View allAll Photos Tagged IWD2021

Suzanne Ferrière, of Geneva, was inspired to humanitarian work by her uncle, Frederic Ferrière, a Swiss doctor and long-serving member of the Comité International de la Croix-Rouge [International Committee of the Red Cross] in Geneva. Suzanne worked as a member of the ICRC for nearly 30 years, and through her services in its Relief Section met Eglantyne Jebb, founder of the Save the Children Fund: she became the Assistant Secretary of the Save the Children International Union in Geneva, and worked closely with Eglantyne during her frequent visits who called her her ‘international sister’. She worked too for the International Union for Child Welfare and contributed to the founding of the International Migration Service, serving as its secretary-general until 1945. Suzanne visited Russia, South America, Palestine and elsewhere in the course of her Red Cross and SCF work and wrote several books, including ‘Les Etats-Unis au secours de l’Europe, 1918-1923’ and contributed to the ICRC journal ‘International Review’ with important articles including ‘The Activities of National Societies in War and Peace’.

Text by Anne George, Archivist, Cadbury Research Library, University of Birmingham.

Jean Overton Fuller was born 7 March 1915, the daughter of Captain John Henry Fuller, army officer (d 1914), and Violet Overton Fuller, artist (d 1967). She graduated from the University of London with a degree in English, acted in repertory theatre and, during World War II, worked for the Postal Censorship office in London. She was a keen painter and, after training at the Academie Julien in Paris, went on to exhibit as an artist and to illustrate her own books. Her first literary work, a volume of poetry, was published by Unwin Brothers in 1942 ('My love to thee: poems written to H. H.'). She is best known for her biographies, including that of her friend, British Special Operations Executive agent, Noor Inayat Khan (initially released as 'Madeleine' in 1952) and was persistent in researching her subjects through personal interviews and correspondence including conversing for several years with Henri Déricourt (1909-1962), an SOE officer alleged to have passed information to the Germans. She also wrote on spiritualism and the occult and was a regular contributor to the periodical, 'Theosophical History'. In the 1960s she established the publishing company, Fuller d'Arch Smith, with her partner, Timothy D'Arch Smith. She died 8 April 2009. The image is an illustration by Jean Overton Fuller for a volume of poetry issued under the title, ‘Tintagel’, Sceptre Press, 1970. Text by Cadbury Research Library, University of Birmingham

  

Lady Muriel Paget, daughter of the twelfth earl of Winchilsea was a philanthropist and humanitarian relief worker. Prior to WWI she founded soup kitchens for the poor in several districts of London but in 1915, after the birth of her fifth child, she widened her sphere of activities to focus on relief work in Eastern Europe and Russia. She organised field hospitals for the military wounded and food kitchens for the civilian population and during the Russian famine attempted to set up child welfare centres and nurse training. She worked closely with the Save the Children Fund, travelling tirelessly on the 'Lady Paget Missions', writing to raise funds and lobbying to encourage support. She was appointed OBE in 1918 and CBE in 1938, and received decorations from countries including Russian, Romania, Czechoslovakia, Lithuania and Latvia. She served on the SCF Council 1922-1929, and thereafter as a vice-president until 1938.

Text by Anne George, Archivist, Cadbury Research Library, University of Birmingham.

 

SCF/P/2/9, Cadbury Research Library

 

Ethel Sidgwick was a popular novelist and member of the Save the Children Fund Council. Educated at Oxford High School and brought up in intellectual circles, her first novel ‘Promise’ was published in 1910 and she went on to write a dozen novels, children’s plays and a biography of her aunt, who was Principal of Newnham College, Cambridge. Her literary skills were put to use in helping Eglantyne Jebb, later founder of the Save the Children Fund, to translate overseas newspapers for the 'Cambridge Magazine'. She was a staunch supporter of Save the Children from its foundation in 1919, serving as a member of Council, member of the Management Committee and chair of the Schools Sub-committee. She wrote several articles for its magazine ‘World’s Children’, and adapted into verse the Declaration of Geneva, originally composed by Eglantyne Jebb, the charity’s founder.

