GARDNER FELLOW PROFILES, 1999-2008
2006-2007 | 2005-2006 | 2004-2005 | 2003-2004 | 2002-2003 | 2001-2002
| 2000-2001 | 1999-2000

The 2007-08 Gardner Fellows are (clockwise from top left) Cammie Lee, Miriam Solis, Elisabeth Centeno, Colin Burke, Jennifer Browning, and Kyle Maurer.
UC Berkeley's Gardner Fellows:
Miriam Solis studied ethnic studies and geography at the University of California, Berkeley with an eye towards equitable community development in the United States and abroad. As a McNair Scholar, Miriam studied the impacts of urban growth on her hometown of Modesto, California, home to a large but marginalized population of Latinos. That research earned her the National Association of Chicana and Chicano Studies' Fredrick E. Cervantes Student Premio.
Miriam's commitment to social justice spans a range of topics, from ensuring access to higher education, maintaining the availability of services for disadvantaged communities, and empowering women of color. As campus organizer for the Bridges Multicultural Resource Center, Miriam served on regional and statewide coalitions to enhance California's commitment to educational outreach and college preparatory programs for high schools students from under-resourced communities. At the Institute for Civic Leadership at Mills College, Miriam initiated a project to visually represent the provision of services to Oakland's youth in an effort to establish alternatives to juvenile detention. She also co-taught a course for her peers at Berkeley on overlooked, subaltern perspectives within the social sciences and coordinated Mujeres Activas en Letras y Cambio Social, an organization dedicated to supporting the education and dissemination of Chicana/Latina and Native American women's issues. And as a researcher with the Center for Latino Policy and the Greenlining Institute, Miriam worked to create fair public policies in the areas of housing and immigration.
During her time in Brazil as a Haas Scholar Miriam explored the connection between local and global urbanization trends. That research gave rise to her honors thesis on the gendered dimensions of workforce settlements in Rio de Janeiro. For this and other work Miriam was awarded the Carlos Muñoz, Jr. Scholar-Activist Award, the Chicana/Latina Foundation scholarship, and the California Alumni Leadership Scholarship.
During her Gardner Fellowship Miriam will be working at the New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development under the auspices of Commissioner Shaun Donovan.
Kyle Maurer graduated Summa Cum Laude from UC Berkeley in 2007 with a degree in political science. An accomplished classical flutist, Kyle played with the San Francisco Symphony Youth Orchestra between 2002 and 2005 and performed regularly at Davies Symphony Hall in San Francisco and on tour at the Musikverein in Vienna, the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam, and the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées in Paris. Kyle was also a member of the UC Berkeley Symphony Orchestra and won the University-wide concerto competition as a soloist.
Kyle's interest in American politics and classical music coincide in his arts advocacy work. As an advocate in Washington, DC with Americans for the Arts, Kyle lobbied members of Congress to cosponsor HR 1120, the Artist Deduction Bill, conducted research for the Congressional Arts Report Card, and completed quarterly reports of expenditures made by the Arts Action Fund Political Action Committee for the Federal Election Commission. Kyle also co-founded the University of California Arts Advocacy Alliance, a student lobbying organization dedicated to supporting arts education in California, and he currently serves as a Congressional District Captain for Americans for the Arts in the congressional district of Representative George Miller (D-CA).
At Berkeley, Kyle was President of the nationally-ranked Cal Mock Trial team and a recipient of outstanding attorney awards for oratorical performance at the UCLA Invitational Tournament and the Harvard Invitational Tournament. He also worked as a speechwriting and legal affairs intern for California State Senator Tom Torlakson and as a research assistant to Professors Bruce Cain and Gordon Silverstein.
During his Gardner Fellowship Kyle will be working with the Senate Democratic Policy Committee under the direction of Research Director Tim Gaffaney. Thereafter, Kyle will attend Stanford Law School as a Frank H. Buck Scholar.
Jennifer Browning graduated Phi Beta Kappa in Development Studies and French, finding a double major the perfect way to merge her interest in international development with her passion for languages. In the summer of 2006 Jennifer became involved with the Malawi Diffusion and Ideational Change Project, an HIV/AIDS research project in rural Malawi. During the fieldwork phase of the project, Jennifer managed a team of Malawi Ministry of Health counselors in the administration of HIV tests to over 300 villagers. During that time she also conducted research on community-based organizations, interviewed local NGO officials, and worked with local villagers on a one-on-one basis. Her research and experiences culminated in a senior thesis on HIV/AIDS community-based organizations, and in the summer of 2007 she traveled back to Malawi to attend a National AIDS Commission Conference where her findings were presented.
During her time in Malawi Jennifer also served as a student correspondent for the UC Berkeley NewsCenter and published four dispatches about life in rural Malawi, a series of articles that UC Berkeley featured on its homepage. She also worked with the Malawi branch of the Invest in Knowledge Initiative ― an NGO dedicated to expanding educational opportunities ― to coordinate logistics for an epidemiology training session for Malawian healthcare professionals.
During her senior year at Berkeley Jennifer revitalized and served as Co-President of Le Cercle Français, a French conversation club. In that role she built a relationship with the non-profit Alliance Française and acted in their fundraising play performed entirely in French. She also served as a peer advisor for International and Area Studies (IAS), organized a successful series of brown bag lunches with faculty and students for the IAS Student Association, participated in STAND's (Students Take Action Now Darfur) campaign for Berkeley's divestment from the Sudan, and played for the Université de Toulouse women's soccer team during her junior year abroad in Toulouse, France.
Jennifer also served as a researcher with the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development – a branch of the National Institutes of Health – as well as ChildTrends, a research and public policy organization in Washington, DC. In spring 2007 she worked with Beyond Borders, a small organization working in rural Haiti, to manage the flow of ethnographic Creole interviews and design culturally-relevant packets of information on agriculture and the environment, child rights, and sexual and reproductive health.
As a Gardner Fellow Jennifer will concentrate on issues of gender and development in Africa under the guidance of Ms. Winnie Byanyima, Director of the Gender Bureau at the United Nations Development Program.
Stanford's Gardner Fellows:
Colin Burke
Colin Burke's interest in international and domestic health policy springs from his undergraduate academic work in the Public Policy Program and a conviction that functional access to high quality health care is a fundamental human right. He plans to pursue this passion, working on high-level public health policy issues as a clinical physician.
As a participant in Stanford's Public Service Scholars Program, Colin sought to integrate his honors thesis work – an investigation of barriers to completion of treatment faced by inmates receiving medication for Latent Tuberculosis Infection in jail – with practical policy recommendations to create positive change in Santa Clara County. In doing so, he wove together quantitative and qualitative approaches, including interviews and medical record reviews of released inmates and conversations with public health and jail medical officials.
Among other service and extra-curricular activities, Colin was granted the Stanford Alumni Association's Pierce Award to found Morning Outreach at Stanford, a group devoted to inspiring student participation in a variety of public service issues through direct contact with both community organizations and leaders in the Bay Area. He also worked as a strategy researcher for FACE AIDS, a campaign to mobilize and inspire students to fight AIDS in Africa. Colin has tutored through Habla el Día and East Palo Alto Tennis and Tutoring, and in his junior year, he studied at the Stanford Overseas campus in Santiago, Chile.
During his Gardner Fellowship Colin will be working with the Global Network for Neglected Tropical Diseases under the direction of Senior Program Officer Kari Stoever.
Elisabeth Centeno
Beginning in her freshman year at Stanford, Elisabeth Centeno pursued activities that built upon her on-going dedication to serving underprivileged communities and youth. Believing service to be integral to her studies in Art History, for four years she served as volunteer, coordinator, and then president of Artspan at Stanford, administrating its four arts education program sites, all of which serve disadvantaged youth from low-income communities. Inspired by Artspan, during her sophomore year Elisabeth was a teacher with Breakthrough Collaborative in Sacramento, where she received the AmeriCorps Education Award.
Through service work and personal experience, Elisabeth became acutely aware of the many social inequities afflicting low-income, working-class families. Merging this awareness with a professional calling, Elisabeth embraced the law as a mechanism with which to fight for social justice. Accordingly, Elisabeth became involved with Derechos, Stanford's only Latino Pre-Law Society, working as an advocate for restaurant worker's rights during her junior year and as the organization's Public Interest Chair her senior year, where she led Derechos' community service efforts by identifying and arranging law-related service opportunities for group members and serving as a liaison between Derechos and the Stanford Community Law Clinic and other legal aid organizations in the Bay Area. Also, through the Immigrant Rights Clinic at Stanford Law School and the Children's Rights Project of Public Counsel Law Center in Los Angeles, Elisabeth has worked as a research assistant, interpreter, and legal assistant in pro-bono clinics on the issues of children's rights and immigration. In 2006, she received a Stanford Professional Women of Los Angeles Fellowship to fund her summer externship with Public Counsel. She also served for a year on Stanford in Government's State and Local Fellowships Committee.
Along with '07 fellow Colin Burke, she studied in Santiago, Chile through the Stanford Overseas Studies program in fall quarter of her junior year. These experiences, coupled with her academic training in international relations and service work promoting social justice, have fueled her interest in international human rights law and domestic civil rights issues, as well as in improving legal access within underrepresented groups and low-income communities.
As a Gardner Fellow Elisabeth will be working with Human Rights First under the guidance of Executive Director Maureen Byrnes.
