Learn more about the hosts of TEDWomen 2017.
At every step of her career, Pat Mitchell has broken new ground for women, leveraging the power of media as a journalist, an Emmy award-winning and Oscar-nominated producer to tell women's stories and increase the representation of women onscreen and off. Transitioning to an executive role, she became the president of CNN Productions and the first woman president and CEO of PBS and the Paley Center for Media. Today, her commitment to connect and strengthen a global community of women leaders continues as a conference curator, advisor and mentor.
In partnership with TED, Mitchell launched TEDWomen in 2010 and is its editorial director, curator and host. She is also a speaker and curator for the annual Women Working for the World forum in Bogota, Colombia, the Her Village conference in Beijing, and co-chairs the US board of Women of the World (WOW). Along with Ronda Carnegie, she partners with the Rockefeller Foundation to curate, convene and host Connected Women Leaders (CWL) forums, focused on collective problem solving among women leaders in government and civil society.
In 2014, the Women's Media Center honored Mitchell with its first-annual Lifetime Achievement Award, now named in her honor to commend other women whose media careers advance the representation of women. Recognized by Hollywood Reporter as one of the most powerful women in media, Fast Company's "League of Extraordinary Women" and Huffington Post's list of "Powerful Women Over 50," Mitchell also received the Sandra Day O'Connor Award for Leadership. She was a contributor to Enlightened Power: How Women Are Transforming the Practice of Leadership, and wrote the Preface to the book and museum exhibition, 130 Women of Impact in 30 Countries. In 2016, she received a Congressional appointment to The American Museum of Women’s History Advisory Council, and in 2019 was named to the Gender Equality Top 100 list of women leaders by Apolitical.
Mitchell is active with many nonprofit organizations, serving as the chair of the boards of the Sundance Institute and the Women's Media Center. She is a founding member of the VDAY movement, serves on the boards of the Skoll Foundation, Participant Media, the Acumen Fund and is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations.
Mitchell is a magna cum laude graduate of the University of Georgia and holds a master's degree in English literature and several honorary doctorate degrees. She is the author of Becoming a Dangerous Woman: Embracing Risk to Change the World. She and her husband, Scott Seydel, live in Atlanta and have six children and 13 grandchildren.
Alaa Murabit's family moved from Canada to Libya when she was 15. Brought up in a Muslim household where she was equal to her brothers, she was shocked to see how women were viewed and treated in her new country. She enrolled in medical school, but felt frustrated by the gender discrimination she experienced.
During her fifth year in med school, the Libyan Revolution broke out. Murabit was invigorated by how women were embraced as decision-makers in the movement. She founded The Voice of Libyan Women (VLW) to focus on challenging societal and cultural norms to make that the case all the time. Many VLW programs -- like the Noor Campaign, which uses Islamic teaching to combat violence against women -- have been replicated internationally.
Murabit is an advisor to many international security boards, think tanks and organizations, including the UN Women Global Civil Society Advisory Group and Harvard’s Everywoman Everywhere Coalition. An Ashoka Fellow, Murabit was a Trust Women Hero Award Winner in 2013.
Jacqueline Novogratz writes: "I want to build a movement in which we define success based on the amount of human energy we release in the world.
"I started my career on Wall Street and soon discovered that markets are efficient, but by
themselves they too often overlook or exploit the poor. So I moved to Rwanda in 1986 to help found
the country's first micro-finance bank. There I saw the humanitarian ethos of philanthropy, and
also how often top-down solutions too often create dependency, the opposite of dignity. Through 30
years of working on solutions to poverty, I have come to redefine it for myself, seeing it not as
how much income a person earns, but how free they are to make their own choices and decisions, how
much agency they have over their own lives.
"Acumen was founded to change the way the world tackles poverty in 2001. Our mission was
simple -- to raise philanthropy and invest it as patient capital -- long-term investment in intrepid
entrepreneurs willing to go where markets and government had failed the poor. We enable companies to
experiment and fail, never wavering from a commitment to stand with the poor, yet understanding that
profitability is necessary for sustainable solutions. We've invested more than $110M across
South Asia, Africa, Latin America and the US, and have seen entire sectors disrupted and hundreds of
millions served.
"The work also taught that it was critical to invest in talent. To date, we've
supported nearly 400 Acumen Fellows across lines of race, class, ethnicity, religion and ideology.
They are a beautiful group, full of vision and grit, and a determination to do what is right, not
easy. The group itself enables individual leaders to endure the loneliness that is part of the
work.
"And then we measure what matters rather than just what we can count. Take this all
together and you see our mission to do what it takes to build a world in which all of us have the
chance to dream and to flourish, not from a place of easy sentimentality but through a commitment to
using the tools of capitalism and the attributes of moral leadership to focus on doing what it
takes, and no less."
Jean Oelwang writes: "I live in awe every day at the wonders of this great planet and the
wisdom of the interconnectedness of all living things, and in hope that we will figure out how to
stop screwing up the world for future generations by learning how to partner and collaborate in time
to co-create an operating manual for Spaceship Earth that recognises 'it has to be everybody or
nobody,' as Buckminster Fuller stated so eloquently.
"Over the past
thirty years, I’ve had the opportunity to work with and learn from: homeless teenagers in the
US; the natural wonders of the Australian National Parks; teams helping to set up mobile phone
companies in South Africa, Colombia, Bulgaria, Singapore, Hong Kong, Australia and the US;
entrepreneurs creating new approaches to global issues; business leaders making their companies 100
percent human; and collectives of inspirational leaders like the Elders, the B Team, The Carbon War
Room and Ocean Unite.
"All of this has led me to a deep belief (and slight
obsession) with the power of partnerships to inspire a better world and better lives. Plus
Wonder emerged over the last ten years as a journey to find and interview 50+ long-lasting,
life-changing partnerships of all types that have brought wonder into their own lives and the lives
of so many others. They shared over 1,500 collective years of practical, honest wisdom."
Jess Search writes: "12 years ago, I got together with four other women to start a documentary foundation in London. We had worked in television but we knew the form was more powerful, both creatively and in terms of social impact, than TV had explored. We believe in the importance of independent storytellers and so we built a tiny institution to empower them.
"Today, as Doc Society, we work with incredibly determined filmmakers literally all over the world, helping them to make their best work and for their films to influence communities and policy makers. Maybe some of you have heard of, or been to, our Good Pitch events, or seen our filems, such as CITIZENFOUR and Virunga. Alongside that work, I am also the trustee of three other organisations whose work I believe in. They are Marie Stopes International, who deliver birth control and safe abortions in 40 countries; IPPR, which is a progressive think tank in the UK; and now Kickstarter in NY, which probably needs no introduction to this crowd."
Chris Waddell writes: "I challenge myself to follow my passion, especially when it scares me, and I fail a lot. Facing my fear, learning to find my best and communicating that process are as important as the end result. Articulating my story forces me to understand the journey, the ups, the downs, the false victories, the crushing defeats, the friends and foes more fully. Hopefully my struggles help others avoid my pitfalls. I’ve adopted the mantra, 'It’s not what happens to you. It’s what you do with what happens to you,' as a reminder in my times of weakness that there is always a way.
"As a Paralympic Athlete, I became the best monoskier in the world despite a significant disadvantage, putting the emphasis on skiing instead of disability. When I climbed Mt. Kilimanjaro in a four-wheeled handcycle, I attempted to turn perception of disability upside down by being the first unassisted paraplegic to reach the summit -- changing the narrative from 'that’s too bad' to 'what do you do?'”