Text by Anne George, Archivist, Cadbury Research Library, University of Birmingham

Ianthe Theodora Heron-Allen (active 1904-1943) was born in 1904, the elder daughter of Edward Heron-Allen (1861-1943), solicitor, zoologist, writer and Persian scholar noted for translating the works of Omar Khayyam (1048-1131). Relatively little is know about the life of Ianthe. In 1921 both Ianthe and her father are listed as fellows of the Zoological Society of London. Their address is given as 33 Hamilton Terrace, St John's Wood, London. Internal evidence from the volume of playbills suggests that Ianthe was possibly an actress at some stage of her life. She is known to have survived her father who died on 28 March 1943 at Large Acres. Her younger sister, Armorel, had died tragically in a car crash in 1930. Armorel had graduated from Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford with a first class degree in zoology only two weeks earlier. The Cadbury Research Library holds an album of programmes and playbills collected by Ianthe, the majority of which have been annotated with the date when she presumably attended each performance.

 

Text by Mark Eccleston, Archivist, Cadbury Research Library, University of Birmingham.

 

calmview.bham.ac.uk/Record.aspx?src=CalmView.Catalog&...

 

Anne Elizabeth Lambert, was born in c. 1823, the daughter of John Lambert, wine merchant, of 33 Tavistock Square, London. She had two sisters and two brothers who were also merchants and judging from the fact that there were five live-in servants, it was a successful and well-to-do family. As a young woman in 1845, Anne (known as Annie) kept a lively diary recording her activities in London, and a second diary records the family visit to Oporto in Portugal, where Annie’s brother John worked in the port wine trade.

Text by Anne George, Archivist, Cadbury Research Library, University of Birmingham.

Ethel Brilliana Tweedie, nee Harley (1862-1940), better known in mid-life as Mrs Alec Tweedie. Educated at Queen's College London, she was the daughter of a physician and later became a travel writer after her marriage to Alexander Leslie Tweedie in 1887 and had two sons, Leslie and Harley. However, tragedy was to strike after the deaths of her husband and father in 1896 leaving her without settlement and two young sons to bring up. She turned to writing to support herself, publishing A Girl's Ride in Iceland (1889) and A Winter Jaunt to Norway (1894) and George Harley F.R.S., the life of a London Physician (1899) in memory of her father. During the First World War she became an active fundraiser and philantrophist starting the 'Mrs Alec Tweedie Hut Scheme' in association with the Y.M.C.A. which in 1916 raised over £10,500 for huts in the U.K. and in France for soldiers at the Front. She also personally donated the Leslie Tweedie Memorial Lounge within the Y.M.C.A. Shakespeare Hut in London, in memory of her son killed in the First World War. After the war she continued to write and carried on her charitable works. In later life she became a fellow of the Royal Geographical Society.

George Harley, F.R.S. : the life of a London physician / edited by his daughter, Mrs. Alec Tweedie, Cadbury Research Library, r R489.H2 T

Lilian Braithwaite had a long and varied career as an actress, from As You Like It in 1900 to Arsenic and Old Lace in the 1940s. One of her most successful roles was the neurotic Florence Lancaster in Noël Coward's The Vortex in 1924. She also served in the Second World War as chairman and chief organiser of the hospital division of ENSA and was created Dame of the British Empire in 1943. This photograph shows her with Ivor Novello in 1934. COW/4/J/4/2/110

Text by Jessica Clark, Archivist, Cadbury Research Library, University of Birmingham.

