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亞太區總部董事局
Neal Keny-Guyer
Chief Executive Officer
Neal Keny-Guyer is a "social entrepreneur" with a calling to help the disadvantaged. A native of Tennessee, Keny-Guyer earned his B.A. in public policy and religion from Duke University, a Masters of Public and Private Management from Yale, and Doctor of Humane Letters (Hon.) from Portland State University.
Keny-Guyer joined Mercy Corps in 1994 as Chief Executive Officer. During his leadership, Mercy Corps has emerged as a leading international relief and development agency with programs in more than 35 countries, over 2,500 staff, and an annual operating budget of $200 million. He has forged new organizational directions - most notably, globalizing operations through mergers and strategic alliances, placing peace-making, human rights, and civil society at the heart of its humanitarian mission, and building an organizational reputation for innovative and entrepreneurial practices.
Keny-Guyer's career began in America's troubled inner cities in 1976. As Special Projects Coordinator for Cities-In-Schools (a nationwide organization known now as Communities-In-Schools), he worked with at-risk youth to stem high school drop-out rates and gang activity among minority young people in Washington, D.C., and Atlanta, Georgia.
In 1980, Keny-Guyer moved to Thailand to aid Cambodian refugees. As Field Coordinator for CARE/UNICEF, he organized an emergency relief program along the Thai-Cambodian border, including cross-border distribution of food and agricultural supplies. With Save the Children over the next nine years, Keny-Guyer designed and implemented high-impact relief and development programs in some of the world's most war-torn and politically sensitive regions including Somalia, Lebanon, West Bank/Gaza, Afghanistan/Pakistan, and Sudan. As Director of the agency's Middle East, Europe, and North Africa programs, Keny-Guyer managed a $44 million budget and supervised 900 staff in 10 countries.
In 1990, Keny-Guyer focused his efforts stateside, founding Keny-Guyer Associates in Menlo Park, California to offer strategic planning and organizational development consulting to businesses, foundations and non-profit agencies. In addition, he undertook his toughest assignment as a year-long home dad for his first born child.
Keny-Guyer serves on the boards of local and national organizations, including InterAction, an alliance of humanitarian and development organizations, Yale School of Management Board of Advisors, and Nike Foundation Advisory Group.
Nancy Lindborg
President
Nancy Lindborg's guidance and strategic vision have helped transform Mercy Corps into a respected, innovative international relief and development organization and global partner of choice. During her ten years of leadership, the organization has experienced unprecedented growth and met new challenges with responsive, innovative programming.
In her role as Mercy Corps President, Lindborg uses her expertise in public policy, economic development, post-conflict and disaster assistance to lead Mercy Corps' global planning, public affairs, program operations and development, and emergency response. She has directed the organization's launch of programs in such challenging places as Afghanistan, the Balkans, North Korea and tsunami-affected areas of southern Asia.
From her base in Washington, D.C., Lindborg currently serves as Vice-President on the Board of Directors for the U.S. Global Leadership Campaign and serves as a board member on the ONE Campaign. In critical roles as co-chair of the National Committee on North Korea and Chair of the InterAction North Korea working group, she leads efforts to advance, promote and facilitate engagement between citizens of the United States and the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. Lindborg served from 2000-2005 on the Sphere Management Committee, an international initiative to improve the effectiveness and accountability of NGOs, and chaired that committee from 2000-2004. Lindborg also served as co-chair of the InterAction Disaster Response Committee from 1998-2002.
Before joining Mercy Corps in 1996, Lindborg managed economic development programs as a regional director in post-Soviet Central Asia and worked in the private sector as a public policy consultant in Chicago and San Francisco. She graduated with honors from Stanford University with a B.A. in English Literature. She also holds an M.A. in English Literature from Stanford and an M.A. in Public Administration from the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.
Paul Dudley Hart,
Paul Dudley Hart, Board of Director
Since joining Mercy Corps' senior management team in April 2003, Paul Dudley Hart's assignments have included managing Mercy Corps' merger with Cambridge, Mass.-based Conflict Management Group. Hart focuses largely on funding diversification, strategic alliances and other new agency initiatives.
Hart's management career includes a stint as president of The Brown Schools Education Services Group, the largest provider of education, therapeutic and family support services for children with extraordinary needs in the U.S., and a tenure as CEO of Pacific Crest Outward Bound School.
Hart grew up in England but emigrated to Australia at age 17. His early career was as seaman and diver aboard a square-rigged sailing ship doing underwater filming in the Southwest Pacific. He spent 10 years in the National Science Foundation's U.S. Antarctic Research Program, directed programs at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute on Cape Cod, and also managed marine and environmental survey programs in Uruguay, Argentina, Brazil, Cambodia, Vietnam, Algeria, Egypt, the U.K., Mozambique and Guyana.
Diana Tsui Board of Director
Ms. Tsui brings an extremely dynamic international background with solid experience in both the corporate and non-profit sector, and is now the Director of Corporate Social Responsibility of KPMG. With her internationally background (studied and worked in China, Hong Kong, Canada, U.S and Japan), and multilingual skill set, she able to lead talents from diverse backgrounds and is a true social entrepreneur in engaging the elite Chinese take part in global issues. She is the founding member of Mercy Corps China and its Asia regional headquarters in Hong Kong. She has also worked closely with international organizations, governments, and many multinationals such as UN, European Commissions, HKSAR, World Bank, HSBC, Bayer, Motorola etc in seeking supports in the area of poverty alleviation and humanitarian assistance. Her leadership and knowledge in resource development, government and corporate relations has benefited Mercy Corps with unprecedented success in the Greater China region from 2002 to 2007.
Before joining Mercy Corps, Tsui worked in the capacity of advertising and brand management since 1995 and later was assigned to lead NIKE's first Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) initiative as the Head of Community Affairs for Asia Pacific. She has help NIKE to establish the first microfinance program in Vietnam in 1997, and later expanded the initiative to China, Thailand and Indonesia. Tsui truly believes in CSR, and actively encourages dialogues among the public and private sectors. Prior to joining NIKE, she started her marketing career in Japan in 1991 and has contributed to numerous successful advertising and marketing campaigns including the first Formula-1race circuit and the establishment of J-Leagues.
Tsui graduated from the University of Oregon with a B.A. degree. She also holds the Masters degree in International and Public Affairs from University of Hong Kong and an Executive MBA from the Chinese University of Hong Kong.
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