Cammie Lee
As a freshman, Cammie Lee became absorbed in issues related to incarceration in the region. She co-founded Stanford Beyond Bars (SBB), a student service organization sparking dialogue and consciousness of these issues. SBB students provide direct service as well, tutoring inmates in San Francisco jails. Through her senior year, Cammie co-directed SBB, which won the Dean of Students Outstanding Achievement Award and a MTV-Youth Venture public service innovation grant, both in 2005. In the same year, Cammie received Stanford's James W. Lyons Award for Service.
Cammie utilized her service-related experiences and Haas Center advising and programs to pursue her academic interest in international relations. Having been awarded a Chappell-Lougee research and travel grant, Cammie analyzed memory reconstruction in post-Holocaust Germany during fall 2005 at Stanford in Berlin. Her senior year, she was a research intern for the US-China Economic and Security Review Commission while attending Stanford in Washington. As a 2006 Sand Hill Fellow in Philanthropy, she worked at The Asia Foundation in San Francisco developing strategic marketing tools, refining donor cultivation methods and devising solicitation plans for key constituent groups.
At the Haas Center, Cammie was coordinator and financial manager for the 2007 Alternative Spring Break, managing finances and logistics for 200 students to participate in 14 service-learning experiences nation-wide. She also served for a year on the center's Public Service Student Advisory Board.
Having delved into the public, private and non-profit sectors, Cammie is fascinated with the capabilities (and challenges) of each in advancing social change. She is interested in harnessing resources and best practices from these diverse sectors to become a more effective public servant in issues related to US-Asia foreign policy and human rights.
During her Gardner Fellowship, Cammie will be working at the United Nations under the auspices of Dr. Robert Orr, Assistant Secretary-General for Policy and Planning.
2006-2007 Gardner Fellows
The 2006-07 Gardner Fellows are (from left) Leslie Lang, Leila Makarechi, Regan Johnson, Brian Bergmark, Felipe Lopez, and Tracey Ross.
UC Berkeley's Gardner Fellows:
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Leslie Lang earned a B.S. in Business Administration and a B.A. in Rhetoric with highest honors at UC Berkeley in 2006. A future Harvard Law student, Leslie hopes to combine her business and law degrees to combat poverty in underdeveloped countries. A summer 2005 visit to Sierra Leone sparked her interest in fostering international development through good governance. |
During her internship at the Special Court for Sierra Leone, Leslie worked in the public affairs office of a war crimes tribunal that prosecutes individuals responsible for atrocities committed during a brutal eleven-year civil war. Her experiences living in impoverished Sierra Leone inspired an interest in creating economic growth in poor countries by protecting human rights and combating corruption. In August 2006, Leslie worked with the Rural Development Institute in Beijing on land law reform in rural China.
At Berkeley, Leslie was involved in a number of domestic public interest activities. She volunteered as an interpreter for the Bar Association of San Francisco and founded the Social Welfare Language Access Program. That program offers students the opportunity to provide language services for social workers at the Alameda County Social Services Agency while also participating in a relevant learning component. Leslie was awarded the Donald A. Strauss Public Service Scholarship for her work in establishing this program. Leslie has also worked in the private sector for a consulting firm and two major healthcare corporations, was awarded the Regents' & Chancellor's Scholarship and the California Alumni Leadership Scholarship, served as chapter president for the Mortar Board Honor Society, and graduated Berkeley as a member of Phi Beta Kappa.
Leslie will be working on economic development projects of central importance to several African nations during her fellowship year at World Bank headquarters in Washington DC.
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Leila Makarechi earned a double major in political science and social welfare at UC Berkeley which engaged her interests in international development and the protection of human rights. Leila seeks to use women's empowerment to enhance development in the Global South. During her study abroad in Barcelona, Spain, Leila worked with both the International Human Rights Cabinet of the Catalan Red Cross and Ca la Dona, a prominent women's rights organization. Leila spent August 2006 in the Dominican Republic with 180º para la Cooperación y el Desarrollo, a non-governmental organization based in Spain, where she managed a children's summer camp that addresses issues involving HIV/AIDS, environmental sustainability, and cultural awareness. |
At Berkeley, Leila was involved with the YWCA Youth Mentor Program. That program matches Cal students with at-risk youth in Berkeley and Oakland and was twice awarded the Chancellor's Service Award. Leila became Program Director her senior year after spending three years as a mentor. As Director, Leila was responsible for managing the recruitment, interviewing, matching, training, and event planning for more than 200 mentors and mentees. She also connected numerous children with community resources such as tutoring, counseling, and, in the most unfortunate cases, Child Protective Services.
Leila also served as Director of Alumni Relations for the Alumni Scholars Association, conducted research for Associate Dean Ananya Roy on microfinance in Bangladesh, Lebanon, and Egypt, and graduated as a member of Phi Beta Kappa. Among other distinctions, Leila was awarded a California Alumni Leadership Scholarship and was recognized as a Leadership and Community Involvement Scholar by the Institute for the International Education of Students.
During her fellowship year, Leila will be working in the Latin America and Caribbean division of the United Nations Development Program under the auspices of Regional Director Rebeca Grynspan.
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Tracey Ross studied political science and anthropology at UC Berkeley where she developed an interest in understanding educational and welfare disparities within the African American community. A politically active student, Tracey worked in the district office of Congresswoman Barbara Lee (D-CA), contributed to publications produced by the Cal Berkeley Democrats, Pop and Politics Magazine, and WireTap, and was accepted into the "Cal in the Capitol" program. While in Washington DC, Tracey worked with the Americans for Democratic Action and the office of Senator Edward Kennedy (D-MA) on legislation to increase the minimum wage. As Chief of Staff to the Student Body President at UC Berkeley, Tracey managed a seventy-member staff and oversaw student body projects such as UC Berkeley's first Dance Marathon and a fundraiser which drew nearly $12,000 to fight pediatric AIDS. |
Tracey also served as a delegate to the College Democrats of America convention, was invited to the 2004 Democratic National Convention, and was elected Vice President of the Cal Berkeley Democrats during the 2004-05 academic year. Tracey utilized her leadership position to help register over 3,000 new voters and recruit sixty volunteers (including herself) to campaign for John Kerry in closely-divided Nevada. In Nevada, Tracey worked as a precinct captain for the Kerry campaign.
As a Fellow at a youth conference organized by People for the American Way, Tracey helped create an affirmative action awareness campaign. Tracey also volunteered at Dharma Publishing where she created Buddhists texts to send to refugees from Tibet at the World Peace Summit. Tracey graduated Berkeley as a member of Phi Beta Kappa.
Tracey will spend her fellowship year in the Washington DC office of Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-NY) working on policy issues surrounding children, education, labor, healthcare, and voting rights.
Stanford's Gardner Fellows:
Brian Bergmark graduated from Stanford with a degree in Human Biology and a concentration in Neurobiology and Impairment. His interests in neuroscience, disability issues, and public health have taken him from neuroscience research in the lab to lobbying on Capitol Hill. Brian spent much of his time at Stanford working on advocacy around public health issues through two student groups he co-founded; the Stanford Chapter of the Student Campaign for Child Survival (SCCS), and the Children's Public Health Initiative. He has served as the Treasurer on the National Coordinating Committee of SCCS and plans to incorporate similar political activism into his work as a physician and researcher.
Brian wrote his Honors Thesis on the residence decision-making process and quality of life determinants for adults with quadriplegia. He hopes that interviews he conducted on victims of spinal cord injury quadriplegia will inform future victims in their residence decisions, and also initiate policy and service changes. Among other distinctions, Brian is a Rhodes Scholarship Finalist and a member of Phi Beta Kappa.
Next year Brian will be applying to medical school and will work on national disability policies as a John Gardner Fellow with the Deputy Director of the Office of Disability in the Office of the Secretary of Health and Human Services.
Regan Johnson formed her interest in global health and development during high school in Minneapolis where she volunteered for a human rights organization, tutored at a high school for war refugees and immigrants, and founded a human rights journal at her own school. At college, she honed her passion to bring healthcare access to the world's poor on local, national, and international levels. During her first week of college at Yale, Regan became active in launching the nation's first student campaign dedicated to advocating for global children's health: The Student Campaign for Child Survival (SCCS). Soon, she became a chapter co-President and was elected to the national Coordinating Committee for SCCS as a Grassroots Organizer. Along with nine other students, Regan helped to orchestrate all national actions for the campaign and build SCCS into a thirty-chapter organization. After transferring to Stanford her sophomore year, she co-founded the Stanford chapter of SCCS and was re-elected to the national Coordinating Committee in the winter as Partnerships Coordinator.
Regan has complemented her work in advocacy both through research and by volunteering in Chile, Mexico, and the United States . During her junior year, she co-taught ANTHSCI 60 SI: International Children's Health and Survival at Stanford, and spent her winter in Chile studying international relations and Chilean literature. That summer, Regan traveled to Guadalajara , Mexico , to work as a clinical intern at a small clinic. Building on her interest in providing healthcare for disadvantaged communities and her work in central Mexico, Regan wrote her Honors Thesis on the access Mexican immigrants have to health services in both the U.S. and Mexico. Regan spent the summer of 2006 in India working in a clinic and plans to pursue a joint degree in medicine and public health following her Gardner Fellowship at Population Services International, an international health organization based in Washington DC.
Felipe Perez explored his broad interests through an interdisciplinary major in Human Biology with a concentration in the biological, psychological, and social aspects of human development. A published biologist, Felipe received a Firestone medal for Excellence in Undergraduate Research for his honors thesis analyzing the developmental mechanism of cells that allow for sight in the eye of an African cichlid fish. Despite this and other accomplishments in academia, Felipe's interests are not limited to esoteric biological functions. They also include a dedication to public service.
