About WIEGO: Who We Are
WIEGO Programme Staff and Steering Committee
WIEGO Programme Staff
Martha Alter Chen
is a Lecturer in Public Policy at the Kennedy
School of Government at Harvard
University and Coordinator of the global research policy network
Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing (WIEGO).
She is an ex-oficio member of the WIEGO Steering Committee. An experienced
development practitioner and scholar with a doctorate in South Asian
Regional Studies from the University of Pennsylvania, her areas
of specialization are gender and poverty alleviation, with a focus
on issues of employment and livelihoods. Before joining Harvard
University in 1987, Dr. Chen lived for 15 years in Bangladesh, where
she worked with BRAC, one of the
world’s largest NGOs, and in India where she served as field
representative of Oxfam America
for India and Bangladesh. She is the author of numerous books including,
most recently, The
Progress of the World’s Women 2005: Women, Work and Poverty
(co-authored with Joann Vanek, Francie Lund, James Heintz, Renana
Jhabvala and Chris Bonner), Mainstreaming
Informal Employment and Gender in Poverty Reduction (co-authored
with Joann Vanek and Marilyn Carr), Women
and Men in the Informal Economy: A Statistical Picture
(co-authored with Joann Vanek) and Perpetual
Mourning: Widowhood in Rural India.
Sharit Bhowmik is
the Director of the Urban Policies Programme of WIEGO, an ex-oficio
member of the WIEGO Steering Committee, and a Professor of Sociology
at the University
of Mumbai. In addition, he currently hold the following positions:
Managing Committee Member of the Indian
Sociological Society; Executive Committee Member of the National
Alliance of Street Vendors of India (NASVI); Chairperson of
the Labour Education and Research Network (LEARN), an NGO which
helps to organize workers in the informal economy; Council Member
of the Indian Council of Social Science
Research (ICSSR); Member of the National Steering Committee
of Indo-Dutch Project
in Development Alternatives (IDPAD) of ICSSR; Member of the
Board of Control for Orphanages and Other Charitable Institutions
Act of the Government of Maharashtra; and a Member of the State
Monitoring Committee State for Implementation of Juvenile Justice
Act. Additionally, he previously served as an expert member of the
National Task Force on Street Vendors, which was formed by the Government
of India’s Ministry of Urban Development and Poverty Alleviation,
and as a member of the Drafting Committee for the National Policy
for Street Vendors. His research interests include the urban informal
sector, plantation labour, and cooperatives.
Christine Bonner is
the Director of the Organization and Representation Programme of
WIEGO and an ex-oficio member of the WIEGO Steering Committee. She
has spent 30 years working in and with the labor movement in South
Africa in various capacities. Most recently, she served as the founding
Director of the Development
Institute for Training, Support and Education for Labour (DITSELA)
focusing on the development and provision of union education, and
on support for union organizational development. Most recently,
she co-authored The
Progress of the World’s Women 2005: Women, Work and Poverty
with Martha Chen, Joann Vanek, Francie Lund, James Heintz, and Renana
Jhabvala.
Sarah Gammage, an
economist, is the Research Coordinator of the WIEGO Global Markets
Programme and the Washington D.C. representative of the Centro de
Estudios Ambientales y Sociales para el Desarrollo Sostenible, a
Non-Governmental Organization in El Salvador. She is also an affiliate
researcher at the Center for
Women and Work at Rutgers University. Her research includes
examining the effects of macroeconomic policy and globalization
on women in Latin America; exploring the impact of migration, internal
displacement and refugee status on the intergenerational transmission
of poverty; and analyzing human-environment interactions in diverse
ecosystems. Over the last ten years, she has worked with and for
a number of development organizations including the United
Nations Development Programme, the
International Center for Research on Women, the Global
Policy Network, and the International
Institute for Environment and Development. She is the board
chair of the Ecumenical Programme in Central America and serves
on the Latin American Committee of the American
Friends Service Committee. She has a master’s degree in
Economics from the London School of Economics and Political Science
and a doctorate in Development Studies from the Institute of Social
Studies in The Hague. She is an active member of the Latin
American Studies Association and the International
Association for Feminist Economics.
