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The Clinton Global Initiative (CGI) community will reconvene September 23-24, 2024 in New York City for the 2024 Annual Meeting. Timed to coincide with the U.N. General Assembly, CGI brings together business, government, and civil society leaders to drive progress on climate resilience, inclusive economic growth and recovery, health equity, the full participation of women and girls, and humanitarian response efforts to crises around the globe. Learn more about CGI.
NEWS
Stay up to date with the latest news and stories from the CGI community.
Inspirational Moments
Browse highlights from last year’s CGI 2023 Meeting.
CGI 2023: “Keep Going”
Every day is a choice. It is the power of what we do with that choice — our …
CGI 2023: Clinton Global Citizen Award | First Lady of Ukraine Olena Zelenska
First Lady of Ukraine Olena Zelenska received the Clinton Global Citizen Award for her awe-inspiring leadership and service …
CGI 2023: Investing in Working Moms | Reshma Saujani
Reshma Saujani’s $100 billion idea? Invest in working moms.
CGI 2023: President Clinton in conversation with His Holiness Pope Francis
“We are living through a changing epoch. Only together can we emerge from it better.” A special conversation …
CGI 2023: This is Our Moment | Reverend William J. Barber III
Reverend William J. Barber III, Founding Director of Repairers of the Breach & the Yale Center for Public …
CGI 2023: Women & Girls To-Do List | Secretary Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary Hillary Rodham Clinton’s women and girls to-do list: – Close the wage gap – Protect and expand …
CGI 2023: “Keep Going”
Every day is a choice. It is the power of what we do with that choice — our …
CGI 2023: Clinton Global Citizen Award | First Lady of Ukraine Olena Zelenska
First Lady of Ukraine Olena Zelenska received the Clinton Global Citizen Award for her awe-inspiring leadership and service …
CGI 2023: Investing in Working Moms | Reshma Saujani
Reshma Saujani’s $100 billion idea? Invest in working moms.
CGI 2023: President Clinton in conversation with His Holiness Pope Francis
“We are living through a changing epoch. Only together can we emerge from it better.” A special conversation …
CGI 2023: This is Our Moment | Reverend William J. Barber III
Reverend William J. Barber III, Founding Director of Repairers of the Breach & the Yale Center for Public …
CGI 2023: Women & Girls To-Do List | Secretary Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary Hillary Rodham Clinton’s women and girls to-do list: – Close the wage gap – Protect and expand …
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Join the Conversation
We invite you to join the conversation on social media by following our channels and using the hashtag #CGI2024.
Agenda
What’s Working
As the CGI community meets once again in New York City, the global challenges we face are stark – and current efforts to meet the moment are coming up short at the scale needed to beat the negative trendlines we face.
We all know what’s not working. Our efforts to curb climate change aren’t accelerating fast enough; mis- and dis-information campaigns are influencing elections around the planet; health inequities are rising; and more people are falling into poverty than climbing out of it. Every morning, headlines read of more conflict and less cooperation.
But in corners of the planet near and far, there’s a different story unfolding – a story of persistence, innovation, and partnership. A story of what is working.
At the onset of this year’s United Nations General Assembly, we all have a responsibility to move beyond a focus on what’s broken. We all have a responsibility to identify, uplift, and scale the solutions that are defying the odds. We all have the responsibility to act with urgency and get to work because our future depends on it.
Future of Funding
While philanthropy has endeavored to reach historically marginalized communities for generations, these efforts are less effective when donors chase headlines or demonstrate a lack of trust in their partners and grantees, or when attacks on diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) result in restrictions on giving. Funders are increasingly looking for more effective ways to deploy capital and promote wealth redistribution as they interrogate their own wealth, dip into endowments, and work toward a rebalance of power. This session will explore what’s working in philanthropy today to help direct resources toward historically marginalized communities and frontline organizations and create a pipeline for a more equitable and inclusive future of funding.