Felipe has actively engaged in direct service to underserved communities. To lessen the disparity in access to health care, Felipe volunteered as an interpreter at multiple health clinics to ensure that Spanish speaking patients could communicate with medical staff. He performed this work first in the Emergency Department of the Santa Clara Valley Medical Center through the Shadowing for Clinical Opportunities and Premedical Experience Medical Interpreters Program (SCOPE MIP), and later for Arbor Free Clinic, a community clinic in Menlo Park.
Through his interdisciplinary coursework, Felipe developed deep convictions about resolving educational inequity. He realized that the earlier an intervention was made in a person's life, the more successful it was likely to be. Armed with awareness and conviction, Felipe joined and eventually served as president of Barrio Assistance, a mentoring and tutoring program aimed at Spanish-speaking Chicano/Latino students whose mission is to diminish the discrepancies in quality of education in East Palo Alto .
As a John Gardner Fellow, Felipe will work with the Commissioner of Health for the city of Baltimore.
2005-2006 Gardner Fellows

The 2005-06 Gardner Fellows are (clockwise from top left) Annie Bird, Sandy Tesch, Michael Harrison Jones, Dung Le, Katie Hill, and Rita Nguyen.
UC Berkeley's Gardner Fellows:
A transfer student to UC Berkeley, Annie Bird was active in service at Santa Monica College where she created Racial Harmony, a full-day seminar for students about racial stereotypes and institutional racism. She went on to hold student government positions as the Director of Student Services and the Student Trustee for Santa Monica College, and was selected by Governor Gray Davis to serve as a Member of the Board of Governors for the California Community Colleges. She also completed internships in Washington, DC with House Democratic Leader Richard Gephardt and the Department of State.
Annie attended sessions of the UN Commission on Human Rights, and participated in related academic and cultural events, in Geneva, Switzerland in 2000 and 2004. As a 2003 Rotary Ambassadorial Scholar, she studied international relations and worked at an NGO dedicated to microfinance activities in Buenos Aires, Argentina for a year. In Senegal the following summer, she continued her work with microfinance through a volunteer project with Operation Crossroads Africa.
Annie served as a research apprentice at the War Crimes Studies Center at UC Berkeley, studying the challenges to international justice in East Timor. Over the summer, she continued this research, as well as taught a class on International Organizations in Switzerland. Throughout her undergraduate education, she has worked part-time and participated in community service organizations and student clubs.
The International Center for Transitional Justice, where she will spend her fellowship year, assists countries pursuing accountability for past mass atrocity or human rights abuse. The Center works in societies emerging from repressive rule or armed conflict, as well as in established democracies where historical injustices or systemic abuse remain unresolved.
Michael Harrison Jones's study focused on macroeconomics as it pertains to the developing world and poverty-stricken households. He is founder and former president of Bears for UNICEF, a 100-member nonprofit organization based at UC Berkeley that educates, advocates and fundraises for the United Nations Children's Fund. He headed the association for three years and spearheaded several programs including a nationwide advocacy campaign urging the U.S. government to increase UNICEF funding. These efforts resulted in a $5 million funding increase for the 2005 Fiscal Year, and helped launch the United Nations Student Internship of the East Bay.
While at Berkeley, Michael established the Special Studies Course "UNICEF: Development in Action," sponsored through the Department of Economics, instructing 130 students every week about global economic and social underdevelopment issues and corresponding multilateral response strategies. In addition, he is founder and past president of the Omicron Delta Epsilon International Economics Honors Society at UC Berkeley, where he initiated numerous educational economics activities, including a private summit with the president and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco.
In December of 2004, Michael was the youngest person to be elected to the Board of Directors of the East Bay Chapter of the United Nations Association of the U.S.A., which advocates for increased U.S. involvement in the United Nations. He has revitalized the organization's influence with the community's college-aged demographic by initiating collaborative projects with student groups and implementing programs at UC Berkeley.
Michael graduated with honors and is a Regents' and Chancellor's Scholar, a member of Phi Beta Kappa (exclusive initiation as a Junior), a four-time California Alumni Leadership Scholar, and a Delta Chi Alumni Leadership Scholar. He is the recipient of the Edward Frank Kraft Scholarship Prize for Freshmen, among other awards.
In the Office of the Secretary General of the United Nations, Michael's responsibilities will be in two main areas: diplomacy and negotiation with Member States, and policy coordination and implementation within the UN Secretariat.
Having volunteered with the American Red Cross for six and a half years, Sandy Tesch strives to develop the leadership potential of youth and increase the number of young people involved in nonprofits. Her Red Cross involvement includes international public health efforts such as the Measles Initiative, a global partnership to vaccinate every child in Africa against measles. Sandy has raised thousands of dollars for this cause, and has overseen national programs including the Measles Initiative National Youth Champions and a nationwide fundraising competition on college campuses. In December 2003, Sandy traveled to The Gambia in Africa on behalf of the Measles Initiative campaign to meet with Gambia Red Cross Society volunteers, public health officials, and observed a campaign that vaccinated over 700,000 children in one week.
Sandy was selected as an American Red Cross National Youth Council member in 2002 and was chosen as its chair after serving for three years. The National Youth Council sets youth policy and involvement efforts for over 300,000 youth and young adult volunteers serving the American Red Cross. The National Headquarters honored Sandy in 2003 with the Woodrow Wilson Award for Exemplary Youth Service, the highest award an American Red Cross youth volunteer can receive.
Sandy began an internship in 2003 as a blood drive account manager with the Northern California Blood Region of the American Red Cross, and she has since been coordinating blood drives at UC Berkeley and forming partnerships with other student organizations to ensure an adequate community blood supply. She served as president of American Red Cross at Cal, and has also been an HIV Test Counselor for the City of Berkeley for over three and a half years.
Sandy's placement, Youth Service America, is a resource center that partners with thousands of organizations committed to increasing the quality and quantity of volunteer opportunities for young people in America, ages 5-25, to serve locally, nationally, and globally.
Stanford's Gardner Fellows:
Before coming to Stanford, Katie Hill spent 10 months working at a local school in rural Nepal. She came away with a deeper understanding of the glaring injustices of poverty and a sense of responsibility to impact change. In the summer of 2002, she worked in a shelter for street-children in Quito, Ecuador, and she later became one of the vice-presidents of Volunteers in Latin America.
Katie raised awareness of the challenges facing the developing world through her involvement in the Stanford Association for International Development (SAID). She was active in SAID since her sophomore year and served as its treasurer as a senior. Katie spent the summer of 2003 interning at the International Planned Parenthood Federation in New York, where she drafted a youth internship program to bring interns from Latin America to work in the secretariat office.
During her semester abroad in Uganda, Katie applied her Chappell-Lougee Scholarship to researching the impact of microfinance on women's empowerment. Her study of the potential of microfinance to alleviate poverty evolved into her senior honors thesis, for which she was awarded the Firestone Medal. In the summer of 2004, she returned to Uganda to explore the recent commercialization on microfinance. Katie graduated with honors and as a member of Phi Beta Kappa.
In addition to her commitment to international development, Katie also played competitive rugby. As co-captain of the Stanford Women's Rugby Team, she recently led her teammates to win the 2005 USA Rugby Collegiate National Championship.
Katie's placement is The Acumen Fund, a global nonprofit venture fund that strives to build financially sustainable organizations that help improve the lives of the poor.
Through her two interdisciplinary majors, Dung Le studied social, psychological, and biological aspects of youth development. She became particularly interested in the impact of the juvenile justice system on the social development of youth, especially racial minority youth.
Formerly a pre-med at Stanford, Dung's initial interest was adolescent health policy. She volunteered in various health-related capacities, from serving as an HIV Peer Educator for middle school students to being a Buddy Volunteer at Lucile Packard Children's Hospital. She thoroughly enjoyed clinical medicine, especially her roles as an emergency room medical interpreter and as a doctor's aide in Guatemala and Botswana. Her experiences eventually led her to develop an interest in the social institutions that influence adolescent development.
Dung delved more directly into social issues of youth development as her coursework and activities broadened to include the impact of legal institutions on adolescent development. She worked to make legal advice more accessible to young people while working at the Stanford Education Law Clinic. As an intern at a nonprofit for youth called Summer Search, she designed and developed an alumni internship program to provide recent program graduates with strong and continued support. In exploration of her interest in the disproportionate number of minority children in the juvenile justice system, Dung's honors thesis in Comparative Studies in Race and Ethnicity (CSRE) sought to examine the ways in which parental involvement in juvenile delinquency hearings affect case outcomes. She graduated with honors and distinction in CSRE, and was awarded the Edith and Norman Abrams Award in Human Biology for Excellence in Public Interest Advocacy.
Dung will pursue her interests at the Annie E. Casey Foundation working on the Juvenile Detention Alternatives Initiative. The Foundation fosters public policies, human service reforms and community supports to build better futures for disadvantaged children and their families in the United States .
In both her academic pursuits and extracurricular involvement, Rita Nguyen is committed to exploring why health disparities exist and how these inequalities can be eliminated. Her intellectual interests have centered around understanding non-biological determinants of health, both on an individual patient level and on a health systems level. To address the health needs of low-income immigrant populations in her hometown, Rita helped establish Pacific Free Clinic (PFC) a free student-run clinic on the east side of San Jose that opened in 2003. She worked to expand the services at PFC during her years at Stanford and in 2004, became the first undergraduate Clinic Manager in the two-decade long history of Stanford free clinics.