James Heintz is the
Research Coordinator of the WIEGO Statistics Programme and an Assistant
Research Professor at the University
of Massachusetts at Amherst. He has written on a wide range
of economic policy issues, including job creation, global labor
standards, egalitarian macroeconomic strategies, and investment
behavior. He has worked as an international consultant on projects
in Ghana and South Africa, sponsored by the International
Labor Organization and the United
Nations Development Programme, that focus on employment-oriented
development policy.
Elaine Jones is the
Director of the WIEGO Global Markets Programme, an ex-oficio member
of the WIEGO Steering Committee, and an independent advisor in the
fields of ethical and fair trade. Elaine worked with The
Body Shop International as Head of Ethical Trade up until May
2003 where she played a key role in developing trading relationships
with community-based producer organisations in 27 countries as part
of the company’s Community Trade Programme. At the same time
she was instrumental in building an ethical supply chain strategy
which worked on promoting compliance with International Labour Standards
in global supply chains.
During her time at The Body Shop, Elaine served on the Board of
The Ethical Trading Initiative
(ETI) , a tri-partite organisation which unites Companies, Unions
and NGOs in the promotion of Labour Standards internationally. Elaine
is currently engaged in developing materials and delivering training
on Ethical Trade with The Co-operative
College, Manchester where she is an Associate Tutor.
Elaine Jones spent a total of 12 years living and working in Latin
America in Bolivia, Mexico, Cuba and Dominican Republic through
programmes of international cooperation and development. During
this time, Elaine worked with a variety of locally-based development
NGOs in the fields of community development, documentation, publications
and research, gender, environment and development, organisational
strengthening and capacity-building.
Elaine Jones is an active member of the international Fair Trade
movement for more than five years has served as a Board member and
Council Trustee of Twin and Twin
Trading, the London-based organisation which trades fair trade
coffee, cocoa, fresh fruit and nuts. Twin Trading was a founder
of two of the UK’s most successful Fair Trade brands, CafeDirect
and Day Chocolate Company.
Francie Lund
is the Director of the Social Protection Programme of WIEGO,
an ex-oficio member of the WIEGO Steering Committee, and an Associate
Professor at the University
of KwaZulu Natal (formerly the University of Natal) in Durban,
South Africa, and teaches Social Policy in the School
of Development Studies. She has done extensive research in social
security, analysing the effects of different forms of social assistance
on poor households, and especially their effects for women in rural
areas. She chaired the Lund Committee on Child and Family Support
which was convened after the transition to democracy in 1994.
Joann Vanek, a gender/social
statistician, is the Director of the Statistics Programme of WIEGO.
She retired from the United Nations
Statistics Division after 20 years of work. At the United Nations,
she led the development of the programme on gender statistics and
co-ordinated the production of three issues of the UN global statistical
report on women, The World’s Women: Trends and Statistics. Her
most recent publications include The
Progress of the World’s Women 2005: Women, Work and Poverty
(co-authored with Martha Chen, Francie Lund, James Heintz, Renana
Jhabvala and Chris Bonner), Mainstreaming
Informal Employment and Gender in Poverty Reduction (co-authored
with Martha Chen and Marilyn Carr) and Women
and Men in the Informal Economy: A Statistical Picture, a
book co-authored with Martha Chen which was prepared for the 2002
International Labour Conference.
WIEGO Steering Committee
Renana Jhabvala
is the Chair of the WIEGO Steering Committee.
