She served on the Cabinet Committees for Economic Affairs, Social Administrative Affairs, Security and Intelligence and the Committee on the Service Conditions of Political Office Bearers. She helped to coordinate the transformation of the Child and Youth Care System and contributed to the work of an Inter-Ministerial Committee on Poverty and Inequality. For more information, visit UNDP’s site,available here.
Arvind Ganesan

Arvind Ganesan, director of Human Rights Watch’s business and human rights program, is involved in research, advocacy, and policy development for Human Rights Watch on issues involving business and human rights, with a primary focus on the energy industry. Currently, his program focuses on human rights issues related to the extractive industries, labor rights, trade, and the economic interests of militaries. Ganesan has worked on a number of other issues related to corporate responsibility – including the internet and human rights – covering countries such as Azerbaijan, Burma, China, Colombia, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea, India, Indonesia, and Nigeria. Before joining Human Rights Watch, Ganesan worked as a medical researcher. For more information, please visit HRW’s website, available here.
John Githongo

John Githongo is a key figure in the global fight against corruption, known best for his leadership and courage in uncovering corruption in Kenya and more specifically his role in exposing the corruption and collusion of three high level ministers and the Kenyan Vice President in the Anglo Leasing Scandal.
After years of leadership and distinction in the fields of journalism and civil society, Githongo took on the role of Permanent Secretary for Ethics and Governance, in the Office of the President, leading the fight against corruption in Kenya for roughly 18 months. His success was much to the dismay of many in the national government, from bottom to top. As it was hinted that he should not do his job too well, his success in exposing corruption in Kenya led to his need to flee the country in 2005 to the UK. It was from there that he completed his revealing and compelling dossier on the Anglo Leasing scandal.
Mr. Githongo has since taken on a number of roles – he is a Senior Common Room Member at St Antony’s College Oxford, a Senior Advisor Global Advocacy for World Vision International, and a Board Member of the Kenya Human Rights Commission, among countless other distinctions. Those interested in reading more on the extraordinary and inspiring career and life of John Githongo are encouraged to read Michela Wrong’s renowned book, Its Our Time to Eat: The Story of Kenyan Whistleblower.
Georg Kell

Georg Kell is the Executive Director of the United Nations Global Compact, the world’s largest voluntary corporate responsibility initiative with more than 6,000 participants in over 130 countries. Spanning more than two decades, his career with the United Nations began in 1987 at the UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) in Geneva.
In 1997, Mr. Kell joined the Office of the UN Secretary-General in New York, where he spearheaded the development of new strategies to enhance private sector engagement with the work of the United Nations. As one of the Global Compact’s key architects, he has led the initiative since its launch in 2000, building the most widely recognized global business platform on human rights, labor, environment, and anti-corruption. Prior to joining the UN System, Mr. Kell worked as a researcher at the Fraunhofer Institute in Germany and as a financial analyst evaluating multinational companies’ investment portfolios in Asia and Africa. A native of Germany, he holds advanced degrees in economics and engineering from the Technical University of Berlin. For more information, please visit the UN Global Compact website, available here.
Ashok Khosla

Ashok Khosla is President of the Club of Rome and has been a Member of the Governing Bodies of the World Economic Forum in Davos, IUCN, WWF, IISD, the Stockholm Environment Institute, WETV and several other Indian and international organizations. He was Special Advisor to the Brundtland Commission and Chairman of the NGO Forum at the ‘92 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro. He is Chairman of the Development Alternatives Group, a consortium of social enterprises based in India whose mission is to create technologies, businesses and markets for large scale generation of sustainable livelihoods.
Earlier, he was Director of the Office of Environment, Government of India, and Director, Infoterra in the United Nations Environment Programme. He has been board member of many government, industry and NGO bodies in India, including the National Security Advisory Board, the Science Advisory Committee to the Cabinet and the National Environment Council. He was awarded the Stockholm Challenge Award in 2002, the UN Sasakawa Environment Prize in 2002 and the Schwab Foundation’s Award for Outstanding Social Entrepreneur in 2004. To learn more, visit www.khosla.in.
Haruhiko Kuroda