As a student and then teaching assistant for the service-learning course "Community Health Assessment," Rita connected Stanford students to community partners. She also co-founded and instructed "Medical Vietnamese," a course established through Student Initiated Courses to address the importance of cultural competency and qualified medical interpretation in the Vietnamese-speaking patient population.
Rita served as co-chair of the Stanford Vietnamese Student Association (SVSA) and helped found its High School Mentoring Program. As a co-coordinator for two years, she supported Vietnamese youth and encouraged them to pursue higher education. She was nominated twice for Stanford's Outstanding Asian American Undergrad Award for her "excellent leadership within Stanford and outside communities, commitment to furthering the arts, diversity, or social activism, and exemplary service to the Asian American community."
Rita's honors thesis was a combination of her intellectual interest and her desire to improve health outcomes of residents in low-income areas. Her work was awarded a Firestone Medal for "exceptional quality and value."
Rita is spending her fellowship year at The California Endowment, a private, statewide health foundation whose mission is to expand access to affordable, quality health care for underserved individuals and communities, and to promote fundamental improvements in the health status of all Californians.
2004-2005 Gardner Fellows

The 2004-05 Gardner Fellows are (clockwise from top left) Tianna
Terry, Stephen Chan, Golda Philip, Anna Ferrari, Thomas DeSimone, and Brandon
Simmons.
UC Berkeley's Gardner Fellows:
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Thomas De Simone graduated from UC Berkeley with a major in
political science and a minor in city planning. These two areas of study
allowed Thomas to concentrate on his primary interest: local government.
His honor's thesis focused on the newly formed system of neighborhood
councils taking root in Los Angeles and analyzed the degree to which the
City is working to empower those councils. Thomas has served as President
of the Cal Berkeley Democrats and spent his 2003-2004 winter break
traveling through western Iowa as part of the Howard Dean campaign. He is
a member of the National Society of Collegiate Scholars and the Golden Key
International honor society. |
Thomas has worked and interned in a variety of public sector positions.
In 2002, he interned with the Mayor of Los Angeles's Housing and Business
Team, working on the City's efforts to revitalize the downtown area. In
2003, he interned with the City's Department of Neighborhood Empowerment,
which oversees the neighborhood councils. During both the summers of 2001
and 2002, he also worked for the educational television station in his
hometown of Thousand Oaks, continuing his interest in local news
programming. While working for the television station, Thomas produced
several shows focusing on local public policy issues, providing the
community with its only form of local television news coverage.
Thomas will spend his Fellowship year working with Deputy Mayor Renata
Simril and Yolanda Chavez in the Los Angeles Mayor's Office of Economic
Development.
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Anna Ferrari graduated from UC Berkeley in the fall of 2003,
majoring in English and Political Economy of Industrial Societies, with a
concentration in economic development policy. She spent three terms as a
university research apprentice, collaborating on several projects in the
fields of history, literature, and political economy. She also served as
communications chair of the Berkeley chapter of Mortar Board National
Senior Honor Society, as a youth mentor for the Berkeley YWCA, and as a
member of Alpha Phi International Fraternity. For two years, she was
involved as a volunteer at the Women's Cancer Resource Center, providing
legal services, referrals, and practical support to low-income cancer
patients and their families. |
While interning at the San Diego County Public Defender's Office, Anna
developed a strong interest in criminal justice policy. Subsequently, she
spent a year conducting pretrial investigations of criminal defendants for
the Superior Court of Alameda County. As a policy intern at the Center on
Juvenile and Criminal Justice in San Francisco, she produced original
research on barriers to employment affecting former offenders. Following
her graduation, she worked at LIFETIME, a statewide advocacy group
promoting education and training opportunities for low-income parents, by
assisting with client cases and policy reform efforts.
Anna will spend her Fellowship year working with Marta Neslon at the
Vera Institute in New York City.
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Brandon Simmons graduated with honors from the Political Science
Department and also completed a minor in City and Regional Planning.
Brandon's academic and public service endeavors reflect his desire to use
his opportunities to improve both himself and his community. During the
summers, Brandon has taken part in UC Berkeley's
"Cal-in-Sacramento" and "Labor Summer" internship
programs, working for State Senator Tom Torlakson and the Alameda County
Central Labor Council. He also interned for Berkeley City Councilmember
Linda Maio who later appointed him to Berkeley's Fair Campaign Practices
Commission. |
In the fall of 2002 Brandon was invited to join the executive committee
of the Tom Bates for Mayor campaign. Using the skills he gained at the UC
Berkeley Center for Campaign Leadership, Brandon participated in the
direction of the city-wide campaign while also managing the campus
campaign. After the election, Mayor Bates appointed Brandon to Berkeley's
Housing Advisory Commission where he now serves as Vice-Chair. While
serving on the HAC Brandon has combined his interest in urban policy with
his leadership ability. He has served two terms on the Community
Development Block Grant Subcommittee, each year overseeing the allocation
of over $10 million. He also pushed for a revision of Berkeley's
Inclusionary Ordinance as a member of the Home Ownership Assistance
Subcommittee. Brandon also represented the Undergraduate students on the
University's Long Range Development Plan Steering Committee. Continuously
trying to learn new ways to serve his community, Brandon spent his last
semester studying homelessness in Berkeley's Undergraduate Research
Apprenticeship Program.
Brandon is a native of Berkeley, CA, and will spend his
fellowship in Washington, DC, working with Douglas Besharov at the
American Enterprise Institute.
Stanford's Gardner Fellows:
Stephen Chan has focused his academic and extracurricular
experiences on exploring innovative strategies to foster sustainable
community development. As a Haas Public Service Scholar, he shared the
results of his honors research examining the effect of urban growth
boundaries on housing prices with various smart growth advocacy
organizations in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Stephen received two summer fellowships that allowed him to deepen his
interest in regional governance and collaboration. As an Urban Summer
Fellow, performed research on local growth control policies at Greenbelt
Alliance. As a Sand Hill Fellow in Philanthropy, he helped manage two
nonprofit loan funds at Northern California Grantmakers. While at Stanford
in Washington, he assisted with fair housing investigations at the Civil
Rights Division of the U.S. Department of Justice. He has also worked and
campaigned for California State Assembly Member Joe Simitian.
At Stanford, Stephen advised students on service opportunities as a
Haas Public Service Advising Fellow, coordinating the program his senior
year. He mentored Asian youth and sang at seniors homes through the
student organizations Project AIYME and Side by Side respectively. Through
the Alternative Spring Break program, he designed and led a seminar and
trip to expose students to the growing field of social entrepreneurship.
Joining California Student Action for Change, a Campus Compact initiative
to promote student civic engagement, he organized campus dialogues and
events to promote awareness of salient social issues. He also served on
the Haas Center's student advisory board.
Stephen will spend his Fellowship year working with Paul Grogan,
President of the Boston Foundation.
Golda Philip's intellectual and extracurricular interests have
focused on the issues of South Asia and its immigrant communities. Since
her freshman year, Golda has been asking questions about dowry practice in
southern India. Her questions led her to pursue honors work through the
Feminist Studies program, conducting research in the Indian state of
Kerala that analyzed women's experiences with the dowry system. On campus,
Golda has been an organizing member for Saheli, Stanford's South Asian
Women's Alliance. As a leader of Project Dosti for the last three years
and as its current president, Golda has helped organize service learning
trips to India for other Stanford undergraduates.
Golda has also been strongly involved in the immigrant needs of the Bay
Area community-specifically those of abused immigrant women. As a
sophomore, Golda became a certified domestic violence counselor, and began
volunteering with Maitri, a local South Asian domestic violence
organization. As an Edith and Norm Abrams Fellow in Public Interest Law,
Golda worked as a legal intern at Maitri, focusing specifically on
clients' legal cases.
Golda is originally from Glendale, California. She will spend her
Fellowship year working with Gail Pendleton at the National Immigration
Project in Boston.
Tianna Terry has focused her academic pursuits on exploring the influence of
race and ethnicity on politics in the United States. Through her Political
Science coursework, she developed a passion for fair housing and community
development in low-income, minority communities. She was able to explore
this interest further during her Stanford in Washington internship at the
Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights. As an intern for the Housing and
Community Development Project, she assisted with preparing cases for
litigation, designed outreach materials for fair housing workshops, and
conducted an assessment of the quality of living of public housing
residents who had been relocated from a toxic waste site. During her
senior year, Tianna worked for Project Sentinel, a fair housing
organization in Palo Alto, CA.
Tianna has held leadership positions in the Black Student
Union, Black Pre-law Society, and the Stanford Gospel Choir. She was also
a peer academic advisor and a research assistant in the Race and Social
Justice Lab in the Psychology Department. During her junior year, Tianna
became actively involved in the student-initiated campaign to expand the
Black Community Services Center. She served as the principal drafter of
the proposal submitted to the administration, helped facilitate a teach-in
for undergraduate and graduate students about the campaign, and presented
the proposal at a meeting with administrators. During her summers, Tianna
has worked as a complaint counselor for the American Civil Liberties Union
of Eastern Missouri and as a legal assistant in small, private law firms
in her hometown of St. Louis, MO. She is a Gates Millennium Scholar and
has received the Dean's Award for Academic Excellence every quarter. She
was also awarded the Condoleezza Rice Award Academic Excellence, an honor
granted to the Black female junior with the highest grade point average in
Political Science, Public Policy, or International Relations.
Tianna will spend her Fellowship year working with Ellen Lazar at the
Fannie Mae Foundation in Washington, DC.