She has been working with the Self
Employed Women’s Association (SEWA) since 1977 and is
currently SEWA’s National Co-ordinator as well as the Chairperson
of SEWA Bank and SEWA
Bharat. Her most recent publications include The
Progress of the World’s Women 2005: Women, Work and Poverty
with Martha Chen, Joann Vanek, Francie Lund, James Heintz, and Christine
Bonner; Informal
Economy Centrestage: New Structures of Employment, which
she co-edited with Ratna M. Sudarshan and Jeemol Unni; and The
Unorganised Sector: Work Security and Social Protection,
which she co-edited with R.K.A. Subramanya.
Kofi Asamoah has been
the Deputy Secretary General of the Ghana Trades Union Congress
since 2000. Prior to holding this position, Kofi previously served
as the General Secretary of the Dock Workers Union in Ghana from
1996 - 2000 as well as the President of the Dockworkers
in Africa (ITF). From 1988-1996, he worked as the Deputy General
Secretary for the Maritime and Dockworkers Union in Ghana. Kofi
is married with two children and holds a postgraduate certificate
in labour policy studies from the University
of Cape Coast in Ghana.
Jacques Charmes is
an economist and statistician. Currently Director of the Département
Sociétés et Santé at L'Institut
de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD, formerly ORSTOM),
he is also teaching economics at the University
of Versailles and at the Institute for Political Science in
Paris. He has been involved in the design and analysis of many labour
force, living standards and informal sector surveys in Africa, North
and South of Sahara. He has written several articles, reports and
manuals on the measurement of informal sector in labour force and
National Accounts, with special emphasis on women. He has participated
in many UN and World
Bank programmes and activities on these topics, especially:
the new international definition of the informal sector adopted
in 1993 (15th International
Conference of Labour Statisticians, ICLS), the definition of
informal employment (17th
ICLS, 2003), the handbook on the household sector accounts for
the implementation of the new System of National Accounts, the handbook
on measurement of the non-observed economy (OECD), the World's Women
statistics compilations, and national human development reports
in various regions. Recently he has been involved in two large programmes
with the UN Economic Commission for
Africa (African
Centre for Gender and Development): the African
Gender and Development Index (AGDI) and the “guidebook
for mainstreaming gender perspectives and household production into
national statistics, budgets and policies in Africa”.
José del Valle Perez
was born in Mexico on December 19, 1946. He received a degree in
law (barrister) from the Escuela Libre de Derecho. Since 1968, he
has been active in union life, first as an advisor and in 1985 he
began working with CROC
(the Revolutionary Confederation of Workers and Farmers) where
he was elected to Secretary General of the Syndicate of Graphic
Arts and Secretary General of the National Federation of Refreshment
Workers. Within the structure of CROC, he was elected to Secretary
of International Affairs and Policies. He has attended numerous
international congresses, seminars, and workshops. He has taken
part in the
International Labour Conferences at the ILO for the past 10
years. At present, he is a member of the Board of the International
Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU in English or CIOSL
en español). He has held many public roles within the
administration of the government of Mexico, as well as many public
posts within the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI).
Dan Gallin is Chair
of the Global Labour Institute
(GLI), a foundation established in 1997 with a secretariat in
Geneva. The GLI investigates the consequences of the globalization
of the world economy for workers and trade unions, develops and
proposes counterstrategies and promotes international thought and
action in the labour movement. Gallin worked from August 1960 until
April 1997 for the International Union
of Food, Agricultural, Hotel, Restaurant and Catering, Tobacco and
Allied Workers' Associations (IUF), since 1968 as General Secretary.
He was born in 1931 as a Romanian citizen, became stateless in
1949 and was granted Swiss citizenship in 1969. He studied political
science and sociology in the United States and in Switzerland and
lives since 1953 in Geneva. He joined the socialist movement as
a student in the United States in 1951 and has been a member of
the Swiss Social-Democratic Party since 1955. He is a member of
the Swiss General Workers' Union(UNIA)
and has been a member of one of its predecessors, the Swiss
Commercial, Transport and Food Workers' Union, since 1960.
