Down is Not Defeated

Speakers

  • Unknown, Individual
    Diana Aviv is president and CEO of Independent Sector, the national leadership forum for America's nonprofits, foundations, and corporate giving programs. She is a leading speaker on trends in and key issues for the sector, such as the financial state of nonprofits, public policies affecting charities and foundations, the role of civil society in democracy, effective advocacy, and civic engagement. She has testified before the US Congress and has been featured in media outlets. Diana also served as executive director of the Panel on the Nonprofit Sector, convened by Independent Sector. President Obama appointed Diana to the White House Council for Community Solutions in December 2010. Diana serves on the board of several nonprofit organizations. A native of South Africa, Diana graduated from the University of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg and received a master's degree in social work at Columbia University.
  • CEO and Co-founder, Shining Hope for Communities
    Kennedy is one of Africa’s best-known community organizers and social entrepreneurs. He grew up in Kenya's Kibera slum, the largest slum in Africa, where he experienced the devastating realities of life in extreme poverty first hand. At age ten he became a street child. Still, he dreamed about changing his community. In 2004, he had a job in a factory earning $1 for ten hours of work. He saved 20 cents and used this to buy a soccer ball and start Shining Hope for Communities (SHOFCO). Driven by the entrepreneurial spirit of the people of Kibera, SHOFCO became the largest grassroots organization in the slum. Today, SHOFCO impacts over 300,000 slum dwellers across 10 urban slums in Kenya, and is the largest employer in Kibera. In 2018, SHOFCO became the youngest-ever organization to receive the Conrad N. Hilton Humanitarian Prize, the world's largest humanitarian prize awarded to nonprofits that have made extraordinary contributions to alleviate human suffering. Although he was entirely informally educated, Kennedy received a full scholarship to Wesleyan University, becoming one of Kibera’s first to receive an education from an American liberal arts institution. He graduated in 2012 as the Commencement Speaker and with honors in Sociology. He later served on the Wesleyan Board of Trustees. He was awarded the 2010 Echoing Green Fellowship, which is given to the world’s best emerging social entrepreneurs. He was named to FORBES "30 under 30 list" for top Social Entrepreneurs in 2014. He is a New York Times best-selling author of Find Me Unafraid: Love, Hope, and Loss in an African Slum, co-written with his wife and partner, Jessica Posner Odede. He has published opinion articles on urban poverty in The New York Times, CNN, The Guardian, Project Syndicate. He previously served on the United Nations International Commission on Financing of Global Education Opportunities. He is a World Economic Forum Young Global Leader and a UBS Global Visionary.
  • Baroness, House of Lords
    After acting in theatre and television, I was an arts administrator, & later professor of Cultural Studies at Middlesex University, a writer, cultural critic and broadcaster. After leading a major initiative at the Black Cultural Archives, I was appointed Head of Culture at the Greater London Authority. I advise arts and cultural organisations on policy, diversity, leadership and strategic planning. I have sat on the Boards of several national cultural organisations including the South Bank Centre, the Royal National Theatre, the Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts, and The National Archives and is currently a trustee of Somerset House. She has been involved in a number of judging panels, including the Art Fund Prize and The Observer Ethical Awards and Chairing the Orange Prize for Literature and the Caine Prize for African Literature. A member of the House of Lords since 2004, Baroness Young is an Independent Cross Bench Peer and has been involved in campaigns criminalising forced labour. established and chairs the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Ethics and Sustainability in Fashion. currently chair of the task group charged with implementing the recommendations of the Young Review: Improving Outcomes for Young Black &/or Muslim Men.
  • Cecilia is a Skoll awardee in 2008 in Oxford. She considered an international expert in Human rights Activists and a Freedom fighter. She is the Founder of Voice of the Free is a hybrid organization that combines social care, social entrepreneurship, Advocating for policy reforms and mobilizing social movements to achieve lasting solutions. Cecilia was appointed by the two Philippine Presidents to the Inter-Agency Council Against Trafficking and served for six years. AICAT is a high-level policy-making body duly constituted by law to oversee the implementation of the country’s anti-trafficking policies, programs, and services. Similarly, she was also a member of the Presidential Task Force Against Illegal Recruitment during the Aquino Administration. Just recently retired as the CEO of Voice of the Free, Cecilia is now serving as an Advisory Board of the global movement Freedom United based in London. She is also an Advisory Council of Telos Governance Agency based in London and in the USA. Cecil also serves as a Jury of the Innovator Award of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
  • CEO, Tennyson Center for Children
    Ned is a proud 2011 Skoll Award recipient who has been focused on next generation monitoring and evaluation linked to systems change work for close to 3 decades. Ned's work in the water and sanitation sector coalesced around a movement originally entitled "Everyone Forever", which forced sector role players to operate at scale, track results over time and rewired the way local governments and national Ministries of Finance allocated, tracked and ultimately financed WASH. Ned pivoted to a whole new sector to see if the systems transforming principles that underpin his work in water and sanitation could be applied elsewhere. He is now CEO of the Tennyson Center for Children, attacking the way $490m is allocated for child welfare in Colorado. Ned's personal journey mirrors that of the life-stories of the children experiencing trauma from abuse and neglect that he sees and supports at Tennyson.