2003-2004 Gardner Fellows
The 2003-04 Gardner Fellows are Ann Bordetsky, Tess
Bridgeman, Amanda Kahn, Jenny Lah, Joanna Levitt, and
César Moreno Pérez.
UC Berkeley's Gardner Fellows:
 |
Ann Bordetsky graduated Phi Beta Kappa and with
honors from the Environmental Science, Policy, and Management Department.
Her academic work and public service reflected her passion for issues of
environmental health, justice, and responsibility. Her honors thesis
focused on the contribution of NGO's to the growth of civil society in
Russia and their prospects for creating an environmental and human health
protection framework within a politically volatile climate. Born and
raised in Chelyabinsk, Russia, a heavily polluted and toxic region, she
bears a deep personal connection to a variety of environmental problems. |
During the summers, Ann has worked as a biotech intern for
Bayer Pharmaceuticals, and for the Environmental Protection Agency. At the
EPA, she served as an Environmental Education Grant Evaluator for Region 9
and as an assistant Congressional Liaison in the Office of Planning and
Public Affairs. As an undergraduate, Ann participated extensively in
Outdoor Connection, an environmental education program for Berkeley school
children. She was also involved in the Berkeley Model United Nations and
the Cal Pre-Law Society. As President of the Honor Students' Society (HSS),
Ann managed the 120-member organization and increased students' community
involvement. She also produced original research on term limits in the
California legislature.
Ann will be spending her fellowship year in Washington,
D.C. at Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) working with John Walke,
Director of the Clean Air Program. The NRDC is a national, non-profit
organization of scientists, lawyers and environmental specialists
dedicated to protecting public health and the environment. Founded in
1970, NRDC has more than 500,000 members nationwide, served from offices
in New York, Washington, Los Angeles and San Francisco.
 |
César Moreno Pérez was born and raised in Arvin,
a small city in California's Central Valley. While at Berkeley, he was on
the dean's list and was also recognized as a National Hispanic Scholar and
National Collegiate Scholar.
César's public service has primarily focused
on historically disadvantaged and underprivileged communities. He has
worked with RAZA Recruitment and Retention Center, the
César Chavez
Student Learning Center, and Gamma Zeta Alpha Fraternity Inc. in their
recruitment and retention programs. He has also particularly enjoyed
working at the East Bay Asian Youth Center (EBAYC) in Oakland as an
academic tutor and mentor. |
During his summers,
César participated in the University
of California Public Policy and International Affairs Junior Summer
Institute (UCPPIA) at Berkeley, as well as the Civil Rights Summer (CRS).
CRS, a fellowship co-sponsored by the Harvard Civil Rights Research
Project and the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, is designed for
student advocates dedicated to creating social change. While working for
CRS,
César interned at the Labor Council for Latin American Advancement,
the Latino constituency group of the American Federation of Labor and
Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO). His studies and travel
abroad have taken him to Africa, Europe, and Mexico.
For his fellowship year,
César is working in Washington,
D.C. with Ingrid
Durán, President and CEO of the Congressional Hispanic
Caucus Institute (CHCI), on a housing initiative to increase the number of
Latino homeowners across the nation. CHCI's mission is to develop the next
generation of Latino leaders by offering educational and leadership
development programs, services, and activities that promote the growth of
participants as effective professionals and strong leaders.
 |
Jenny Lah's undergraduate coursework focused on
international development, gender relations, and China's economic reforms.
Her senior history thesis examined a women's magazine in China before and
after the Cultural Revolution. She is a member of Phi Beta Kappa and Phi
Alpha Theta, a history honors society. As a student researcher, she worked
at the Woodrow Wilson International Center in Washington, D.C. with a
scholar who focused on Chinese economic reforms and privatization, and
also for the Emma Goldman Papers Project at UC Berkeley. |
Outside of academics, Jenny has been involved on campus
and in the community with the advancement of the status of women. She has
served as president of Prytanean Women's Honor Society where she helped
increase membership, plan a rally for women's athletics, and increase
service involvement. She has also volunteered as a tutor for English in
Action and for Women in Community Service, an organization that endeavors
to reduce the number of women and youth living in poverty by promoting
self-reliance and economic independence. Jenny assisted in planning a
workshop, Global Perspectives on Women and Disability, for the Third
Annual Women's Rights Conference at UC Berkeley. For two years, she served
as a Resident Assistant, where she planned programs and helped new
students transition to campus.
Jenny will be working at UNIFEM, United Nations
Development Fund for Women, in New York City. Her mentor is Joanne Sandler,
Deputy Director of Programs. UNIFEM is the women's fund at the United
Nations. It provides financial and technical assistance to innovative
programs and strategies that promote women's human rights, political
participation and economic security. Within the UN system, UNIFEM promotes
gender equality and links women's issues and concerns to national,
regional and global agendas by fostering collaboration and providing
technical expertise on gender mainstreaming and women's empowerment
strategies.
Stanford's Gardner Fellows:
For the past five years, Tess Bridgeman has
conducted health, development, and agricultural extension programs in
Paraguay and Mexico. Two years ago, she co-founded the non-profit
organization Puente a la Salud Comunitaria (Bridge to Community Health) in
Oaxaca, Mexico. Puente aims to foster community development by enabling
women to act as local health advocates and by establishing relationships
among and between communities, grassroots organizations, and institutions.
Also in Oaxaca, Tess conducted research on knowledge and use of folic
acid, the results of which will be published and used by Oaxaca's
Secretariat of Health. After volunteering at Planned Parenthood from ages
12 through 18, Tess was a founding member of Stanford Students for Choice
during her freshman year at Stanford and has been its president for the
past two years. In 2003, she was named one of the "Top 30 Under
30" reproductive rights activists by Choice USA.
Tess has designed, coordinated and guest lectured in two
Stanford courses: "The Health and Environmental Effects of U.S.
Foreign Policy" (Spring 2002) and "Post-field Seminar for
Students in International Health and Development" (Fall 2002). She
was awarded a Truman Scholarship in 2002, and a Deans' Award for Academic
Accomplishment and a James W. Lyons Award upon graduation. She is also a
Stanford University President's Scholar, a Donald A. Strauss Scholar, a
Coca-Cola Scholar, twice a Haas Summer Fellow, and a Latin American
Studies Summer Research Fellow.
Tess is from Santa Cruz, California. She will spend her
fellowship year in Washington, D.C. at the World Bank Inspection Panel
where her mentor is Edith Brown Weiss, WBIP Chair. The World Bank
Inspection Panel, is "a three-member panel that receives and
investigates Requests for Inspection from people directly affected by
World Bank projects."
Raised in Philadelphia, Amanda Kahn came to
Stanford with a deep interest in urban policy reform efforts, and has
focused her academic and extracurricular pursuits on the exploration of
different methods to achieve sustainable change at the local level.
Through her coursework in Urban Studies, Amanda developed
an interest in social entrepreneurship. As a founding member and president
of FUSION, The Future Social Innovators Network, she led a small
consulting-style partnership with a local nonprofit, and helped organize a
campus-wide conference on "Creating Social Change in the 21st
Century." She also worked on a business plan to address local
affordable housing constraints that received the top undergraduate prize
in the Stanford Social Entrepreneurs Challenge.
Amanda has been the recipient of two summer fellowships in
public service, which allowed her to explore her interests in urban
governance and community development. As an Urban Summer Fellow, she
worked in Philadelphia for the City Council president on the Neighborhood
Transformation Initiative. As a Sand Hill Fellow in Philanthropy, Amanda
worked with Social Venture Partners and the San Francisco Foundation.
During her quarter at Stanford in Washington, Amanda worked at the
Brookings Institution Center on Urban and Metropolitan Policy.
Amanda's placement is with Gloria Young, Clerk of the San
Francisco Board of Supervisors. The Clerk of the Board of Supervisors
serves the Board by providing leadership and administrative support,
implementing Board policies, and providing quality services to the people
of the City and County of San Francisco.
Joanna Levitt believes strongly in a human approach
to environmental preservation. She was able to explore this passion
through her major in Human Biology, focusing on International Conservation
and Development, and her minor in Latin American Studies. She has spent
significant time in Latin America, including several months in the
Peruvian Amazon conducting research on community-based development
initiatives. She has also worked and studied in Costa Rica, Cuba and El
Salvador. While at Stanford in Washington, she interned with the World
Bank doing research for the Latin America and Caribbean Environmental
Department.
Outside of the classroom, Joanna worked for four years as
a tutor and then a tutor coordinator of East Palo Alto Tennis and
Tutoring, a local non-profit education organization that serves middle and
high school students. During her senior year, she was active with the
Stanford Women's Center in promoting awareness about sexual violence,
including organizing and leading educational panels on issues of domestic
violence and sexual assault and performing in The Vagina Monologues. The
latter was instrumental in shaping her current feminist perspective on
international development and environment.
Joanna is from Stanford, California. During her fellowship
year, she will be working with Anne Perault, Senior Attorney, at the
Center for International Environmental Law (CIEL) in Washington, D.C. CIEL
is a public interest, not-for-profit environmental law firm founded in
1989 to strengthen international and comparative environmental law and
policy around the world. The firm provides a full range of environmental
legal services in both international and comparative national law,
including policy research and publication, advice and advocacy, education
and training, and institution building.
2002-2003 Gardner Fellows
The 2002-03 Gardner Fellows are Heidi Boas, Rachel Goldbrenner, Talya
Horowitz, Christopher Maloney, Chanthip Phongkhamsavath, and Michael
Umpierre.