Covering a Crisis: How to Support Journalists
We rely on journalists to report on the most urgent crises around the globe – humanitarian emergencies, armed conflicts, climate change, protests, and more. These journalists routinely contend with physical threats, the rise of misinformation, media deserts, and other challenges that are making reporting increasingly more difficult. At the same time, the way we consume news has fundamentally changed journalism, and everyone can have a role in reporting the news and exposing injustices and corruption. This session will explore what’s working to support a robust media sector able to report on the wide range of crises confronting our global community.
Innovations in Water Access
Water is fundamental to every living being on the planet, but access is becoming increasingly limited largely due to climate change. Last year, the World Resources Institute reported that almost half of the world’s population faces water scarcity for at least one month a year. Improving clean water access is critical to sustaining human health; improving economic, political, and food security; and adapting to a changing climate. This session will examine what’s working to provide safe and clean fresh water to communities around the globe.
Unlocking Health Care Excellence through Data, Diversity, and Access
In countries with developing health care systems – where 90 percent of preventable deaths occur – we are investing less than 10 percent of health research globally. Even in established and advanced health care systems, drugs and treatments are often only tested on a homogenous group of people, which can have significant consequences for public health. Innovations in the medical research and development process, including diversification of clinical trials, and technology development with diverse populations in mind, are unlocking access to precision medicine for more people and improving health outcomes to better serve all patients, regardless of gender, race, or geolocation. This session will examine what’s working to drive that progress forward and what is needed for further investment in more inclusive medical research and innovation.
Uncharted Paths: Unconventional Approaches to Global Challenges
In a world grappling with daunting global crises like climate change, humanitarian needs, and rising homelessness, finding effective solutions can feel like hitting a brick wall. Yet, sometimes the most innovative solutions are right in front of us, already discovered and waiting to be scaled or adapted to a different industry, challenge, or geography. Explore with us as we spotlight pioneers who have not only identified but successfully implemented unconventional and effective solutions to some of our most pressing global challenges. These groundbreaking ideas, once considered unattainable, are now reshaping how we tackle global issues and paving the way toward a brighter future. Discover how these bold initiatives are making a tangible difference and inspiring new approaches worldwide
Combatting the U.S. Gun Violence Epidemic
Every day in the United States, 327 people – including 23 children and teens – are shot with a firearm on average. Despite widespread consensus on the need for action to prevent gun violence, policy and social challenges have stood in the way of progress on this issue. However, we have reached a critical tipping point, and civil society and private sector leaders are advancing important solutions and public health interventions that will help mitigate the gun violence epidemic in America and save lives. This session will explore what’s working in this public health effort and what can be learned from other countries’ successful efforts to curb of gun violence to finally decrease shootings and deaths in the United States.
Preserving Our Planet: Harnessing Community Engagement for Sustainable Land Management
As communities grapple with the effects of climate change, food insecurity, and biodiversity loss, local leaders are increasingly working to responsibly manage and steward their natural resources in innovative ways. Sustainable agriculture practices and community-led ecological preservation can help communities produce more food and protect the environment. This session will explore what’s working in communities worldwide to improve land management in ways that boost sustainability, biodiversity, and economic well-being.
Investing in Africa’s Next Generation to Promote Economic Progress Across the Continent
Africa is poised for a massive population boom. With 60 percent of its population under the age of 25 right now, the U.N. estimates that by 2050, 1 in 4 people on the planet will be African. The continent is booming with innovation, business, art, and technology, and efforts to invest in education and entrepreneurship abound. This session will explore what’s working to advance opportunities for young people and sustain Africa’s development over the coming decades.
Resilient Futures: Defending Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights in the Face of Climate Change
As women and girls face increased threats to their autonomy and health decisions, the rapidly changing climate is exacerbating broader threats to sexual and reproductive health and rights particularly as a result of disruptions in supply chains and reduced income to procure necessary care and treatment. The resulting inadequate access to contraceptives, HIV and other STI screenings and treatment, mental health care, and abortion services can have devastating long-term consequences including infertility, cervical cancer, increased unintended pregnancies, pregnancy complications, and death during childbirth or as a result of unsafe abortions. Yet specific climate-related interventions are emerging as an area of opportunity and need. This session will explore what’s working to advance and protect women’s sexual and reproductive health and rights through climate solutions.