May Lamberton Becker was born in New York. She was a celebrated American childen's librarian, writer on children's literature, journalist and literary editor of the 'New York Herald Tribune' . In 1940, with her daughter Beatrice Warde who was by then living in England, she founded 'Books Across the Sea', a mutual exchange of publications which became a movement which promoted better cultural and literary understanding between the two countries. The idea had arisen following the stoppage of imports of printed books into Britain from America at the beginning of the war. Societies were set up in London and Edinburgh in the UK and in New York and Boston in the US and by 1944, about 2,000 volumes had been received in London and 1,600 in New York . When May Lamberton Becker died, she was described in her obituary as 'world traveller and educator'. The library reading room of the National Book League in London was dedicated in her memory when it was opened by T.S. Eliot in 1960.

Text by Anne George, Archivist, Cadbury Research Library, University of Birmingham.

calmview.bham.ac.uk/Record.aspx?src=CalmView.Catalog&...

Jane Hussey has been almost certainly identifed as one of the daughters of Sir Charles Hussey, 1st baronet, of Caythorpe, Lincolnshire, and his wife Elizabeth, nee Brownlow. Jane Hussey was born c. 1657 and died in 1735. The volume of medicinal recipes ('receipts' ) she compiled in 1692 presents a fascinating insight into the world of late 17th century domestic medicine and reflects Jane's proven experience in treating a whole range of illnesses and injuries. The wide range of ingredients required to make up the recipes seem unusual to the modern layman: as well as herbs and spices of all kinds other items for example include moss from a dead man's skull, steel filings, peacock dung, live swallows, shearings from scarlet cloth, the fattest badger you can get, failing that a fat young puppy.

Text by Anne George, Archivist, Cadbury Research Library, University of Birmingham.

ILRI spoke to Elizabeth Swai, the chief executive officer at AKM Glitters in Tanzania about her experience in leading the enterprise under the COVID-19 pandemic (photo credit: ILRI/Stefano Bianco).

 

Visit www.ilri.org/iwd2021 for more information.

Twin sisters Agnes Smith Lewis and Margaret Dunlop Gibson together discovered the Codex Syriac Synaiticus, a gospel palimpsest from about the fourth century and the oldest copy of the gospels in Syriac. Agnes and Margaret were born in Irvine, Ayrshire, the daughters of Scottish Presbyterians in 1843. As women they were not able to attend a British university; however they undertook private tuition and developed considerable expertise in modern and ancient languages, including Greek, Arabic, Hebrew and Syriac. They travelled widely throughout Europe and the Middle East. It was their friend James Rendel Harris who encouraged them to travel to St Catherine's Monastery in Sinai in 1892, during this visit they made their extraordinary discovery. DA61.

Beatrice Warde was born in New York City, daughter of writer and journalist, May Lamberton Becker. After graduating from Barnard College (the women's division of Columbia University), she was employed at the American Typefounders' Company Library in Jersey City becoming the acting head librarian under Henry Lewis Bullen. On 30 December 1922, she married the book designer and typographer, Frederic Warde (1894-1939), who was then the director of printing at Princeton University Press. Following a visit to the USA by the typographer Stanley Morison in 1924 the Wardes moved to England and Beatrice began writing scholarly articles on printing under the name of 'Paul Beaujon'. She was then recruited by the Monotype Corporation where she edited the Monotype Recorder and eventually became director of publicity. She also became a successful writer and lecturer; the educational aspect of typography became an important focus she and established connections with many printing schools and delivered a number of international lecture tours; her speech 'Printing should be invisible' presented to the British Typographers Guild in 1930 was republished several times.

In 1940, in conjunction with her mother, Beatrice Warde founded 'Books Across the Sea' . Following the cessation of import of printed books from America at the beginning of the war, Warde arranged with her mother to receive copies of 70 new American publications and the parallel exchange of new British books led to the formation of the movement which promoted better cultural and literary understanding between the two countries.

Text by Anne George, Archivist, Cadbury Research Library, University of Birmingham.

calmview.bham.ac.uk/Record.aspx?src=CalmView.Catalog&...

