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MASTERS DEGREE IN ECONOMICS. ACCREDITED DISTANCE DEGREES. BUY DEGREE ONLINE. Masters Degree In Economics
dr fauzia saeed although i had read the book "taboo" when it came out in 2001, i did not know the author, till i met her about 3 months back during the graduation of the mehargarh class of 2008 in islamabd, and found her to be all that is said about her. this is a good recognition not only for her, but all the people in pakistan who have such issues close to their hearts. Distinguished Leadership Award for Internationals 2008 Recipients Fouzia Saeed, Pakistan B.S., General Home Economics (1983) M.S., Design (1985) Ph.D., Education (1987) Dr. Fouzia Saeed is an alumna of the College of Education and Human Development and the College of Design. She earned a Bachelor of Science degree in General Home Economics in 1983, a master's degree in Design in 1985, and a doctorate in Education in 1987. As a student she showed innate leadership qualities and was active in the Pakistani Student Association. Dr. Saeed has been fearless in confronting norms that perpetuate the diminution of human rights for all persons and takes action to change those conditions. She has worked extensively on issues of violence against women and its effects on women and children. Dr. Saeed is currently the director and a founding member of Mehergarh, a center for learning, in Pakistan. The center is committed to transforming the lives of future generations. Dr. Saeed is also the managing partner for New Directions, Ltd., a consulting firm on youth, gender, governance, human rights, institutional strengthening, and capacity building of civil society. Early in her career she co-founded Bedari, the first women's organization in Pakistan to address violence against women. She provided leadership to create and pass legislation in Pakistan to prevent sexual harassment of women in the work place. She has held leadership positions as head of the gender unit for the United Nations Development Progamme (UNDP), the national officer for the United Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM/UNDP), and was a coordinator for the fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing, China. She has been a visiting professor in the Philippines and Pakistan and has served as a consultant and adviser on gender and development, community mobilization, and social sector developments. Dr. Saeed is most noted for her book, "Taboo: The Hidden Culture of a Red Light Area." It has been widely acclaimed as a brilliant piece of research that combines activism with scholarship. The book has been translated into several languages and has been recognized in India and Pakistan as a significant contribution to changing the discourse about women. In naming Dr. Saeed as a recipient of the Distinguished Leadership Award for Internationals, the committee cited her leadership accomplishments over the past 24 years that have focused on human rights issues for women and children in developing countries. Her work is courageous, bold, inspiring, creative, and sustained. The committee cited her peers' respect for her work, bravery, and courage, who said she has unusual courage to walk where others do not. At the time of her nomination for the Distinguished Leadership Award for Internationals she was in Afghanistan consulting, lecturing, organizing, and inspiring others. Most of her work is done in countries where feminist causes are not welcome and outright opposed. Women will rule
It's college graduation season, and according to data available from the U.S. Department of Education, an estimated 3,092,800 degrees will be granted this academic year (2008-2009) for Associate's degrees (714,000), Bachelor's degrees (1,585,000), Master's degrees (647,000), Professional degrees for MD, DDS and JD (91,000) and Doctor's degrees for Ph.D and Ed.D (55,800). Of the more than 3 million college degrees for the Class of 2009, women will earn close to 60% of those degrees (1,849,200), or almost 149 degrees for every 100 degrees earned by men. And it's now official: Women dominate men at every level of higher education, in terms of degrees conferred. Here's the breakdown for graduates of the class of 2009: Associate's Degrees: 167 for women for every 100 for men. Bachelor's Degrees: 142 for women for every 100 for men. Master's Degrees: 159 for women for every 100 for men. Professional Degrees: 104 for women for every 100 for men. Doctoral Degrees: 107 for women for every 100 for men. In fact, the last time men had more degrees than women at any level was the Class of 2006, which had slightly more men than women for both Professional and Doctoral degrees. For the other levels, it hasn't been even close for decades. The last year that men earned more Master's degrees than women was 1984-1985, for Bachelor's degrees it was the Class of 1981, and for Associates degrees it was 1976-1977 when men earned more degrees than women. For all levels of higher education, women have earned more college degrees than men in every year since the Class of 1982, and the degree gap has widened in every year since then, and is expected to widen in the future through the 2016-2017 year (see chart above). Related topics: distance education master degree degrees in forensic masters degree tourism early childhood education degree best college degree how many degrees will the hand move in one hour economics degree canada |