Mr. Haruhiko Kuroda is the President of the Asian Development Bank (ADB) and the Chairperson of ADB’s Board of Directors. Before joining ADB, Mr. Kuroda was Special Advisor to the Cabinet of Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi and a professor at the Graduate School of Economics at Hitotsubashi University in Tokyo.
In a career spanning nearly four decades, Mr. Kuroda has represented Japan’s Ministry of Finance at a number of international monetary conferences as Vice Minister of Finance for International Affairs.
During his terms as Director-General of the International Bureau and as Vice Minister of Finance between 1997 and 2003, Mr. Kuroda helped design and implement the US$30 billion Miyazawa Initiative – Japan’s response to Asian economies hit by the 1997-1998 financial crisis.
Under his leadership, Japan helped Asian nations establish the Chiang Mai Initiative, a network of currency swap agreements designed to avert another crisis.
He has authored several books on monetary policy, exchange rate, international finance policy coordination, international taxation, and international negotiations. For more information, please see the ADB website’s page on President Kuroda, available here.
Huguette Labelle

Huguette Labelle holds a Doctor of Philosophy, Education. She is a Companion of the Order of Canada. She has been awarded honorary degrees from twelve Canadian Universities and has received the Vanier medal of the Institute of Public Administration of Canada, the Outstanding Achievement Award of the public service of Canada, the McGill Management Achievement Award and l’ordre de la Pleiade.
She has served for a period of nineteen years as Deputy Minister of different Canadian Government departments including Secretary of State, Transport Canada, the Public Service Commission and the Canadian International Development Agency. She has served on more than 20 Boards.
She is currently Chancellor of the University of Ottawa, Chair of the Board of Transparency International, member of the Board of the UN Global Compact, member of the Group of External Advisors on the World bank Governance and Anti-corruption Strategy, member of the Advisory Group to the Asian development Bank on Climate Change and Sustainable Development and member of the Board of CRC Sogema. She also serves on additional national and international Boards. She provides advisory services to national and international organizations.
Karin Lissakers

Karin Lissakers is Director of the Revenue Watch Institute. She has held senior posts in the U.S. government, academia and several think tanks. Lissakers was United States Executive Director on the Board of the International Monetary Fund from 1993 to 2001, representing the Fund’s largest shareholder during a period of turmoil in international markets and a U.S.-led campaign to redesign the international financial architecture and reform the IMF, including opening its policies and practices to public scrutiny.
Lissakers served as deputy director of the Policy Planning Staff of the U.S. Department of State and was staff director of the foreign economic policy subcommittee of the U.S. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, the first woman to hold such a post.
She taught at Columbia University for many years, lecturing on international financial markets, regulation and public policy and heading the international business and banking studies program at the graduate School of International and Public Affairs. Her research and writing have focused on the interplay of international business and U.S. foreign policy. She has been a Senior Associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and a researcher for Nobel economist Gunnar Myrdal.
Lissakers is a frequent public speaker and participant in public policy, business and academic conferences. She is the author of Banks, Borrowers and the Establishment (Basic Books 1991) about the 1980’s international debt crisis. Her articles have appeared in Foreign Policy, the Journal of International Affairs, The New York Times, the Washington Post and other publications. She is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and is married with two children.
Kunio MIKURIYA

Before taking up his position as Secretary General of the World Customs Organization (WCO) on 1 January 2009, Kunio Mikuriya spent seven years as the Organization’s Deputy Secretary General. In this position he led efforts to coordinate the work of the WCO Secretariat with other international organizations such as the WTO to support the Doha Development Agenda trade negotiations, and the World Bank and other development banks to coordinate Customs reform projects, and with the private sector to develop Customs-Business Partnerships in support of transparency in trade. His current priority is securing and facilitating global trade through setting standards, sharing best practices, and providing assistance for capacity building in Customs. He has actively been championing the fight against corruption in Customs to showcase good governance in the public sector.
Prior to joining the WCO, he worked for Japan’s Ministry of Finance for 25 years. During his career with the Ministry, Kunio Mikuriya occupied a variety of senior posts, which have given him broad experience and knowledge in customs, trade, development, budget, and financial policies. He served as Director of Enforcement where he led efforts to fight illicit trade, then as Director of Research and International Affairs, paving the way for the conclusion of the first regional trade agreement for Japan, and then as a Counsellor in the Tariff and Customs Bureau. He also served as Director of Salaries and Allowances to coordinate remuneration levels for the entire government workforce, and as the Budget Controller for Foreign Affairs, Official Aid, International Trade and Industry, in the Budget Bureau. In addition, he spent time as a Counsellor at the Japanese Mission to the WTO in Geneva and participated in the GATT Uruguay Round trade negotiations.
Homer Moyer