Marguerite Radclyffe Hall (1880-1943), poet and author, was said to be one of the most influential lesbian writers of the twentieth century. Her most celebrated work is the 'Well of Loneliness', which caused great controversy when it was published in 1928. Although a lifelong campaigner for homosexual rights she also held deeply conservative views and converted to Catholicism in 1912. In 1918 she began a relationship with sculptor Una Troubridge which was to last for the rest of her life despite the best efforts of Troubridge's husband and Hall's affair with Evguenia Souline in the 1930s.

Text by Jennifer Childs, Archivist, Cadbury Research Library, University of Birmingham.

Charlotte Georgiana Jerningham (1770-1854) was the only daughter of Sir William and Lady Frances Jerningham of Costessey Hall, Norfolk. Charlotte married Sir Richard Bedingfeld (1767-1829) of Oxburgh Hall, near King's Lynn, in 1795 and they had eight children. Lady Bedingfeld collected together the letters she received from her mother and from other members of the large Jerningham and Bedingfeld families, and between 1809 and 1833 kept diaries relating to specific events in her life. The collection provides a rich and fascinating insight into the life of an aristocratic Catholic family of the period and includes comment on national and international events as well as family and other society news.

Text by Anne George, Archivist, Cadbury Research Library, University of Birmingham.

ILRI spoke to Elizabeth Swai, the chief executive officer at AKM Glitters in Tanzania about her experience in leading the enterprise under the COVID-19 pandemic (photo credit: ILRI/Stefano Bianco).

 

Visit www.ilri.org/iwd2021 for more information.

In 1900, Annie Emma Allen went out as a missionary to the Uganda Mission of the Church Mission Society (CMS). She served in an honorary capacity for 25 years at Gayaza, Mengo, Kabarole, Toro and Nabumali. Missionaries were expected to turn their hand to what was needed and much of Annie’s time was spent teaching and helping in the hospital and dispensary. She was a talented artist and one of the legacies of her time in Uganda are her beautifully observed watercolours featuring scenes of everyday life in Uganda. Putting her artistic skills to practical use she introduced weaving and other handicrafts to local women and girls. Invalided back to England, she retired in January 1926, aged 70 years. She died 27 January 1942 in Cilrhiw, Narberth, Wales.

Text by Cadbury Research Library, University of Birmingham

ILRI spoke to Elizabeth Swai, the chief executive officer at AKM Glitters in Tanzania about her experience in leading the enterprise under the COVID-19 pandemic (photo credit: ILRI/Stefano Bianco).

 

Visit www.ilri.org/iwd2021 for more information.

Ethel Snowden (1881-1951), wife of the Labour Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Snowden, was a suffrage campainger and socialist, and toured the country giving lectures for the socialist cause, for the National Union of Women’s Suffrage and the Women’s Peace Crusade. She was a vigorous supporter of two international organisations, the League of Nations and, from its earliest days, the Save the Children Fund. In 1926 she wrote ‘The British Standards of Child Welfare as Tested by the Declaration of Geneva’. 'Her eloquence and vitality were a great asset to the venture' [SCF] was written of her when she died.

Text by Anne George, Archivist, Cadbury Research Library, University of Birmingham.

 

Cadbury Research Library ref. SCF/P/2/9 page 129.

ILRI spoke to Grace Bruno Duncan, a chicken business entrepreneur in Tanzania. Grace explains how the COVID-19 crisis prevented her from accessing her customers, most of whom are hotel businesses (photo credit: ILRI/Stefano Bianco).

 

Visit www.ilri.org/iwd2021 for more information.

