Date
Oct 8, 2019, 9:00 am10:30 am
Location
019 Bendheim Hall
Audience
  • Private
  • Faculty/Student Only

Speaker

Details

Event Description

The Liechtenstein Institute on Self-Determination's Project on Gender in the Global Community (GGC) will host Fatima Goss Graves, President and CEO of the National Women's Law Center, as guest speaker at the Gender and Security student fellows bi-monthly meeting on Tuesday, October 8, 2019. Goss Graves will be visiting the Woodrow Wilson School on October 7-8 as a Leadership through Mentorship Visitor. Participation in this event is open to Gender and Security student fellows only.

Fatima Goss Graves is President and CEO of the National Women's Law Center. Goss Graves, who has served in numerous roles at NWLC for more than a decade, has spent her career fighting to advance opportunities for women and girls. She has a distinguished track record working across a broad set of issues central to women’s lives, including income security, health and reproductive rights, education access, and workplace fairness. She is among the co-founders of the TIME’S UP Legal Defense Fund. Prior to becoming NWLC's President, Goss Graves served as the Center’s Senior Vice President for Program, where she led the organization’s broad program agenda to advance progress and eliminate barriers in employment, education, health and reproductive rights and lift women and families out of poverty. Prior to that, as the Center’s Vice President for Education and Employment, she led the Center’s anti-discrimination initiatives, including work to promote equal pay, combat harassment and sexual assault at work and at school, and advance equal access to education programs, with a particular focus on outcomes for women and girls of color.

Ms. Goss Graves has authored many articles, including "A Victory for Women’s Health Advocates," National Law Journal (2016) and "We Must Deal with K-12 Sexual Assault," National Law Journal (2015), and reports, including Unlocking Opportunity for African American Girls: A Call to Action for Educational Equity (2014), Reality Check: Seventeen Million Reasons Low-Wage Workers Need Strong Protections from Harassment (2014), and 50 Years and Counting: The Unfinished Business of Achieving Fair Pay (2013). Goss Graves received her B.A. from UCLA in 1998 and her J.D. from Yale Law School in 2001. She began her career as a litigator at the law firm of Mayer Brown LLP after clerking for the Honorable Diane P. Wood of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit. She currently serves as an advisor on the American Law Institute Project on Sexual and Gender-Based Misconduct on Campus and was on the EEOC Select Task Force on the Study of Harassment in the Workplace and a Ford Foundation Public Voices Fellow. She is widely recognized for her effectiveness in the complex public policy arena at both the state and federal levels, regularly testifies before Congress and federal agencies, and is a frequent speaker at conferences and other public education forums. Goss Graves appears often in print and on air as a legal expert on issues core to women’s lives, including in the New York TimesWall Street JournalWashington Post, AP, Chicago TribuneLA TimesSan Francisco Chronicle, CNN, MSNBC, and NPR.