September 24, 2003 - Bates University: Carol Bellamy degree citation

Peace Corps Online: Peace Corps News: Directors of the Peace Corps: Carol Bellamy: October 7, 1993-May 1, 1995 : Bellamy: September 24, 2003 - Bates University: Carol Bellamy degree citation

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Carol Bellamy degree citation



Carol Bellamy degree citation

Carol Bellamy degree citation
Doctor of Humane Letters

DEAN JILL REICH: President Hansen, I am honored to present Carol Bellamy.

Our humanity is grounded in the ways we treat our fellow humans, especially those most dependent upon us. Our future will be defined by the ways we care for, nurture, and encourage our children, for they will carry our society forward. Today we honor a woman whose eloquent advocacy of the rights of children around the world has helped advance the human prospect.

Carol Bellamy exemplifies the very best in what we expect from a person educated in the liberal arts tradition: an inventive thinker, an ethically grounded public servant, a persuasive leader devoted to improving society. After having served as a Peace Corps volunteer, lawyer, financier, director of the Peace Corps, New York state senator, and New York City Council president, Ms. Bellamy brought her considerable talents, experience, and commitment to social justice to the United Nations Children's Fund.

As executive director of UNICEF since 1995, Ms. Bellamy has advanced a set of ambitious goals aimed at improving the lives of children across the globe, focusing on health, from nutrition programs to the management of infectious diseases that claim the lives of so many children; on providing access to education, particularly for girls, recognizing that only through education can girls and women fully participate in society; on efforts to reduce violence against children, whether in the home or through acts of war; and in reducing child labor and alleviating poverty. To meet these enormous challenges, Ms. Bellamy has skillfully harnessed the collective energy and resources of the world's governments, non-governmental organizations, and individuals by articulating the moral imperative of all nations to protect and nurture children.

For her boundless optimism, for her conviction that every individual deserves to reach his or her fullest potential, and for her diplomatic but relentless call to action, I present Carol Bellamy for the degree Doctor of Humane Letters.

PRESIDENT ELAINE HANSEN: Carol Bellamy, we honor you as one who champions the highest ideals of public health for those who are most vulnerable in our world. As executive director of the United Nations Children’s Fund, you make the case that poverty can be reduced and the world can be made more secure only if children are allowed to grow in health, peace, and dignity. You use your respected voice in the international community to promote key UNICEF priorities: immunizing every child, ensuring that all girls and boys receive a quality basic education, reducing the spread of HIV/AIDS and its impact on youth, protecting children from violence and exploitation, and introducing universal early childhood development programs.

Therefore, by the authority vested in me by the Board of Trustees, I hereby confer upon you the Degree of Doctor of Humane Letters, with all the rights, privileges, and responsibilities which here and everywhere pertain to this degree.


"I believe that the world is the power of many, not just the power of one, and you can become more powerful if you’re able to engage others and bring them along with you," Carol Bellamy told an interviewer in 2000. During nearly eight years as executive director of the United Nations Children’s Fund, Bellamy has done just that.

Arguing that poverty can be reduced and the world can be made more secure only if children are allowed to grow in health, peace, and dignity, Bellamy’s UNICEF has five key priorities: immunizing every child; ensuring that all girls and boys receive a quality basic education; reducing the spread of HIV/AIDS and its impact on youth; protecting children from violence and exploitation; and introducing universal early childhood development programs.

Bellamy’s experience spans finance, law, and public service. From 1993 until 1995, she was director of the Peace Corps, the first former Corps volunteer to run the organization. Previously she was a managing director at Bear Stearns & Co., a principal at Morgan Stanley, and an associate in the New York law firm of Cravath, Swaine & Moore. In 1978 Bellamy was elected the first woman president of the New York City Council, a position she held until 1985, and she earlier served five years in the New York State Senate.

She graduated from Gettysburg College in 1963 and earned her law degree from New York University in 1968. At UNICEF, Bellamy has challenged world leaders to recognize their responsibility to invest in children - and to shift national resources accordingly. "In a global economy worth over $30 trillion, it is clear that the necessary resources and know-how to reach every child are well within our grasp," Bellamy told a gathering in Stockholm in 2002. Born and raised in the New York area, Bellamy is a Mets fan.


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Story Source: Bates University

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