
Interview with Heather Anderson (Global Health Corps)
Global Health Corps seeks to increase global health equity by providing leadership opportunities for young professionals from diverse backgrounds to
Eye-opening experiences in her young days in Thailand and a strong sense of empathy led Anouck to engage in humanitarian work from a young age. In her work with the UN and grassroots NGOs across continents, she’s had diverse roles from monitoring and evaluating social developments programmes in rural India, to advocating for the rights of refugees vis-à-vis governments and international donors in Iran and Rwanda. Since she joined Crisis Action in 2012, Anouck has contributed to impactful campaigns involving diverse coalitions of 100+ NGOs and civil society members to protect civilians from conflict in the Central African Republic, Mali, and Israel- Palestine. She currently co-leads Crisis Action’s international campaign on Syria. In this role she helps broker collaboration between Syrian civil society and humanitarian, human rights & conflict prevention organisations to foster conditions to bring the 5-year conflict to an end.
Global Health Corps seeks to increase global health equity by providing leadership opportunities for young professionals from diverse backgrounds to
A software platform, developed by a women-led nonprofit startup, aims to make it easier and less traumatic for victims to
Catalyst 2030 is a global movement to accelerate progress on the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The chapter in
EcoNusa Foundation works to strengthen Indigenous rights, protect forests and marine ecosystems, and build sustainable local economies in Papua and
The vast majority of births in Malawi still happen under the care of traditional birth attendants, who are often unequipped