UC Berkeley's Gardner Fellows:
Talya (Tali) Horowitz (University of California, Berkeley, '02)
graduated Phi Beta Kappa in Ethnic Studies. Throughout her career at
Berkeley she has worked in a variety of volunteer and public service
capacities, primarily centering on disadvantaged and/or underserved
populations. Tali has worked for the University's Disabled Students
Program where she was a reader and tutor for a disabled student with
cerebral palsy. She was a tutor through an AmeriCorps program, for a sixth
grade student with learning disabilities. During Tali's junior abroad in
Ghana, West Africa, where she studied at the University of Legon, she
volunteered at an orphanage, organizing activities and assisting with
day-to-day group living. Tali has also been a caseworker for the Berkeley
Suitcase Clinic where she provided health, legal and referral services to
low-income and homeless people, and trained other caseworkers.
For the past year and a half, Tali has interned at the Legal Services
for Prisoners with Children (LSPC) in their domestic violence section. Her
work at the LSPC includes expanding the efforts of the volunteer-based
organization the California Coalition for Battered Woman in Prison (CCBWP), and organizing the April event Our Voices Within. This event
involved sharing the writing and artwork of the incarcerated survivors of
domestic violence. In her senior year at Berkeley, Tali took short fiction
writing, drama, and installation art classes. She also taught first and
second graders, frequently using acting and art to convey the
instructional material and encourage artistic self-expression. Through
these experiences, Tali has developed new appreciation for the power of
art (writing, theatre, visual arts) to inform and to give voice to the
voiceless on an aggregate level, as well as to increase the individual's
sense of competence, confidence, and self-awareness. Tali is interested in
spending her Gardner Fellowship in an organization dedicated to creating
and developing art programs for children and youth.
Rachel Goldbrenner will be graduating in May 2002 with a major
in political science and a minor in English. Rachel's course load at
Berkeley has reflected her interest in human rights, the ethics of
politics and international relations, and constitutional law. She is
writing a Political Science honors thesis entitled, "Framing a Judicial
Response to Terrorism: Legal Alternatives After September 11," and is
interested in broader issues of international criminal justice and human
rights law. Rachel has earned many academic honors at Berkeley, including
Phi Beta Kappa, UC Berkeley Dean's Honors List, and the Edward Frank Kraft
scholarship for academic excellence in the first year of college. She has
contributed research and assistance to the publication of the quarterly
academic journal "Ethics & International Affairs" and the human rights
publication "Human Rights Dialogue," both produced by the Carnegie Council
on Ethics and International Affairs; and to the final report of the
California Abortion Access Project entitled "Holes in the Safety Net: the
Lack of Abortion Access in California Hospitals." In addition, Rachel has
worked for Bruce Cain, Danforth Professor of Political Science and
Director of the Institute for Governmental Studies, researching and
contributing to numerous publications and conference papers.
Outside of the classroom, Rachel has been involved in a wide range of
non-profit research and advocacy positions, working on issues such as
women's health rights, improving education in juvenile detention
facilities, and the role of ethics in international policy. Both her
extensive study and travel in China and Southeast Asia and her summer
internship at the Carnegie Council increased her desire to work in the
area of international human rights and international criminal justice. The
terrorist attacks of September 11 have influenced her interest in finding
a just and effective response to that tragic event, while still ensuring
the constitutional rights and broader human rights of all involved. As a
Gardner Fellow, she would like to pursue these interests by seeking
placement at a non-profit organization devoted to human rights,
international law and the International Criminal Court, and specifically
to some aspect of the world's ongoing response to September 11. Chanthip Phongkhamsavath graduated from the University of
California, Berkeley in December 2001 with a major in Sociology and a
minor in Education. As a freshman she took a leadership role in REACH, the
Asian and Pacific Islander Recruitment and Retention center committed to
promoting higher education to recent immigrant and urban youth as a means
for economic and community development. With REACH, she coordinated
outreach programs for high school youth throughout Northern and Southern
California. Through the Democratic Education for Cal program, Chanthip
facilitated an interactive class, incorporating volunteer service into the
discussions of Asian Pacific Islander Youth Issues. In her Junior year,
Chanthip worked as a research assistant, and later youth counselor, with
Asians and Pacific Islanders for Reproductive Health in developing,
coordinating, and implementing summer leadership trainings for Asian
American women in Oakland and Richmond. As Co-Founder of the Southeast
Asian Student Coalition, she organized community roundtables with key
stakeholders to identify policy issues impacting Laotian, Cambodian, and
Vietnamese students. Currently, Chanthip is developing a Summer Institute
focused on promoting cultural understanding and leadership of Southeast
Asian high school youth.
Furthering Chanthip's dedication to educational equity and
multicultural collaboration, she became the Programs Director for bridges
the Multicultural Recruitment and Retention Center. As director, she
advocated and developed statewide outreach efforts to increase the number
of underrepresented and disadvantaged students in higher education.
Throughout her career at UC Berkeley she mentored and tutored local junior
high and high school students in Project Collegebound, at Berkeley High
School, and with the East Bay Asian Youth Center of Oakland.
In the summer of 2001, Chanthip was selected to participate in the UC
Public Policy and International Affairs Summer Institute. She completed
rigorous coursework in economics, statistics, and policy analysis.
Chanthips' other extracurricular activities have included campaign
organizing for CAL Students for Equal Rights and a Valid Education, and
serving as a board member of the Canterbury Episcopal Ministry. Chanthip
plans to use the Gardner Fellowship in an organization combining her
dedication to educational and economic equity with her interests in public
policy.
Stanford's Gardner Fellows:
Heidi Boas, a senior from Atlanta, Georgia, will graduate in
June of 2002 with a BA in Feminist Studies and a concentration in women's
rights as human rights. Heidi has been active in the women's activism
community on campus since her sophomore year, volunteering with the
Stanford Women's Center and the Stanford Self-Defense Program, and serving
most recently as the student representative to the Feminist Studies
Program Committee. In the fall of this year, she had the honor of working
with Anne Firth-Murray, founder of The Global Fund for Women, as a
teaching assistant for a Human Biology course in International Women's
Health.
As a recipient of the Gardner fellowship, Heidi hopes to work next year
with an organization promoting the rights of refugee women. Ever since
hosting a Bosnian refugee in her Atlanta home during high school, Heidi
has sought to understand and explore the struggles of refugee women
worldwide. Her passion for advocating for refugee rights led to an
internship with The Feminist Majority Foundation during the summer of
2000, where she worked intensively on a campaign to educate the American
public about the Taliban's abuse of Afghan women. Inspired by her work at
The Feminist Majority, Heidi designed a research project to explore the
status of refugee women's health in Kenya and traveled to Africa this past
summer, sponsored by an undergraduate research grant from Stanford. Since
returning from Kenya, she has given several speeches at Stanford and in
her hometown about her work with refugee women, and raised money to
sponsor the college education of a Sudanese refugee friend she met in
Kenya. Heidi is currently compiling her research into a senior honors
thesis and was recently honored with a Dean's Award for Academic
Accomplishment. She looks forward with great anticipation to the coming
year and the opportunity to work on public service issues she feels
passionate about.
A native of New York, now transplanted to Hawai'i, Chris Maloney
'02 majored in Economics and African and African-American Studies with a
research focus on economic development in sub-Saharan Africa. His thesis
was concerned with the dynamics of the split labor market in apartheid
South Africa. Proficient in Swahili, his interest in Africa stems from
years of work on the continent including two summers in Botswana helping
build schools, a summer studying political economics at the University of
Cape Town and the University of the Transkei, a summer spent completing a
marketing review of ApproTEC, one of the foremost appropriate technology
non-profits in East Africa, and a summer completing independent research
as a Beagle II Fellow in southern Africa – where he examined the
intersection of popular conceptions of economic growth, government policy,
and economic theory.
At Stanford, Chris was the co-founder of the Stanford Africa Forum, an
organization geared at bringing together faculty, undergraduates, and
graduates interested in Africa from across all disciplines. He was also
active on the international fellowships board of Stanford in Government in
charge of posts in Africa and India, and was also active within the
Stanford Economics Association. He was a part of the Stanford in
Washington program in Spring 2001 and interned with the chief economist of
the African Economic and Social Policy sector of the World Bank, where he
completed a substantial report on market access reform in Africa and the
OECD in light of the new free trade agreements.
An avid traveler, Chris hopes to bridge his deep interest in economic
and development policy with his passion for international development
while in Washington as a Gardner Fellow. He firmly believes in the
potential of private investment in catalyzing development and hopes to be
placed with an organization that deals with American policy and practice
within this arena.
Michael Umpierre will graduate from Stanford in June 2002 with a
degree in Public Policy. During his time at Stanford Michael has used
academics and extracurriculars to develop himself as a youth advocate. For
the past five years, he has worked for the Quest Scholars Program – an
on-campus summer enrichment program for underserved high school
students – most recently as the Director. He has also interned at the
Children and Youth Policy Division of the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services and worked as an assistant teacher at Bing Nursery
School.
Last year Michael took a sabbatical from Stanford to pursue his passion
for youth law and advocacy. He worked at two non-profit law offices that
represent abused, neglected, and poor children: Legal Services for
Children and the National Center for Youth Law, both in the San Francisco
Bay Area. Since returning to Stanford, Michael has worked on an honors
thesis focusing on California's unlawful practice of detaining youth in
juvenile halls when they have been adjudicated to non-secure placements.
