Source: Forbes
In charge of budgets of over $5 billion, capable of mobilizing resources and 100,000 + staff worldwide. Responsible for the coordination of thousands of peacekeepers in conflict zones throughout the world, and leading negotiations for the release of child soldiers in Uganda.

Talk about power.

Although there are many actors within the UN system making a positive impact in the international public sector, the 10 women featured here have a level of institutional power that is unprecedented in UN history.

These women are at the head of departments and agencies working to ensure that the right resources get to those who need them as swiftly as possible. They hail from countries all over the world, hold degrees in law, medicine, engineering, political science and military strategy, and have worked in positions as diverse as a senior manager at IBM, a Managing Director on Wall Street and the president of Chile.

Here, are the 10 Most Powerful Women at the United Nations.

Valerie Amos/UN

Valerie Amos
Appointed in July 2010, Amos is the Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief.

Formerly serving in positions as the United Kingdom’s High Commissioner to Australia and as Secretary of State for International Development, she is now responsible for directing strategies for handling complex man-made emergencies and natural disasters throughout the globe.

Michelle Bachelet/UNMichelle Bachelet
Appointed in September 2010, Bachelet is the Under-Secretary-General for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women and head of the United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women), a composite entity of four offices all focused on the advancement of women.

Formerly serving as the president of Chile (2006 – 2010), and as a health and defense minister, Bachelet now directs the UN’s global efforts around women’s rights in various contexts, including conflict settings, access to education and with regard to environment and health.

Judy Cheng-Hopkins/UN

Judy Cheng-Hopkins

Judy Cheng-Hopkins
Appointed in August 2009, Cheng-Hopkins is theAssistant-Secretary-General for Peace-Building Support.

Formerly a Director of the World Food Programme, she now helps lead the UN’s Peace-Building Support Office, which coordinates all of the other UN agencies in their peace-building efforts in conflict and post-conflict situations, ranging from Afghanistan to Uganda to Sudan.

Helen Clark/UN

Helen Clark
Appointed in March 2009, Clark is the Administrator of the United Nations Development Program (UNDP).

Formerly the PM of New Zealand (1999 – 2008), she now heads the agency tasked with assisting developing economies to both attract and most effectively utilize development aid through various initiatives including the Millennium Development Goals, 15 global development targets around democratic governance, poverty reduction, crime prevention and recovery, environment and energy, and HIV/AIDS, as well as an overarching goal of cutting global poverty in half by 2015.

Radhika Coomaraswamy/UN

Radhika Coomaraswamy
Appointed in February 2006, Coomaraswamy is the Special Representative and Under-Secretary-General for Children and Armed Conflict. A lawyer by training, and graced with the title of Deshamanya (literally translated as “Pride of the Nation”) in her native Sri Lanka, Coomaraswamy serves as an independent moral voice on behalf of children violated in situations of conflict around the world.

The changing nature of conflict has dramatically increased the proportion of civilian casualties worldwide to more than 90%; half of these victims are children. In this context, Coomaraswamy works to promote and protect the rights of all children affected by armed conflict.

Angela Kane/UN

Angela Kane
Appointed in May 2008, Kane is the Under-Secretary-General for Management.

A native of Germany with myriad UN posts under her belt, she is head of the Department of Management, which provides services to support the day-to-day operations of the global UN Secretariat, which has some 44,000 staff members and a regular program budget of US $5.156 billion.

Susana Malcorra/UN

Susana Malcorra
Appointed in March 2008, Malcorra is the Under-Secretary-General and Head of the Department of Field Support.

Formerly CEO of Telecom Argentina and a senior manager at IBM, Malcorra now leads UN staff across 32 field operations, comprised of over 100,000 military, police and civilian personnel. Her department supports and makes budgetary, tactical and human resource decisions related to peacekeeping, humanitarian and political field operations throughout the globe.

Patricia O'Brien/UN

Patricia O’Brien
Appointed in August 2008,  O’Brien is the Under-Secretary-General for Legal Affairs and the UN Legal Counsel. She is the first woman to hold this position.

Formerly the Legal Advisor to the Department of Foreign Affairs of Ireland, O’Brien now oversees some 200 staff and a biennial budget of approximately $60 million. The objective of her office is to provide unified central legal service on questions of international and national, public, private, procedural and administrative law, including international public and trade law.

Navanehtem Pillay/UN

Navanehtem Pillay
Appointed in July 2008, Pillay is the High Commissioner for Human Rights, the principle UN human rights official, which has a mandate to promote and protect all human rights.

Formerly a judge in the International Criminal Court, and the first woman to start a law practice in South Africa’s Natal Province, Pillay now leads the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Right’s efforts to empower individuals and assist states in upholding human rights.

Josette Sheeran/UN

Josette Sheeran
Appointed in April 2007, Sheeran is the Executive Director of the World Food Programme, the world’s largest humanitarian agency.

Formerly the under secretary for Economic, Energy and Agricultural Affairs at the U.S. Department of State, as well as a Managing Director of Starpoint Solutions, a leading Wall Street technology firm, Sheeran now oversees the World Food Programme’s work in at least 80 of the world’s poorest countries, providing food to an average of 90 million people ever year.

 

 

 

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