MEDIA
Select articles about Elizabeth
l climb up the steep stairs out of the hot and stuffy London Underground, emerging on to a busy street in Bayswater. Commuters flow in and out of the Tube station’s entrance like ants rushing in and out of a nest. For just a moment, I forget that my fingers have gone numb after clutching the plastic handle of my small green suitcase for so long. I forget about the throbbing blisters inside my tight new shoes, and the damp yellow dress clinging to my back. The year is 2000. I am 25 years old. I can hardly believe that I have finally made it to Britain.
Women are severely underrepresented at the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, a conclave for the world’s most powerful leaders and tycoons. But this year, two of the women leading initiatives are Ms. Whitmarsh, who as head of the Washington State Investment Board runs one of the biggest state pension funds in the United States; and Elizabeth Nyamayaro, who heads the U.N. Women’s HeForShe campaign at the United Nations.on, and human rights issues.
A Push for Gender Equality at the Davos World Economic Forum, and Beyond
It is Elizabeth Nyamayaro’s childhood experience of growing up in an impoverished village in Zimbabwe that serves as a guiding star to her today – one she describes in her 2021 book, I Am a Girl from Africa.
“I was raised by my gogo, my grandmother, in a small agro-community,” Nyamayaro says. “We grew our crops together, we harvested together. There was abundance because the food was shared by everyone.”
Then came a crippling drought, drying out water and food supplies. It left Nyamayaro and other villagers on the edge of starvation.
Select articles and OPEDs written by Elizabeth