Constance Caroline Woodhill Naden, 1858-1889, poet and philosopher. Constance Naden was born in Edgbaston, the only child of Thomas Naden and his second wife, Caroline Anne. Her mother died shortly after the birth, and Constance was brought up by her maternal grandparents. After leaving school she travelled widely in Europe, and worked on 'Songs and Sonnets of Springtime', published in 1881. She became a student at the recently opened Mason Science College the same year, studying physics, chemistry, botany, zoology, physiology and geology. She took an active role in debating societies, and in the Mason College Union of students, and edited the student magazine for a time. In 1885 she won the Paxton prize for an essay on the geology of the district, and in 1887 she won the Heslop gold medal with her essay 'Induction and Deduction'. She published a second volume of poems 'A Modern Apostle'; 'The Elixir of Life'; 'The Story of Clarice'; and other Poems' in 1887. She moved to London in 1888 and became involved in philosophical and philanthropic activities there. She was a public supporter of women's suffrage. Naden stopped writing poetry in 1887, influenced by her correspondence with Robert Lewins, a retired army doctor who she had met in 1876. Naden's first philosophical essays reproduced aspects of Lewins' system 'hylo-idealism' which was a mixture of idealism and materialism. 'Induction and Deduction' was published posthumously in 1890, edited by Lewins.

Text by Helen Fisher, University Archivist, Cadbury Research Library, University of Birmingham, USS115.

Julia Eva Vajkai worked tirelessly from 1920 to 1949 as the Save the Children Fund’s administrator in Hungary. She founded and maintained Work-Schools in Budapest where children, having left school at 12 and before apprenticeships were available at 14, could be cared for whilst learning a craft such as dressmaking or shoemaking. In 1949 these Work-Schools were handed over to the Hungarian Government. Madame Vajkai was a member of the executive council of the Save the Children International Union (UISE) based in Geneva, and served as an Assessor on the Child Welfare Committee of the League of Nations. She was a renowned social worker and visited England many times, writing ’Through Hungarian Eyes: an impression of social work in England’ in 1928. She wrote several books on social issues, and articles on her work in Hungary and social work in general appeared in Save the Children Fund’s magazine, World’s Children. She died in an accident the week before the Hungarian Uprising; the executor of her will was Thomas Walker Boyce, secretary general of Save the Children in Britain.

Text by Anne George, Archivist, Cadbury Research Library, University of Birmingham.

calmview.bham.ac.uk/Record.aspx?src=CalmView.Catalog&...

ILRI spoke to Elizabeth Swai, the chief executive officer at AKM Glitters in Tanzania about her experience in leading the enterprise under the COVID-19 pandemic (photo credit: ILRI/Stefano Bianco).

 

Visit www.ilri.org/iwd2021 for more information.

ILRI spoke to Grace Bruno Duncan, a chicken business entrepreneur in Tanzania. Grace explains how the COVID-19 crisis prevented her from accessing her customers, most of whom are hotel businesses (photo credit: ILRI/Stefano Bianco).

 

Visit www.ilri.org/iwd2021 for more information.

Working with UN Women to advance #IWD2021’s theme of “Women in Leadership”, Jittirat Tantasirin, CEO of ATTA. Autohaus, one of Thailand’s authorized Mercedes-Benz dealers, is leveraging technology to revolutionize retail sales models and expand women’s place in the automotive industry amid the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2020, Tantasirin won the Gender-inclusive Workplace category at the UN Women Asia-Pacific WEPs Awards in Thailand, which honours innovation in the private sector that promotes gender equality. #WhenWomenLead

 

Photo: UN Women/Nicolas Axelrod

Elizabeth Blackwell is best known for her publication 'A Curious Herbal' (1737-1739) a comprehensive reference book of medicinal plants. Blackwell not only described all the plants, including many new varieties from the 'New World', but also illustrated, engraved and hand coloured all the images herself.

 

A curious herbal : containing five hundred cuts, of the most useful plants, ... / by Elizabeth Blackwell, to which is added a short description of ye plants ....

Elizabeth Blackwell fl. 1737.

London : printed for John Nourse, 1739

Classmark: f QK99

 

birmingham-primo.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com/primo-explore/f...