Innovation in Job Creation: The Business Case for Inclusive Economic Opportunity
Historically marginalized workforce populations represent significant untapped global talent. Social enterprises around the world have led the way in developing innovative business models which meaningfully and profitably engage those most excluded from the labor market. Yet, there is still tremendous scope and opportunity for corporations, governments, and cross-sector partners to capitalize on this latent workforce brimming with potential to tackle barriers to employment while addressing global skill shortages. This session will showcase pioneering leaders who are reimagining approaches to skills development, job creation, and market-based investments that support inclusive economic opportunities for all.
Addressing Access Disparities in Mental Health Care
There is an urgent global mental health crisis. An estimated 1 billion people live with mental health, neurological, and substance use disorders globally, according to Boehringer Ingelheim – but 70 percent don’t have access to the care they need. While mental health challenges have been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic and rising diagnoses of anxiety and depressive disorders, we know that access to quality treatment and support is the antidote. By prioritizing research funding, tech-based solutions, and innovative community-based approaches, we are beginning to see substantial progress in expanding mental health care access and improved global health outcomes. This session will examine what’s working to increase access to care and educate communities on mental health.
The Unwritten Future of Racial Equity
Racial inequality is persistent globally, in part due to structural barriers deeply ingrained in our economic, governmental, technological, and environmental ways of life. In recent years, diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) rollbacks have become widespread, yet new efforts are making progress to mitigate these challenges and promote inclusion. This session will examine what’s working in the persistent fight against the status quo to reshape global systems, engage frontline communities, and create a more equitable and just future for all.
Alternative Visions for Waste and Circularity
Waste products produce significant greenhouse gases and create public health risks when not managed properly. Every year, more than 2 billion tons of municipal solid waste – from food surplus to discarded textiles and plastic – crowd our landfills and contribute to the pollution of our soil, water, and air. The session will explore what’s working to advance innovative recycling and promote circularity in both consumption and production.
Health Equity and Economic Inclusion for Aging Populations
As humans are living longer on average, the changing makeup of the global population will have a dramatic effect on economic and health systems. Aging populations present unique challenges, particularly for women, who often face distinct health issues and economic vulnerabilities as they age. In response, innovative models for economic resilience and healthy longevity are shaping a different future for all of us as we age, from community-centric initiatives to new applications of technology and reimagined retirement policies. This session will explore what’s working to drive better economic and health outcomes for the world’s aging population.
Beyond Play: Uniting through Sports and Gaming
Live sports and gaming are among the largest global industries, sharing a common goal: to unite people through shared experiences. Whether fans are packed into a stadium, crowded around a television, or connected online in virtual worlds, sports and gaming collectively engage more than 4 billion individuals worldwide, each with diverse perspectives and life experiences. With such an extensive global reach, these industries can – and do – shape the cultural zeitgeist. However, recently, both industries have faced criticism for how they spotlight different experiences in relation to social causes. However, in this session, we will hear from individuals who demonstrate that leveraging their platform as a catalyst to inspire important cultural shifts that support a more equitable and inclusive world is more than a checkbox—it is at the core of both industries.
Look Around
The work of advancing social impact can be a lonely endeavor. Resource constraints, accelerating global challenges, and politicized news cycles all have made our commitment to make a positive difference in the world harder to realize.
While the work can feel lonely, you don’t have to do it alone. Whether it’s a formal partnership between organizations or informal support networks, finding and forging value-aligned connections can help sustain and fuel us as we face even the most difficult challenges.
Since CGI’s inception in 2005, more than 10,000 organizations have partnered on more than 4,000 Commitments to Action impacting more than 500 million people – a testament to the power of partnership and an example of a different way to build a community around a shared vision for a better future. As the world continues to fracture across geographic, political, and economic lines, there is greater urgency than ever to find creative ways to partner to reach shared objectives.
In this Mainstage Session, leaders from across the social impact spectrum will highlight the ways in which they break down barriers between peer institutions, cultivate partnerships and community, and align values and programs to create new, specific, and measurable ways to support one another.