He also works as the Program Coordinator for the Pacific Juvenile Defender
Center (PJDC) -- an ABA-sponsored organization that assists juvenile
defenders in California and Hawaii. With the PJDC, Michael has organized
two annual statewide conferences on juvenile detention and placement delay
issues.
Born and raised in Burbank, California, Michael is proud of his Cuban
heritage. Under the guidance of the Gardner Fellowship, Michael hopes to
work for a youth policy organization that focuses on juvenile justice,
child welfare, and education issues.
2001-2002 Gardner Fellows
The 2001-02 Gardner Fellows are Priscilla Aguirre, Jennie Berry, Alicia
Johnson, Dana Kaplan, and Kori Kelley.
UC Berkeley's Gardner Fellows:
From Daly City, California, Priscilla Aguirre '01 graduated from
UC Berkeley in American Studies with a minor in Public Policy. Her senior
thesis analyzed mortgage lending and real estate discrimination and
proposed recommendations for preventing racial discrimination in the
housing market. Priscilla also expanded her research by looking at the
legislative histories of the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act and the
Community Reinvestment Act to better understand laws related to housing
discrimination. While an undergraduate, Priscilla worked as a legal intern
in the San Francisco District Attorney's Office where she assisted with
criminal cases, and at the Latino Issues Forum, a non-profit organization
in San Francisco, where she analyzed energy bills that affected low-income
communities in California. In January of 2000, she gave a brief
presentation to the California Public Utilities Commission on Energy Bill
No. 1893 that set out to strengthen the relationship between consumers,
community-based organizations and the public utilities. In the summer of
2000, Priscilla was selected as a Public Policy and International Affairs
Junior Institute Fellow at UC Berkeley's Goldman School of Public Policy
where she will begin the Masters program in 2002. She did statistical and
economic analysis and wrote policy memorandums on issues such as welfare
aid, income credit, and rent control. During her senior year, Priscilla
served as a tutor and mentor to students in the East Bay Asian Youth
Center R.I.S.E program at Berkeley High School. Passionate about housing
discrimination and educational policy issues, Priscilla would like to take
a leading role in both the non-profit sector and eventually as a
California State Senator. As a John Gardner Fellow, she works at the
National Council on Crime and Delinquency in Oakland, California. Dana Kaplan '01 graduated from UC Berkeley in History with a
minor in Ethnic Studies. As a freshman, she was campus volunteer
coordinator for the Equal Educational Opportunity Initiative, an attempt
to place affirmative action in education on the California ballot. Dana
also did community organizing around issues of campus diversity, bilingual
education and the campaign to end sweatshop production of UC merchandise.
In her sophomore year, she participated in the successful student campaign
to defend funding of the Ethnic Studies Department, create a Multicultural
Student Center and develop a Race and Gender Resource Center. She
dedicated time to low income youth in the Bay Area, working initially as a
volunteer tutor for the STEP Tutorial Program and as a writing instructor
for Upward Bound. During her junior year, Dana spent a semester in Cuba
studying its model of economic development in multiracial communities and
assisting with a weekly seminar program in Havana that allowed Cuban and
American youth to discuss contemporary social and political issues.
Currently, Dana's primary interest is reform of the American criminal
justice system. She worked at the Center for Juvenile and Criminal Justice
in Washington, D.C. in the summer of 2000, where she co-authored and
researched a report entitled "Texas Tough: An Analysis of Incarceration
and Crime Trends in the Lone Star State." She also has been the
facilitator of a men's support group at the San Francisco County Jail.
Dana is originally from New York City. She returns there to spend her
fellowship year with the Prison Moratorium Project, founded in 1995 to
educate the public about criminal justice issues and to give youth and
communities a greater voice in criminal justice debates. Her mentor is
Kate Rhee, Director of the organization. A member of Phi Beta Kappa, Kori Kelley '01 graduated with high
honors from UC Berkeley. She majored in Political Science with a minor in
African American Studies. Kori maintained a commitment to research and
service in low-income and minority communities throughout her
undergraduate years. As a McNair Scholar, she studied leadership conflict
within the National Welfare Rights Organization (NWRO), focusing on the
emerging role of black female welfare recipients on the organization's
national staff. Her senior thesis compared the national welfare rights
movement of the 1960's and 70's to efforts by contemporary Bay Area
welfare rights advocates to organize around the 1996 Welfare Reform Act.
In 1999, Kori interned at the District Office of Congresswoman Barbara Lee
in Oakland and in the Section of Dispute Resolution at the American Bar
Association in Washington, D.C. While on exchange at Howard University,
Washington, D.C., she worked as a research assistant at the Woodrow Wilson
International Center for Scholars. Kori also worked on digital divide
issues in west Oakland as a Neighborhood Improvement Initiative Intern for
the Institute of Urban and Regional Development and tutored in elementary
school programs in Berkeley, Oakland, and Washington, D.C. Kori's Gardner
Fellowship placement is with DC Agenda, a nonprofit, civic organization
that supports community leadership to address the challenges and
opportunities facing the District of Columbia. Carrie Thornhill, Vice
President of Community Outreach, is her mentor. Kori is originally from
Pittsburg, California.
Stanford's Gardner Fellows:
During her four years at Stanford, Jennie Berry
'01 pursued a self-designed major in Information Economics and
Policy and a co-terminal Masters in Sociology with an Organizational
Studies concentration. She stayed busy outside the classroom, too, in a
variety of leadership roles. As a sophomore, she was Senior News Editor of
The Stanford Daily, and in her junior and senior year, she was
administrative coordinator (and co-founder) of the Stanford Voter Project.
Most recently, as a senior, Jennie served as Vice Chair for operations and
strategic planning of Stanford in Government. She is also familiar with
legislative and political processes, having worked for a summer as a
congressional intern and a research assistant in Washington, D.C. Jennie
has worked extensively in the media, writing stories for Stanford Magazine
and producing news shows for an ABC affiliate in her home town of Bowling
Green, Kentucky. While at Stanford, her focus shifted from reporting the
news to policymaking that affects the news media. Jennie's work in
traditional news organizations sparked an interest in how government and
media organizations construct a policy environment for journalists. More
recently, her experience in the Summer Management Program at
telecommunications conglomerate SBC Communications familiarized her with
information technology policies yet to come. Jennie is particularly
interested now in the evolving field of telecommunications regulation. She
will be spending her Fellowship at the FCC offices in Washington,
D.C.
From White Plains, New York, Alicia Johnson '01
graduated from Stanford in Public Policy, completing her senior thesis
through the Stanford University School of Education Honors Program. Before
attending college, her work with children in low-income settings and the
resulting frustration of dealing with the public school system led to an
interest in policy as a vehicle for supporting more far-reaching change in
the lives of "her kids." During her freshman year, Alicia joined Stanford
Advocates for Children (SAC), the campus's only student group dedicated to
youth advocacy and policy issues; she went on to become co-director of SAC
when she was a senior. Alicia also explored her policy interests through a
research position with Stanford's Center for Research on Teaching in her
sophomore and junior year. She worked as a Government Scholar with the New
York City Administration for Children's Services during the summer of 1999
and as an Eben Tisdale Public Policy Fellow with Agilent Technologies in
Washington, D.C., in the summer of 2000. Alicia balanced her policy
interests and work with direct service to youth. In 2000, she received the
Donald A. Strauss Scholarship in Public Service, part of which she used to
finance the GIRLS (Growth, Integrity, Respect, Learning and Self- Esteem)
Program for middle school girls in the Ravenswood School District run
through the East Palo Alto Girls Club. Additionally, she tutored
elementary school students with Ravenswood Reads and worked with children
in other volunteer capacities. Alicia's placement is with the Institute
for Youth, Education & Families, established as part of the National
League of Cities in Washington, D.C, to implement an expanded program of
research, technical assistance and service to local governments. Clifford
Johnson, Executive Director, serves as her mentor.
2000-2001 Gardner Fellows
The 2000-2001 Gardner Fellows from U.C. Berkeley are Romi Bhatia,
Catherine Fernandez, and Charlotte Lee. The new Gardner Fellows from
Stanford University are J. Azania Andrews, Oeindrila Dube, and Antonia
Welch.
UC Berkeley's Gardner Fellows:
Romi Bhatia will be graduating from U.C. Berkeley in summer 2000
with a bachelor's degree in Political Economy of Industrial Societies
(PEIS). He is completing his senior thesis on the topic of microenterprise
programs as a strategy for poverty alleviation in the United States.
During the spring of his junior year, Romi was selected as a Public Policy
and International Affairs Fellow at the Daniel Evans School for Public
Affairs at the University of Washington. As a PPIA fellow, he spent the
summer taking a rigorous schedule of statistics, economics, and policy
analysis classes. Outside the classroom, Romi has undertaken a host of
leadership roles and volunteer service activities. As Co-Chair of the Sikh
Students Association, he initiated a College Planning Day to assist high
school students prepare for college and organized Big Brother/Big Sister
programs for Sikh youth in neighboring cities. During fall semester 1999,
Romi worked as an intern for the Berkeley Alliance, where he implemented a
Job Shadow Program for approximately 140 teachers/staff at Berkeley High
School. Throughout the course of his public service, Romi's commitment to
working on issues of educational reform and in low-income communities has
remained steadfast. As a Gardner Fellow, Romi seeks to further his
professional development by working at an organization that focuses on
implementing microenterprise programs in low-income communities in the
United States.