Homer Moyer, chair of the International Bar Association’s Anti-Corruption Committee, is regarded as one of the US’s leading Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) lawyers and has been recognized as a premier lawyer in other international legal fields as well. A political appointee of both political parties, he has also developed and guided pro bono projects that have been hailed for their global impact.
Over the last decade, Mr. Moyer has come to be recognized as an authority on the FCPA and international anti-corruption law, which is now the principal focus of his work. He has written and spoken on the subject extensively, chaired more than 30 national and international conferences, and served as an SEC-appointed Independent Compliance Consultant.
In the area of export controls and economic sanctions, Mr. Moyer’s experience dates from when he served as General Counsel of the U.S. Department of Commerce during a time of historic foreign policy and national security controls. While in government, he co-authored the Anti-Boycott regulations of the Export Administration Act. In matters of international trade, Mr. Moyer has advised clients on World Trade Organization (WTO) panel and Appellate Body disputes, represented governments in free trade agreement negotiations, and successfully litigated before bi-national panels and “Extraordinary Challenge” tribunals under the NAFTA and CFTA. Mr. Moyer has been counsel in landmark antidumping and countervailing duty cases, in trade and investment disputes before international arbitral bodies, and in federal court proceedings involving issues of international law. In other cases, he has represented clients before all levels of federal courts, including the United States Supreme Court. For more information, please see his full bio on Miller and Chevalier’s website, available here.
Barry O’Keefe

Barry O’Keefe AM QC, Chair of the International Anti-Corruption Council, is a highly accomplished barrister, arbitrator and former judge. He joined Clayton Utz as a Consultant, having retired from the New South Wales Supreme Court with a distinguished career as an advocate, Chief Judge of the Commercial Division of the Supreme Court of NSW, an Additional Judge of the Court of Appeal, Independent Commission against Corruption, and as a Judge of the Common Law Division and of the Court of Criminal Appeal.
Barry is available to advise and represent clients on construction industry disputes both nationally and internationally, particularly in national and international arbitration matters and in relation to matters of probity.
Before his appointment to the Bench, Barry appeared on behalf of the Governments of the Commonwealth of Australia, and New South Wales and also for Her Majesty’s Crown Agents (UK) in a number of leading cases. For more information on Justice O’Keefe, please see his full bio on Clayton Utz’s website, available here.
Nuhu Ribadu

Nuhu Ribadu is a visiting fellow at the Center for Global Development. His work at the Center, which began in April 2009, is to draw lessons from his experience for combating corruption worldwide and to provide fresh thinking on the role of international institutions in this fight. Before joining CGD, Nuhu was head of Nigeria’s Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) from 2003 to 2007. He served on several economic and anti-corruption commissions and was a key member of Nigeria’s economic management team that drove wide-ranging public sector reforms. Nuhu was awarded with the World Bank’s Jit Gill Memorial Award for Outstanding Public Service in recognition of his efforts. Prior to leading the EFCC, Nuhu spent 18 years in the Nigerian police force. A lawyer by training, he received his Bachelors and Masters in Law from Ahmadu Bello University in Nigeria. Nuhu is also a Senior Fellow at St. Anthony’s College at Oxford University in the UK.
Magdalena Sepúlveda Carmona