Agenda
Everything Everywhere All At Once
There’s no shortage of global challenges to confront. The pressure, speed, and magnitude of these challenges – like climate change, rising inequality, and natural and manmade disasters – are creating the “perfect storm” for those of us committed to making progress on both new and longstanding international development issues. For both those on the frontlines and in positions of power, the ‘ask’ is to increasingly stretch resources, take on new work, and fix systems with an unprecedented urgency.
The good news is that, in most cases, there are approaches already working that could be scaled or adapted. The question becomes – how do we marshal the resources and ingenuity to bring these solutions to scale? How do we harness one community solution and replicate it in other geographies or apply lessons learned to new challenges? How can we break down barriers and reorganize our ways of working so that the promise of one good idea has the ability to multiply?
In this Mainstage Session, we’ll unpack what it really means to be charged with finding solutions for everything everywhere all at once – and offer insights into how to leverage scale, replication, and innovation to meet the moment.
Health Equity for All
Progress has been made toward eradicating and treating infectious diseases, yet millions of people worldwide continue to die each year from conditions like malaria, HIV/AIDS, hepatitis, STIs, and antimicrobial resistance. This session will examine what’s working to eliminate diseases, increase access to vaccines, and promote better education and collaboration.
Meeting the Infrastructure Needs for Electric Vehicles
Automobiles are a key driver of greenhouse gas emissions and are difficult to mitigate when reliant on fossil fuels. As sustainable solutions and transit options develop and are brought to scale, there’s an opportunity for significant emission reduction globally. This session will explore what’s working to promote adoption of cleaner transportation through electric vehicles and build infrastructure that supports a transition away from fossil fuels.
No One Left Behind: Bridging the Digital Divide
Technology enables connection, education, health, and economic growth—but not for everyone. The digital divide—the gap between those who have access to technology and those who don’t—remains a global challenge and is at risk of widening further with advances in artificial intelligence (AI) and its impact on the workforce. Extending access to technology across countries where rapidly growing youth populations must be able to participate fully in the economy and society is particularly urgent. This session will explore what’s working to address the digital divide and the concerted efforts from governments, businesses, non-profit organizations, and communities to empower individuals, reduce poverty, promote social inclusion, and foster innovation.
Women on the Frontlines
Humanitarian crises and violent conflicts have a disproportionate impact on women and girls, who are increasingly the architects of solutions for their affected communities. Despite their knowledge and lived experience, women continue to be vastly underrepresented in positions with decision-making power. Empowering women as decision-makers, from the community to the global level, can drive solutions and accelerate peace. This session will explore what’s working to elevate and support women who are on the frontlines fighting a range of social, political, and humanitarian threats.
Food as a Tool to Empower Communities and Drive Climate Smart Solutions
Globally, enough food is produced to feed the world population 1.5 times over, but nearly 30 percent of the world’s population experiences moderate to severe food insecurity. The current food system is unsustainable, inequitable, and in need of innovative, climate-smart solutions to tackle the interconnected problems of hunger, poverty, and climate vulnerability. This session will convene global thought leaders and social entrepreneurs pioneering solutions that maximize existing food production, leveraging both traditional knowledge and technological innovations to develop new opportunities to create a more equitable, sustainable, and resilient global food system.
Visibility's Ripple Effect in Empowering Recovery
“Recovery” often conjures images of someone overcoming substance abuse with clinical and community support. Today, opioid addiction has the highest mental health-related mortality rate, and the crisis continues to grow. . There has been a staggering 45 percent increase in substance use disorder cases globally over the past decade, impacting 39.5 million people in 2023 alone. However, until recently, the deadliest mental health crisis was rarely discussed or recognized globally: eating disorders. Now considered the second most deadly psychiatric illness, the number of those suffering from eating disorders has more than doubled in the past decade, with one person dying each hour in the United States alone. Both disorders thrive in silence and are shrouded in stigma. In this Story Studio session, we’ll break that silence. We will explore inspiring stories of people working to create solutions for recovery, whether at home or through large-scale social interventions.