  

ILRI spoke to Tatu Ibrahimu, a unit brooder leader under AKM Glitters in Tanzania. Tatu notes that with the COVID-19 pandemic, it's hard to sell her four-week-old chickens to smallholder farmers (photo credit: ILRI/Stefano Bianco).

 

Visit www.ilri.org/iwd2021 for more information.

ILRI spoke to Elizabeth Swai, the chief executive officer at AKM Glitters in Tanzania about her experience in leading the enterprise under the COVID-19 pandemic (photo credit: ILRI/Stefano Bianco).

 

Visit www.ilri.org/iwd2021 for more information.

ILRI spoke to Tatu Ibrahimu, a unit brooder leader under AKM Glitters in Tanzania. Tatu notes that with the COVID-19 pandemic, it's hard to sell her four-week-old chickens to smallholder farmers (photo credit: ILRI/Stefano Bianco).

 

Visit www.ilri.org/iwd2021 for more information.

ILRI spoke to Grace Bruno Duncan, a chicken business entrepreneur in Tanzania. Grace explains how the COVID-19 crisis prevented her from accessing her customers, most of whom are hotel businesses (photo credit: ILRI/Stefano Bianco).

 

Visit www.ilri.org/iwd2021 for more information.

Working with UN Women to advance #IWD2021’s theme of “Women in Leadership”, Jittirat Tantasirin, CEO of ATTA. Autohaus, one of Thailand’s authorized Mercedes-Benz dealers, is leveraging technology to revolutionize retail sales models and expand women’s place in the automotive industry amid the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2020, Tantasirin won the Gender-inclusive Workplace category at the UN Women Asia-Pacific WEPs Awards in Thailand, which honours innovation in the private sector that promotes gender equality. #WhenWomenLead

 

Photo: UN Women/Nicolas Axelrod

Working with UN Women to advance #IWD2021’s theme of “Women in Leadership”, Jittirat Tantasirin, CEO of ATTA. Autohaus, one of Thailand’s authorized Mercedes-Benz dealers, is leveraging technology to revolutionize retail sales models and expand women’s place in the automotive industry amid the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2020, Tantasirin won the Gender-inclusive Workplace category at the UN Women Asia-Pacific WEPs Awards in Thailand, which honours innovation in the private sector that promotes gender equality. #WhenWomenLead

 

Photo: UN Women/Nicolas Axelrod

Lady Eleanor Charlotte Butler (1739–1829) was originally from Ireland. She met Sarah Ponsonby in 1768 and became involved in a romantic friendship. In 1778, rather than be forced into arranged marriages by their respective families, they left Ireland and set up home together in Wales. The house they shared for over 50 years until their deaths was situated near the town of Llangollen, and they were known as ‘The Ladies of Llangollen’. We hold several letters in our Jerningham collection written by Eleanor Butler, 1811-1813. Refs: JER/595, JER/677, and JER/682.

ILRI spoke to Grace Bruno Duncan, a chicken business entrepreneur in Tanzania. Grace explains how the COVID-19 crisis prevented her from accessing her customers, most of whom are hotel businesses (photo credit: ILRI/Stefano Bianco).

 

Visit www.ilri.org/iwd2021 for more information.

Working with UN Women to advance #IWD2021’s theme of “Women in Leadership”, Jittirat Tantasirin, CEO of ATTA. Autohaus, one of Thailand’s authorized Mercedes-Benz dealers, is leveraging technology to revolutionize retail sales models and expand women’s place in the automotive industry amid the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2020, Tantasirin won the Gender-inclusive Workplace category at the UN Women Asia-Pacific WEPs Awards in Thailand, which honours innovation in the private sector that promotes gender equality. #WhenWomenLead

 

Photo: UN Women/Nicolas Axelrod

Working with UN Women to advance #IWD2021’s theme of “Women in Leadership”, Jittirat Tantasirin, CEO of ATTA. Autohaus, one of Thailand’s authorized Mercedes-Benz dealers, is leveraging technology to revolutionize retail sales models and expand women’s place in the automotive industry amid the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2020, Tantasirin won the Gender-inclusive Workplace category at the UN Women Asia-Pacific WEPs Awards in Thailand, which honours innovation in the private sector that promotes gender equality. #WhenWomenLead

 

Photo: UN Women/Nicolas Axelrod

ILRI spoke to Elizabeth Swai, the chief executive officer at AKM Glitters in Tanzania about her experience in leading the enterprise under the COVID-19 pandemic (photo credit: ILRI/Stefano Bianco).