He has served as President of the
International Federation of Workers' Education Associations (IFWEA)
from 1992 to 2003 and served as Director of the Organization and
Representation Programme of WIEGO from June 30, 2000 to July 31,
2002. He continues to serve on the WIEGO Steering Committee.
Gallin also serves on the Board of the following institutions:
Collège du Travail
(Geneva), Federation
News (General Federation of
Trade Unions, UK) (editorial board), International
Union Rights (International
Centre for Trade Union Rights, UK) (editorial board).
He is currently researching union organization of women workers
in the informal economy, the role of trade unions in development
and issues of policy and organization in the international trade
union movement.
Pat Horn is the International
Co-ordinator of StreetNet
International , an international federation which has been formed
to promote and protect the rights of street vendors around the world.
An experienced trade unionist and activist in the women's movement,
her work now focuses principally on the issues of workers in the
informal economy, with a specialization in the areas of work of
the street vending sector, such as urban policies and the own-account
labour market. StreetNet International has almost 200 000 members
in 19 affiliated organizations in 17 countries of Africa, Asia and
Latin America. Prior to starting in 2000 to work full-time on the
launch of StreetNet International, Ms Horn worked as a trade unionist
from 1976 - 1991 in the emerging independent trade union movement
in Apartheid South Africa (which became COSATU
- Congress of South African Trade Unions - in 1985) and as a
women's activist in the African National
Congress (ANC) Women's League when it launched its democratic
structures on the ground in the early 1990s. From 1993 she merged
these two experiences into founding the Self-Employed Women's Union
(SEWU) which organized women in the informal economy into a new
kind of trade unionism in five regions of South Africa for the ten
years from 1994 - 2004.
Dave Spooner has a
background in education and writing on international trade unionism,
and the use of internet technologies for international solidarity.
In the 1980s he worked with trade unions in north-west England on
transnational corporations, factory closures and unions in the South,
co-founded International Labour Reports magazine, worked for the
Hong Kong-based Asia Labour Monitor, returning to England in 1989
to work for Manchester City
Council. He became International Programmes Officer for the
UK Workers' Education Association
in 1993 and Secretary of Euro-WEA
in 1995. He was elected General Secretary of IFWEA
in 2003.
During his time with the WEA he worked closely with the Zambia Congress
of Trade Unions in developing education work to support informal
economy workers, and has subsequently been involved in similar work
elsewhere in Southern Africa and in Asia. He was commissioned to
join the British Government delegation to the
ILC discussions on the informal economy in 2002, and has written
on informal economy questions for the UK
Department for International Development, the ILO and trade
union and NGO publications. He has been a member of the WIEGO ORP
Advisory Committee since 2000.
William F. Steel is
one of the founding members of WIEGO, and has participated actively
in the Steering Committee. At the end of 2005, he retired as Senior
Adviser in the Africa Region Private
Sector Group of the World Bank, where he had worked since 1983,
specializing in small enterprise development and microfinance. He
is currently living in Accra, Ghana, working part-time at the
University of Ghana and as a consultant in the local World Bank
Office. He continues to support the World Bank-IFC programme for
development of micro, small and medium-scale enterprises (MSMEs)
in Africa, for which he was the Regional Adviser based in Uganda
for two years. He is also a leading expert in micro and rural finance,
and recently co-authored studies of microfinance regulation in African
countries. As Co-Chair of the Committee
of Donor Agencies for Small Enterprise Development (1991-2004),
he led the development of Guiding Principles for donor support both
for microfinance (1995) and for business development services (2001).
He has published numerous studies, articles and books on small enterprise
development, informal financial markets, microfinance regulation,
employment of women, and industrial adjustment. He previously taught
economics at Vanderbilt University
and the University of Ghana, and he has served as an Advisor in
the African Development Bank and
the Indonesia National Planning Agency.