Innovating in a Time of Crisis
Vulnerable populations around the globe are threatened by the climate crisis, diminishing resources, and urgent humanitarian needs. This session will examine and highlight solutions from government, to public-private partnerships and community innovators who are working to address these issues on a local and global scale.
Citizen Social Responsibility: Bolstering Democracies through Civic Engagement
In 2024 alone, more than 2 billion voters in more than 60 countries will vote in a national election—the most voters in history and the highest concentration of elections for the next 24 years. Amid these high stakes, we face weakened trust in institutions and the political process because of global conflicts, polarized societies and politics, and various forms of oppression and misinformation. Renewed civic engagement is critical to the health of functioning democracies and broad social impact campaigns. This session will examine what’s working in the public, private, and philanthropic sectors to bolster democratic institutions in times of crisis and uncertainty.
Technology and Nature at the Forefront of Tomorrow’s Cities
More than half of the world’s population lives in cities – where limited space and systems to serve billions of people are generating health disparities and high levels of pollution. As urban populations are set to double by 2050 and each successive year is the hottest on record, cities must leverage the power of both technology and nature to reimagine, advocate for, and ultimately build cities that allow people and the planet to prosper. This session will examine what’s working to develop healthy, sustainable, and equitable cities worldwide.
Closing the Financial Access Gap for Women
A majority of “unbanked” people around the world are women – leaving them unable to pay for purchases through credit or access critical financial services. Structural barriers can hold women back in the global economy, but improved financial literacy and access to banking and wealth creation tools can dramatically expand opportunities and equal participation for women. This session will explore what’s working globally to unlock financial resources and economic potential for women.
Creating Stories for a Better Tomorrow
In the last decade, media and entertainment have become more fragmented but better at showcasing more diverse voices that have not previously been heard. Film, television, and digital media featuring people with disabilities, the LGBTQIA+ community, and Black, Hispanic, Asian, and Native stories have increased awareness and inspired allyship for historically marginalized communities – often emboldening and expanding social movements. This session will feature trailblazing artists, storytellers, actors, producers, influencers, and writers who have broken the mold sharing how they infuse meaningful narratives into their creative work and use their platforms to drive greater understanding and meaningful impact.
Getting Ahead of the Next Humanitarian Crises
In 2023, an estimated 360 million people needed humanitarian assistance because of natural disasters and regional conflicts, according to the United Nations – more people than any other year in history. As we confront accelerating needs for relief due to climate change and widespread violent conflict, humanitarian actors are increasingly incorporating anticipatory action strategies into their work to pre-position aid and maximize their impact. This session will examine what’s working in the fight to get ahead of the next crisis, emphasizing the importance of philanthropic actors and other key stakeholders supporting local organizations as first responders.
Education Under Pressure: Tailored Strategies for Overcoming Modern Challenges
Education systems face pressures never before experienced both in scope and complexity. Barriers to academic success abound, from gender discrimination and growing mental health concerns, to inadequate infrastructure and increasing costs borne by families and caregivers. Amid these challenges, community-specific approaches to education are meeting students and educators where they are, with solutions tailored to specific geographies and demographics This session will examine what’s working to support more inclusive learning and drive better education outcomes for all.
AI Applications for Greater Social Impact
The use of artificial intelligence (AI) is rapidly expanding and becoming more accessible with the potential for good across society. For example, the Harvard School of Public Health estimates that using AI to support diagnoses can help reduce treatment costs by up to 50 percent and improve health outcomes by 40 percent. However, as we rely more on AI to help us solve our most pressing challenges, leaders must contend with concerns including data privacy, inaccuracies, and job displacement. This session will examine what’s working across sectors to apply AI-enabled solutions while addressing the risks that this rapidly evolving technology poses.