Magdalena Sepúlveda Carmona is the independent expert on the question of human rights and extreme poverty for the Office of the UN High Commissioner of Human Rights since May 2008. Sepulveda is a Chilean lawyer and is currently working as Research Director at the International Council on Human Rights Policy. She holds a Ph.D in International Human Rights Law from Utrecht University in the Netherlands and an LL.M in human rights law from the University of Essex in the United Kingdom. She lectures at several universities in Latin America and has provided technical assistance and training on human rights to NGOs, IGOs and governments. Ms. Sepulveda has worked as a researcher at the Netherlands Institute for Human Rights, as a staff attorney at the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, and as the Co-Director of the Department of International Law and Human Rights of the United Nations affiliated University for Peace in San Jose, Costa Rica. She also served as a consultant to the Department of International Protection of UNHCR and more recently to the Norwegian Refugee Council in Colombia. She was appointed Independent Expert on the question of human rights and extreme poverty by the Human Rights Council in March 2008 and assumed her functions on 1 May 2008. For more information, visit the website of the UN OHCHR, available here.
Ingrid Srinath

Ingrid Srinath is the Secretary General of CIVICUS: World Alliance for Citizen Participation, which has members and partners that make up an influential global network of organisations at local, national, regional and international levels, dedicated to strengthening civil society throughout the world. She also serves on the board of the IANGO Accountability Charter and on the World Economic Forum NGO Advisory Group
Prior to joining CIVICUS she served as Chief Executive of India’s leading child rights advocacy organisation – Child Rights and You. At CRY, she led a team of over 200 employees in 7 offices based in India and overseas through a process of organisational transformation from a charity orientation to a rights-based approach. Under her leadership, CRY facilitated over 20 NGO alliances including a pan-India national alliance the National Alliance for the Fundamental Right to Education with which has over 3000 NGO members. Among its many achievements was the grassroots mobilisation that led to the amendment of India’s Constitution to make education a fundamental right. While working with CRY’s network of volunteers in over 20 countries she was exposed to the legal environment and constraints that voluntary organisations face across these countries and with the skills necessary to navigate their complexities. To read more about Ingrid Srinath’s background, please see her full bio on the CIVICUS website,available here.
Cobus de Swardt

Dr. Cobus de Swardt, Managing Director of Transparency International, is a South African sociologist whose work experience spans the fields of globalisation, development policy, international relations and multinational business management. His academic experience includes teaching at universities in South Africa, Australia, Japan and Germany. He has also worked for multinational corporations, trade unions and research institutes in managerial and research-related capacities in various countries. During the 1980s and early 1990s he was active in the anti-Apartheid struggle in South Africa chairing the ANC in Cape Town. In June 2007 he was appointed Managing Director of Transparency International (TI).
Cobus de Swardt co-chairs the World Economic Forum (WEF) Global Agenda Council
(GAC) on Corruption and is also a Board member of the WEF Partnering Against Corruption Initiative (PACI).
Daphne Wysham

Daphne Wysham is a Fellow and board member of the Institute for Policy Studies, founder and co-director of the Sustainable Energy & Economy Network, a project of IPS , and founder and co-host of Earthbeat Radio, which airs on WPFW 89.3 FM in Washington and is being syndicated to other stations nationwide. SEEN conducted the initial research which drew attention to the disproportionate ratio of fossil fuel investments by international financial institutions, including the World Bank. Translated into numerous languages, these studies resulted in: demands for reform from members of the US House and Senate; hearings held in Italian Senate, Dutch Parliament; Italian Prime Minister and former Vice President Al Gore calling for reforms. SEEN launched an international campaign in 1998 that, in 2001, resulted in World Bank President James Wolfensohn calling for an independent study of extractive industries (EIR). The EIR called for the World Bank to phase out of fossil fuels immediately, and rapidly phase in renewable energy. She is a Fellow of the Transnational Institute, Amsterdam; former editor-in-chief of Greenpeace Magazine; and associate of the Center for Investigative Reporting. She is an energy writer for UPI, a board advisor to the Nuclear Information and Resource Service, a Senior Fellow with the Sierra Club, and a member of the Durban Group for Climate Justice.
Ms. Wysham’s analysis and critiques have been featured in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, Grist, The Guardian, the Financial Times, and on BBC, NPR, and Marketplace, among others. For more information, please visit http://www.ips-dc.org/staff/daphne