Víctor E. Tokman
is presently an Advisor to the President of Chile and an international
consultant for ECLAC, IDB and the ILO. He is a member of the Steering
Committee of WIEGO. He also teaches at the post graduate programme
of FLACSO in Santiago. He retired
from the ILO in 2001 after a long career mostly in Latin America,
where he was Director of PREALC (Regional Employment Programme for
Latin América and the Caribbean) and ended as Regional Director
for the Américas and Assistant Director General. He was also
the Director of the Employment and Development Department in Geneva.
He graduated at Oxford as a D.Phil in economics, as a Master in
the University of Chile and he obtained his first degree in the
Universidad del Litoral in Argentina. He has published a large number
of books and articles on employment, equity, labor and development.
He is a recognized authority in the informal sector field. His pioneer
work on this field started back in 1973 at the beginning of the
introduction of the concept and continue to contribute up to present
days. His last book on the informal sector is "From informality
to modernization" (2000) and his most recent book which includes
a main chapter on the evolution f the concept and a policy proposal
is "Employment and Equity: 40 years of search" (2004,
Fondo de Cultura Económica). Both books were published in
Spanish.
Past Members of the WIEGO Steering Committee
Ela Bhatt is founder
of the Self Employed Women’s
Association (SEWA) and served as the General Secretary of SEWA
from 1972- 1996. She served as chair of the WIEGO Steering Committee
until 2005. A lawyer by training, Ms. Bhatt is a respected leader
of the international labour, cooperative, women and micro-finance
movements who has won several national and international awards.
She was one of the founders of Women’s
World Banking and previously served as Chair of the International
Alliance of Homebased Workers [Homenet], of the International
Alliance of Street Vendors [Streetnet], and of WIEGO. She also
served as a trustee of the Rockefeller
Foundation. Most recently, she authored the book, We
Are Poor but So Many: The Story of Self-Employed Women in India.
Marilyn Carr is development
economist undertaking consultancies in: gender, trade and export
promotion; women in the informal economy; women and non-timber forest
products; and gender,science and technology. From 1988 to 2005,
she was Director of the Global Markets Programme of WIEGO as well
as a member of the WIEGO Steering Committee. She has been a Research
Associate at the Institute of Development
Studies, University of Sussex,
UK; a Research Fellow at the Radcliffe
Institute of Advanced Studies; a Senior Research Fellow at the
International Development Research
Centre, Ottawa; and a Visiting Fellow at the International
Institute for Environment and Development, London. She also
was Senior Economic Adviser for UNIFEM,
New York and Regional Director, UNIFEM, Harare; Senior Economist
with ITDG in London; and worked
on gender, technology and small business development throughout
Africa with the Women's Centre of the UN
Economic Commission for Africa in Addis Ababa. She has written
or edited 10 books and published several monographs and articles
in her specialist areas.
Winnie Mitullah is
a researcher and a lecturer at the Institute for Development Studies
(IDS), University of Nairobi.
She formerly served as the Director of the Urban Policies Programme
of WIEGO and as a member of the WIEGO Steering Committee. She holds
a PhD in Political Science and Public Administration. Her PhD thesis
was on Urban Housing, with a major focus on policies relating to
low income housing. Over the years, she has researched, written
and consulted in the areas of urban development, with a focus on
housing, informal urban economy, politics, institutions, governance,
and the role of stakeholders in development. Recently completed
works include a contribution to the Global
Report on Human Settlements 2003, case study of Nairobi;
contribution to the fourth-coming World
Development Report 2005: A Better Investment Climate for Everyone,
a study commissioned by the ILO on the Informal
Labor in the Construction Industry in Kenya: A Case Study of Nairobi
and a book chapter on `Gender Inclusion in Transition Politics:
A Review and Critique of Women's Engagement.'
S.V.Sethuraman is
an independent consultant working out of Washington, D.C. and a
member former of the WIEGO Steering Committee. Until recently, he
was the foremost thinker and writer on the informal sector in the
ILO and wrote and/or edited most
of the ILO’s publications on the informal sector in the last
two decades.
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