Supporting the Social Enterprise Ecosystem
The social enterprise business model is rapidly gaining traction on a global scale. Today, social enterprises make up approximately 3 percent of businesses worldwide, generating over $2 trillion in annual revenue and creating more than 200 million jobs. There is immense economic potential to be realized when governments, corporations, and philanthropic organizations partner with social enterprises that put people and the planet first. From businesses that scale solutions to make health care more equitable to initiatives that improve education access for underserved populations, there is great opportunity to collaborate with social enterprises to collectively advance impact goals and catalyze transformative societal change. This session will bring together impact entrepreneurs as well as public and private sector intrapreneurs to explore collaborative partnerships, funding opportunities, and comprehensive solutions that enable social enterprises, especially those founded by traditionally marginalized entrepreneurs, to scale and thrive.
Tomorrow
Tomorrow – it’s both an inevitability and an opportunity. As the CGI community reverts to corners of the globe near and far to take action together, we are reminded that there’s more work to be done.
In our closing Mainstage session, we’ll focus our attention on the future. As the 2024 CGI Annual Meeting comes to a close, we know what’s working, we know who’s doing it, and we know where we need to fill in the gaps. The question becomes: what will you do – tomorrow – to make a difference?
Mainstage Sessions
The CGI Mainstage is the marquee stage for insights and announcements from President Bill Clinton, Secretary Hillary Rodham Clinton, and Chelsea Clinton as well as world leaders, global CEOs, and those on the frontlines who are showing all of us what’s working in their respective fields.
Leaders Stage
The CGI Leaders Stage is a premier stage with high-level moderated conversations with market movers and news makers. These timely and candid conversations will address some of today’s most pressing global challenges across a range of topics including health equity, gender equity, and climate finance.
Spotlight Sessions
Spotlight Sessions are dynamic spaces focused on driving action and accelerating new, specific, and measurable solutions. Hear from leading international voices as they engage thoughtfully in these 75-minute sessions.
Story Studio
Story Studio is a creative lounge where attendees gather to hear from some of the most brilliant change-makers today. Story Studio isn’t a traditional breakout session at a conference with panels, keynotes, and demos. Instead, it is a space for our community to hear how a personal moment created a ripple effect that has positively impacted countless lives and witness dynamic solutions-driven conversations with trailblazers from across the globe.
Greenhouse
Greenhouse supports entrepreneurs from growth-stage social impact companies from across the globe working to introduce innovative technologies and business models that aim to solve critical global challenges. These sessions showcase innovators across social enterprise and startup communities who are scaling powerful solutions.
PARTICIPANTS
President Bill Clinton
President Bill Clinton
Founder and Board Chair, Clinton Foundation and 42nd President of the United States
William Jefferson Clinton, the first Democratic president in six decades to be elected twice, led the U.S. to the longest economic expansion in American history, including the creation of more than 22 million jobs.
After leaving the White House, President Clinton established the William J. Clinton Foundation, and today, the renamed Bill, Hillary & Chelsea Clinton Foundation, works to improve global health and wellness, increase opportunity for girls and women, reduce childhood obesity, create economic opportunity and growth, and help communities address the effects of climate change.
Today the Foundation has staff and volunteers around the world working to improve lives through several initiatives, including the independent Clinton Health Access Initiative, through which over 11.5 million people in more than 70 countries have access to CHAI-negotiated prices for HIV/AIDS medications. The Clinton Climate Initiative, the Clinton Development Initiative, and the Clinton Giustra Enterprise Partnership are applying a business-oriented approach to promote sustainable economic growth and to fight climate change worldwide and in Africa, Latin America, and the Caribbean. In the U.S., the Foundation is working to combat the alarming rise in childhood obesity and preventable disease through the Alliance for a Healthier Generation and the Clinton Health Matters Initiative. Established in 2005, the Clinton Global Initiative brings together global leaders to devise and implement innovative solutions to some of the world’s most pressing issues. So far, more than 3,600 Clinton Global Initiative commitments have improved the lives of over 435 million people in more than 180 countries.
In addition to his Foundation work, President Clinton has joined with former President George H.W. Bush three times – after the 2004 tsunami in South Asia, Hurricane Katrina in 2005, and Hurricane Ike in 2008, and with President George W. Bush in Haiti in the aftermath of the 2010 earthquake. Today the Clinton Foundation supports economic growth, job creation, and sustainability in Haiti.