Catherine (Kay) Fernandez graduated from U.C. Berkeley in
December 1999 with a major in Social Welfare and a minor in Business
Administration. From the beginning of her college experience, Kay has been
committed to issues of educational equality, youth empowerment, and
community development. She served on the Academic Senate Committee on
Admissions and Enrollment, played a leadership role in the Bridges
Multicultural Recruitment and Retention Center, and mentored high school
students from diverse backgrounds in Project Pull Academy, a college
preparatory program for disadvantaged youth. As a researcher and community
organizer, she has worked on projects concerning affirmative action and
educational reform with several organizations, including the Greenlining
Institute, the Oakland Unified School District, and the Institute for the
Study of Social Change. In the summer of 1999, Kay was selected as a
Public Policy and International Affairs Fellow at the Woodrow Wilson
School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University. At
Princeton, she honed her research skills, taking classes in statistics,
economics, and public policy analysis. Currently, she holds the position
of Research Analyst on Youth Initiatives at Everett Middle School in San
Francisco and also serves as a Youth Development Coordinator for Oakland
Unified School District. For her Gardner Fellowship, Kay seeks a placement
with an organization or governmental agency that deals with educational
reform in urban areas.
Charlotte Lee will be graduating in Spring 2000 as a double
major in Political Economy of Industrial Societies and Asian Studies, with
an emphasis on Chinese history. As a freshman, she took a leadership
position with the Inspire Youth Mentorship Program, a student group that
matches university students with Oakland high school students. During her
third year, she studied abroad at Beijing University and interned with the
United States Information Technology Office while taking time to travel
extensively throughout China, teach English to a group of government
satellite engineers, and organize a student clothes drive. After returning
to UC Berkeley, Charlotte joined Professor Beth Simmons' international law
compliance research project. Currently, she remains involved with Inspire
and also tutors elementary school students for Oakland Asian Students
Educational Services. Past extracurricular activities include volunteering
to file income tax returns for Oakland Chinatown residents and
representing undergraduate students on the International and Area Studies
dean search committee. Last summer, Charlotte interned at the Smithsonian
Institution, an experience that piqued her interest in museum studies,
material history, exhibit development, and issues of representation. For
her Gardner Fellowship, Charlotte will pursue a placement site related to
museum policy.
Stanford's Gardner Fellows:
Jewel Azania Andrews '00 of Miami, Florida, is majoring in Urban
Studies with a concentration in community organizations. During her time
at Stanford Azania has served in several leadership roles including
co-director of the Stanford Community Carnival, Peer Advisor at the Haas
Center, and this year as Student Coordinator for the Center's new Urban
Fellowships/Internships program. Each of these experiences has reaffirmed
Azania'a commitment to service and to educating other students about ways
to incorporate service into their lives. Through several service-learning
courses and an internship at the National Urban League Headquarters in New
York, Azania developed a strong interest in non-profit organizations,
particularly those that serve the African-American community. Having
worked in small and large non-profits, Azania became very frustrated at
the lack of support for organizational structure and financial
independence among these organizations. She plans to use the Gardner
Fellowship to explore the field of social entrepreneurship in hopes that
it will provide insights into ways that relationships between
service-providers and grantmaking organizations can use business models to
create an environment where non-profits are not only effectively serving
their clients but are also able to develop a long term plan for financial
independence and staff stability.
Oeindrila Dubé '00, of Syracuse, New York, is completing a
degree in Public Policy, with a focus on development studies. Through her
affiliation with economic justice organizations, and as a founder and
coordinator of the National Student Labor Alliance, Oeindrila has been
dedicated to workers' rights and other issues that affect low-income
communities. She has worked on health care policy as an intern at the
Office of Management and Budget, and on welfare reform as a Congressional
intern. Both these experiences have given her insight into the role of
government in poverty alleviation and social service provision. Research
for her honors thesis, which assesses the impact of international trade on
unionism in the United States, combines her international and domestic
policy interests. Oeindrila will use the Gardner fellowship to work at an
organization that focuses on development and trade issues, as a part of
her continued commitment to understanding international economic
integration and its global effects.
Antonia Welch will be graduating from Stanford University in
June 2000 with a degree in Latin American Studies with a focus on
international health. Her secondary major is Spanish and Portuguese. Prior
to coming to Stanford, Antonia volunteered as a Spanish-speaking medical
interpreter at Massachusetts General Hospital, in Boston. She also lived
in Bogotá, Colombia, where she volunteered in pediatric hospice before
beginning her Stanford career in the fall of 1996. During her studies at
Stanford, Antonia managed a free, urgent-care clinic for residents of East
Palo Alto for three years, training Stanford students as medical
interpreters and health advocates. She held a Haas Center for Public
Service Summer Fellowship after her sophomore year in order to develop a
bilingual health education program. Antonia's senior thesis focused on
reproductive health issues for at-risk youth in Quito, Ecuador. She hopes
to use her Gardner Fellowship in an organization dedicated to health
research and advocacy at the international level, particularly in Latin
America and among Latin American immigrant issues in the United States.
1999-2000 Gardner Fellows
The 1999-2000 Gardner fellows from U.C. Berkeley are Grant Harris,
Anupama Menon, Elizabeth Pianca, Smriti Rana, and Carlos Romo, and Anthony
Solana, Jr.
UC Berkeley's Gardner Fellows:
Grant Harris graduated from U.C. Berkeley in December 1998 with
a bachelor's degree with honors in Political Science, focusing on
international relations and women's studies. A member of Phi Beta Kappa,
he graduated with Highest Honors and a 3.93 grade point average. Harris
was one of only eighty-eight national finalists for the Rhodes
Scholarship. In nonacademic work at Berkeley, he formed a new student
political party and was elected Student Body President of Berkeley's
30,000 students during his sophomore year. Harris also studied in the
Universidad Complutense in Madrid for a year, spent a summer teaching
English to ten-year-old Ethiopian immigrants in Israel, and has spent
months traveling throughout Western and Eastern Europe, Israel and other
countries. His interest in international areas of conflict has led him to
travel through Northern Ireland, the Basque Country, the West Bank and
Bosnia. These experiences helped shape his desire to become a diplomat and
enter the field of conflict resolution. As a Gardner Fellow, Grant is
working on African affairs in the office of Richard Holbrooke, United
States Ambassador to the United Nations.
Smriti Rana graduated from U.C. Berkeley in May 1999 with a
degree in Development Studies, with a focus on development in Latin
America. During her junior year, she studied abroad in a unique program
studying social changes first hand in Nicaragua, Guatemala, and El
Salvador. In addition to her academic pursuits, Rana acted on campus
through Students Organizing for Justice in the Americas and was a founding
member of the University Coalition Against Sweatshops. She has worked on
immigrant rights, labor rights, and initiated a campaign against the use
of sweatshops in making university apparel. This campaign resulted in the
strengthening of the University's labor standards regarding its licensed
apparel products, as well as the creation of an advisory board with
student representation to work on the implementation and monitoring of
those standards. Rana has also interned at immigrants' rights
organizations, working with immigrants on issues of work permits,
legalization issues and INS issues. She also served as an after-school
tutor and as a mentor to low-income students of color. As a Gardner
Fellow, Smriti is working at Public Citizen, a group that is concerned
with unfair labor practices in developing countries.
Anthony Solana, Jr. graduated in May 1999 from U.C. Berkeley
with a degree in History, with honors, and Political Science. He also
participated in the Public Policy and International Affairs Fellowship
Program at the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs
at Princeton University during the summer of 1998. On the U.C. Berkeley
campus, Solana served in many roles in the student Senate, was the Alumni
Chairperson for Hermanos Unidos, and received numerous awards from the
University for leadership and community involvement. As a progressive
student leader, Solana committed himself primarily to protecting
affirmative action and to increasing the University's minority recruitment
efforts. In the Oakland community, he was the primary historian for a
community-based legal aid center and researched how community-based
organizations can substantively help indigent communities. Solana has
entensive experience in law enforcement and criminal justice policy
analysis, at the UC Police Deparment, at the Institute for Law and Policy
Planning, and as an assistant to a court-appointed special master in the
Coleman case. Anthony's placement as a Gardner Fellow is at Los
Angeles Councilman Nick Pacheco's office.
Stanford's Gardner Fellows:
Anupama Menon '99 of North Hills, CA, majored in Anthropology
and minored in Latin American Studies. Through internships at the U.N.
Human Rights Commission in Geneva and at the Comisión Chilena de Derechos
Humanos in Santiago, Anu came to realize that her goal is to work in the
field of human rights. Anu is spending her ten months as a Gardner Fellow
at the Lawyers Committee for Human Rights.
An Urban Studies major, Elizabeth Pianca '99 of Palo Alto, CA,
served in several leadership capacities in Stanford In Government, rising
her senior year to become Chair of SIG. Service-learning courses gave
Elizabeth the opportunity to pursue internships with the City of East Palo
Alto sophomore year and with Joint Venture Silicon Valley junior year,
re-affirming her lifelong commitment to service at the local and regional
level. Elizabeth's placement as a Gardner Fellow is at the National Trust
for Historic Preservation, examining issues of urban planning and
community development at the state and the national level.
Carlos Romo '99 of Austin, Texas, completed a joint degree in
Public Policy and International Relations at Stanford University.
Frustrated by the inequitable access to information that handicaps low
income communities seeking to solve systemic problems, Carlos interned
last summer at The Society for International Development in Washington,
D.C. There, his honors thesis research interest in the negative impacts of
European fiscal federalism on poorer nations converged with new, personal,
insights into the nature of urban problems in the U.S. As a Gardner
Fellow, Carlos is working at the Enterprise Foundation on issues of how to
close the gap between low-income and high-income communities.
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