Dr. Mamphela Ramphele has spent a lifetime as a leading campaigner for social justice both domestically and globally. She is the Chairperson of Circle Capital Ventures, a venture capital company in South Africa. She sits on the board of directors of the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa.
Dr. Ramphele served as the Managing Director of the World Bank Group between 2000 and 2004, becoming the first African and only the second woman to be appointed to the post. Her responsibilities included managing the Bank's human development activities in education, health, nutrition, population and social protection.
Prior to joining the World Bank, she was the first woman, and the first black South African, to hold the position of Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cape Town. In 2004-2005 she chaired the Global Commission on International Migration organised by the United Nations and several member states.
Dr. Ramphele serves on the boards of major companies including Anglo American plc. She is a Board member of the Nelson Mandela and Steve Biko Foundations. In 2004, Dr. Ramphele was voted one of the Top 100 Great South Africans.
Published Work:
In a rousing speech at a pre-election meeting in South Africa, Ramphele urged South Africans to dust off their ‘struggle boots’ and keep fighting for South Africa’s young democracy.
Read Full ArticleThe public service’s failure to treat all citizens fairly is threatening our democracy. There are danger signs flashing on our democracy screen from many fronts. For example, the media reports of a baby dying of diarrhoea and vomiting on the back of his distraught grandmother in Cape Town’s Nyanga ...
Read Full ArticleUltimately, our children pay the price for the constant erosion of African languages. Can you imagine a French child arriving at preschool being greeted by a teacher in broken English? Or a child in grade 1 being taught in English by a teacher who is not proficient in the language because her mother ...
Read Full ArticlePost-colonial Africa has been characterized by a tragic litany of failure of governance from the promising birth of Ghana as a free nation in 1957 to our own freedom in 1994. It is not just a failure of governance due to ignorance, inexperience or technical errors. It is sad that much of the failure ...
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