President Clinton was born on August 19, 1946, in Hope, Arkansas. He and his wife Secretary Hillary Rodham Clinton have one daughter, Chelsea, and live in Chappaqua, New York.
Chelsea Clinton
Vice Chair, Clinton Foundation
Secretary Hillary Rodham Clinton
67th Secretary of State of the United States
Kevin F. Adler
Founder-in-Residence, Miracle Messages
Noubar Afeyan
Founder and CEO, Flagship Pioneering; Co-Founder and Chairman, Moderna
Hanin Ahmed
Founder, Old Omdurman Emergency Response Room
Denise Yvonne Aki-Sawyerr
Mayor of Freetown, Freetown City Council
Ricardo Alba Torres
CEO and Co-Founder, Eko Group H2O+
Masih Alinejad
President, World Liberty Congress
José Andrés
Founder and Executive Chairman, José Andrés Group
Ragina Arrington
CEO, Clinton Foundation: CGI University
Carme Artigas
Co-Chair, AI Advisory Body, United Nations
Schuyler Bailar
Educator, Author, and Advocate, Pinkmantaray, LLC
Svanika Balasubramanian
Co-Founder and CEO, rePurpose Global
Adriana Barbosa
Executive Director, Instituto Feira Preta & PretaHub
Joel Bervell
Medical Student and Medical Mythbuster, Washington State University
Marla Blow
President and COO, Skoll Foundation
Ian Bremmer
Founder and President, Eurasia Group & GZERO Media
PeiYao Chen
President and CEO, Global Fund For Women
Chmba Ellen Chilemba
Chmba Ellen Chilemba
Founder, We Are Family Foundation, Youth To The Front Fund Director, DJ and Producer
Catherine Coleman Flowers
Catherine Coleman Flowers
Founder and CEO, The Center for Rural Enterprise and Environmental Justice
Chrystel Cornelius
President and CEO, Oweesta Corporation
Sean Daniels
Founder and Anti-Stigma Director, Recovery Project & Live Tampa Bay
Sally Davies
UK Special Envoy on Antimicrobial Resistance, UK Government
Vilas Dhar
President and Trustee, Patrick J. McGovern Foundation
Alex Diaz
Head of AI for Social Good, Google.org
Richard Dickson
President and CEO, Gap Inc.
Hope Ditlhakanyane
Investment Principal, 54 Collective VC
Aniket Doegar
Co-Founder and CEO, Haqdarshak
Dana Dornsife
CEO, Lazarex Cancer Foundation
Albert Douer
Chairman and Co-CEO, UBQ Materials
Arne Duncan
Managing Director, Emerson Collective
Farhad Ebrahimi
Philanthropic Transformation Strategist, Solidaire Network
Angela Ferrell-Zabala
Executive Director, Moms Demand Action
Jessica Geschke
Jessica Geschke
Senior Project Manager, Overdose Response Network, Clinton Global Initiative
Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus
Director-General, World Health Organization (WHO)
Rolando Gonzalez-Bunster
Founder, President and CEO, InterEnergy
Jane Goodall
Founder, The Jane Goodall Institute
Lutz Hegemann
President of Global Health and Sustainability, Novartis AG
David Hogg
President and Co-Founder, Leaders We Deserve
Mohamed Irfaan Ali
President, Cooperative Republic of Guyana
Aurora James
Founder, Brother Vellies; 15 Percent Pledge
Mariéme' Jamme
Founder and CEO, iamtheCODE
Hakim Jeffrey
Senior Coordinator, Green City Force
David Johnson
Founder and President, Lets Unpack It
Shelia Johnson
Founder and CEO, Salamander Collection
Sana Kadri
CEO and Co-Founder, Diaspora Spice Co.