 

Visit www.ilri.org/iwd2021 for more information.

ILRI spoke to Elizabeth Swai, the chief executive officer at AKM Glitters in Tanzania about her experience in leading the enterprise under the COVID-19 pandemic (photo credit: ILRI/Stefano Bianco).

 

Visit www.ilri.org/iwd2021 for more information.

ILRI spoke to Elizabeth Swai, the chief executive officer at AKM Glitters in Tanzania about her experience in leading the enterprise under the COVID-19 pandemic (photo credit: ILRI/Stefano Bianco).

 

Visit www.ilri.org/iwd2021 for more information.

ILRI spoke to Elizabeth Swai, the chief executive officer at AKM Glitters in Tanzania about her experience in leading the enterprise under the COVID-19 pandemic (photo credit: ILRI/Stefano Bianco).

 

Visit www.ilri.org/iwd2021 for more information.

ILRI spoke to Elizabeth Swai, the chief executive officer at AKM Glitters in Tanzania about her experience in leading the enterprise under the COVID-19 pandemic (photo credit: ILRI/Stefano Bianco).

 

Visit www.ilri.org/iwd2021 for more information.

ILRI spoke to Elizabeth Swai, the chief executive officer at AKM Glitters in Tanzania about her experience in leading the enterprise under the COVID-19 pandemic (photo credit: ILRI/Stefano Bianco).

 

Visit www.ilri.org/iwd2021 for more information.

ILRI spoke to Grace Bruno Duncan, a chicken business entrepreneur in Tanzania. Grace explains how the COVID-19 crisis prevented her from accessing her customers, most of whom are hotel businesses (photo credit: ILRI/Stefano Bianco).

 

Visit www.ilri.org/iwd2021 for more information.

Leaders from across Bloomberg collaborated with Goldman Sachs to host a bespoke training and coaching for 20 women in the Goldman Sachs 10,000 Women program

ILRI spoke to Elizabeth Swai, the chief executive officer at AKM Glitters in Tanzania about her experience in leading the enterprise under the COVID-19 pandemic (photo credit: ILRI/Stefano Bianco).

 

Visit www.ilri.org/iwd2021 for more information.

ILRI spoke to Elizabeth Swai, the chief executive officer at AKM Glitters in Tanzania about her experience in leading the enterprise under the COVID-19 pandemic (photo credit: ILRI/Stefano Bianco).

 

Visit www.ilri.org/iwd2021 for more information.

ILRI spoke to Grace Bruno Duncan, a chicken business entrepreneur in Tanzania. Grace explains how the COVID-19 crisis prevented her from accessing her customers, most of whom are hotel businesses (photo credit: ILRI/Stefano Bianco).

 

Visit www.ilri.org/iwd2021 for more information.

ILRI spoke to Grace Bruno Duncan, a chicken business entrepreneur in Tanzania. Grace explains how the COVID-19 crisis prevented her from accessing her customers, most of whom are hotel businesses (photo credit: ILRI/Stefano Bianco).

 

Visit www.ilri.org/iwd2021 for more information.

ILRI spoke to Grace Bruno Duncan, a chicken business entrepreneur in Tanzania. Grace explains how the COVID-19 crisis prevented her from accessing her customers, most of whom are hotel businesses (photo credit: ILRI/Stefano Bianco).

 

Visit www.ilri.org/iwd2021 for more information.

2 4 5 6 7 ••• 11 12