Der er tradition for, at amerikanerne sætter sig på posten som chef for Verdensfødevareprogrammet – og det sker også denne gang
ROME, 17 January 2012: The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) Tuesday welcomed the appointment of American diplomate, Ertharin Cousin, as its new Executive Director.
The congratulation came after confirmation by the UN Secretary General that she would assume the post at the head of the world’s largest humanitarian agency later this year.
Cousin is currently the United States Representative to the United Nations agencies for Food and Agriculture (WFP, FAO, IFAD) in Rome.
Afro-american Cousin is expected to assume her new role when WFP’s current Executive Director, Josette Sheeran’s term ends in April.
Earlier this month, Sheeran announced that she will move to the World Economic Forum in Geneva where she will be the new Vice Chairman at the world’s leading platform for engaging corporate and government leaders in solutions to global social, economic and humanitarian challenges.
Cousin has been supported by the US Department of State in a quote made by Hillary Clinton in reference to her appointment stating:
– She (Cousin) has been central to designing and implementing our country’s food security policies. I am confident that she will continue to be a powerful voice in the global fight against hunger and lend her energy, optimism and experience to the World Food Programme.
– Leading WFP is a great honour and a critical link to the world’s most vulnerable. I offer every support to Ertharin Cousin and wish her the greatest success at this critical time for the world’s most vulnerable nations and people, said Josette Sheeran Tuesday.
– On behalf of the WFP Executive Board I wish to congratulate Ertharin Cousin on her appointment as next Executive Director. We have known and appreciated her as a colleague in Rome and we now look forward to working with her in her new role, said Ambassador Jim Harvey, President of WFP’s Executive Board.
Om den nye WFP-chef
Ertharin Cousin grew up in the poor Lawndale neighborhood of Chicago along with her three sisters. Her mother, Anne Cousin, worked in the social services field and her father often engaged in volunteer community development work.
She earned a B.A. degree from the University of Illinois at Chicago in 1979 and a J.D. degree from the University of Georgia School of Law in 1982. At the latter, she studied international law under former U.S. Secretary of State Dean Rusk.
Cousin worked in Illinois as Assistant Attorney General and Western Regionals Office Director for the Illinois Attorney General’s office and as Deputy Director of the Chicago Ethics Board. In the private sector she was Director of Governmental Affairs for AT&T.
Cousin moved to Washington, D.C., and during 1993 worked as Deputy Chief of Staff for the Democratic National Committee. She joined the Clinton administration in 1994 as the White House Liaison at the U.S. State Department. There she received a Meritorious Service Award. She served as Senior Advisor to the Secretary of State during the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta.
In 1996 she stepped down from that post in order to run the Illinois operation of the Clinton–Gore presidential campaign. After the campaign’s victory, she served as Vice-President of Government, Community and Political Affairs for the 1997 Presidential Inaugural Committee making reference to the Second inauguration of Bill Clinton.
In 1997 she received a White House appointment for a four-year term to the Board for International Food and Agricultural Development. There she supported many of the agricultural projects being run by the United States Agency for International Development. At the same time, she was Vice-President for Government and Community Affairs for Jewel Food stores.
In 1999, Albertsons LLC bought Jewel and Cousin became Group Vice President of Public Affairs for Albertsons and then Senior Vice President of Public Affairs. While working for Albertsons, she also served as President and Chair of the company’s corporate foundation, managing the organization’s philanthropic activities.
In 2002, Cousin joined the board of America’s Second Harvest, the nation’s largest domestic hunger organization, and in 2004 she became its Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer.
Among her achievements during this period was leading the organization’s response to Hurricane Katrina in 2005, an effort which resulted in the distribution of more than 62 million pounds of food to those in need across the Gulf Coast region of the United States. Cousin helped raise the annual revenue of the organization from 20 million to 56 million US dollar during her time there.
Cousin left America’s Second Harvest in 2006 and founded and served as President of The Polk Street Group, a national public affairs consulting firm located in Chicago. In 2009, she handed over the reins to her son, Maurice Cousin, in order to accept the ambassadorial appointment.
On Jun 19, 2009, Cousing was nominated by President Barack Obama to become United States Ambassador to the United Nations Agencies for Food and Agriculture, serving in Rome, Italy. She was sworn in as Ambassador on August 17, 2009. There she is chief of the United States Mission to the UN Agencies in Rome and is part of the “Tri-Mission Community” that also includes the United States Ambassador to Italy and the United States Ambassador to the Holy See.
During her time in Rome, she has efforted the setting up of new country-led aid programs. She worked towards providing food relief to Port-au-Prince following the devastating 2010 Haiti earthquake.
She has said that seeing the famous sights of Rome does not get old and that her biggest surprise in the job is, “When people talk about ‘Her Excellency, Ertharin Cousin.’ You know, I grew up in Lawndale. You are a long way from there when someone is referring to you as ‘Your Excellency.’