Twesigye Jackson Kaguri
Founder and CEO, Nyaka
Shawn Malia Kanaʻiaupuni
President and CEO, Partners in Development Foundation
Johanna Kandel
Founder and CEO, National Alliance for Eating Disorders
Fran Katsoudas
Executive Vice President and Chief People, Policy & Purpose Officer, Cisco
Lydiah Founder and CEO, 8B Education Investments
Founder and CEO, 8B Education Investments
Francis Kéré
Founder and Architect, Kéré Architecture
Aamir Khan
Founder, Aamir Khan Productions & Paani Foundation
Ira Khan
Founder and CEO, Agatsu Foundation
Patrice King Brickman
Founder and CEO, Inspire Access
Regina Kline
Founder and Managing Partner, Enable Ventures & SmartJob
Daniela Konietzko
President , Fundación WWB Colombia
Andy Kuper
CEO and Founder, LeapFrog Investments
Peter Laugharn
President and CEO, The Conrad N. Hilton Foundation
Michelle Lujan Grisham
Governor of New Mexico
Marianne Markowitz
President and CEO, First Women's Bank
Mariana Matus
Co-Founder and CEO, Biobot Analytics
Patty McIlreavy
CEO, Center for Disaster Philanthropy
David Miliband
President and CEO, International Rescue Committee
Frankie Miranda
President and CEO, Hispanic Federation
MacBain Mkandawire
Executive Director, Youth net and Counselling (YONECO)
La June Montgomery Tabron
President and CEO, W.K. Kellogg Foundation
Valentina Muñoz Rabanal
Emeritus SDG Advocate, United Nations
Happy Mwende Kinyili
Co-Executive Director, Mama Cash
Reema Nanavaty
Director, Self-Employed Women’s Association (SEWA)
Nemonte Nenquimo
Co-Founder, Amazon Frontlines
Michelle Nunn
President and CEO, CARE USA
Tolullah Oni
CEO and Professor, UrbanBetter and University of Cambridge
Carole Osero-Ageng’o
Carole Osero-Ageng’o
Global Initiatives Lead and Africa Regional Representative, HelpAge International
H.E. Dr. Vjosa Osmani Sadriu
President, Republic of Kosovo
Clionadh Raleigh
President and CEO, ACLED
Jonathan Reckford
CEO, Habitat for Humanity
Michael Regan
Administrator, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Maria Ressa
Nobel Laureate, Co-Founder and CEO, Rappler
Kelley Robinson
President, Human Rights Campaign
Carlos Manuel Rodríguez
CEO, Global Environment Facility
Noé Romo
Noé Romo
Medical Director, Stand Up To Violence, NYC Health + Hospitals - Jacobi, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, NY State Division of Criminal Justice Services
Nima Roohi
CEO and Co-Founder, Blooming Health, Inc.
Ernic Sala
Explorer in Residence, National Geographic Society
Abanti Sankaranarayanan
Abanti Sankaranarayanan
Chief Group Public Affairs Officer and Group Executive Board Member, Mahindra Group
Sema Sgaier
CEO and Co-Founder, Surgo Health
Manali Shah
National Secretary, Self Employed Women's Association (SEWA)
Arian Simone
CEO and Founding Partner, Fearless Fund
Hansi Singh
CEO and Co-Founder, Planette AI
Joan Steinberg
Joan Steinberg
President, Morgan Stanley Foundation and CEO, Morgan Stanley Alliance for Children’s Mental Health Advisory Board
Jim Steyer
CEO and Founder, Common Sense Media
Simon Stiell
Executive Secretary, United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
Nigel Sullivan
Chief Sustainability and People Officer, Bupa
Eva Maria Trujillo-Chivacuan
CEO and Co-Founder, Comenzar De Nuevo
Hamdi Ulukaya
CEO and Founder, Chobani; and Founder, Tent Partnership for Refugees
Sigrid Van Aken
CEO, Postcode Lottery Group
Alexandra van der Ploeg
Head of Corporate Social Responsibility, SAP
Darren Walker
President, Ford Foundation
Olivia Walton
Founder and CEO, Ingeborg Investments
Clarissa Ward
Chief International Correspondent, CNN
Debra Whitman
Debra Whitman
Executive Vice President and Chief Public Policy Officer, American Association of Retired Persons (AARP)
Ginger Zee
Chief Meteorologist and Climate Correspondent, ABC News