Kavita N. Ramdas

Kavita N. Ramdas

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Kavita N. Ramdas is the President and CEO of the Global Fund for Women. Ramdas provides leadership and direction for the largest grantmaking foundation in the world focused exclusively on supporting international women’s human rights. During Ramdas’ tenure, Global Fund assets have increased from $6 million to more than $20 million. Grantmaking has risen annually at a rate of 12 percent, and the number of countries in which the Global Fund has made grants has nearly tripled.

Ramdas extends her expertise in women’s human rights, social justice philanthropy, and international development to her diverse array of professional affiliations. She serves as a board member for the Rural Development Institute, a member of the board of trustees at Mount Holyoke College, and collaborates with the Ethical Globalization Initiative Human Rights Policy Group, Council of Advisors on Gender Equity to the Woodrow Wilson School at Princeton University and the Women's Rights Prize Advisory Council of the Gruber Foundation.

Ramdas received her academic training at Mount Holyoke College (B.A. 1985) and Princeton University where she earned a Master’s degree in Public Affairs from the department of International Development Studies of the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs (1988). Ramdas is fluent in Hindi/Urdu, English and German and can converse in Tamil, Spanish and French.

Blog Entries by Kavita N. Ramdas

The Silent Olympics

Posted July 24, 2008 | 05:23 PM (EST)


It is important for the world to know that quietly and out of sight of the mainstream media, ordinary people from all over China have engaged in citizen activism even after the suppression of the Tiananmen Square protests in 1989. Their grassroots efforts are building a society that is likely...

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Playing Political Catch Up with the Rest of the World

4 Comments | Posted March 20, 2008 | 03:09 PM (EST)


March 2008, Women's History Month has taken on dramatic new relevance for the women of the United States.

For the first time in U.S. history, a woman, Senator Hillary Clinton, is being taken seriously as candidate for president. After a long and still uphill struggle within the Democratic Party, including...

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Pakistan's Women

Posted November 21, 2007 | 03:43 PM (EST)


Musharraf's acrobatics may actually mark the return of democracy to Pakistan after more than eight years of military rule. Here's why: while the world has been focused on Pakistan's bombs and viability as a state, its women see a flickering light at the end of the tunnel, a future that...

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No Fair Trade for Women

Posted September 27, 2007 | 04:14 PM (EST)


This week marks the premiere of Trade in local theaters, a powerful new film about the underworld of sex trafficking. The movie is inspired by a 2004 New York Times Magazine cover story by journalist Peter Landesman, and shares with it the revelation that human trafficking exists right here in...

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Need a Safe Abortion? Go to Mexico City

Posted April 24, 2007 | 10:00 AM (EST)


It is easier to access contraceptive services in Iran, an Islamic theocracy, than it is in Mexico or other Latin American countries. In the U.S. the pro-choice movement is reeling from last Wednesday's Supreme Court ruling to uphold a ban on partial-birth abortions. U.N. data shows that in countries where...

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On Giving

Posted December 6, 2006 | 01:36 PM (EST)


At no time of the year do the deep-seated contradictions of our world become more apparent and more disturbing than these few weeks at the end of December. On the one hand, the pages of our newspapers and the screens on our TV are filled with advertisements for the latest...

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