Andrea Bohnstedt
Publisher, Ratio Magazine, on the East African business environment
Carolyn Hayman, OBE
CEO, Peace Direct, UK
Emmanuel Hategeka
Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Trade and Industry in the Government of Rwanda
Howard French
Associate Professor, School of Journalism, Columbia University, USA
Kaliza Karuretwa
Director General in charge of investment climate
Karl Boyce
CEO, Eco-Positive, UK
Lucy Mathieson
Programme Manager CREA, India, co-author of the Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative report on Rwanda
Maximilien Usengumuremyi
National Development Planning and Research Unit,
Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning, Republic of Rwanda
Richard Dowden
Ecexutive Director, Royal African Society, UK
Steinar Sundvoll
Norwegian honorary consul to Rwanda, representative of Norwegian People's Aid
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Howard French received his BA from the University of Massachusetts – Amherst. He worked as a French-English translator in Abidjan, Ivory Coast in the early 1980s, and taught English literature at the University of Ivory Coast. His career in journalism began as a freelance reporter for The Washington Post and many other publications in West Africa. He was hired by The New York Times in 1986, and worked as a Metropolitan reporter for three years, and from 1990 to 2008 reported for the Times as bureau chief for Central America and the Caribbean, West Africa, Japan and the Koreas, and China in Shanghai. During this time, his work was twice nominated for the Pulitzer Prize, he was twice the recipient of an Overseas Press Club Award, and he has also won the Grantham Environmental Award, among other awards.
From 2005 to 2008 alongside his work for the Times, Howard was a weekly columnist on global affairs for The International Herald Tribune.
Howard is the author of "A Continent for the Taking: The Tragedy and Hope of Africa (2004)," which was named non-fiction book of the year by several newspapers, and won the 2005 American Library Association Black Caucus Award for Non-Fiction, and was runner up for the Lettre Ulysses Award for the Art of Reportage and for the Hurston Wright Foundation's non-fiction prize. Other awards include an honorary doctorate from the University of Maryland.
His work has been published in The Nation, the New York Review of Books, Transition, Rolling Stone, The New York Times Magazine, The Chronicle of Higher Education, The Crisis, and Travel and Leisure. He is also a documentary photographer, whose work, "Disappearing Shanghai," has been displayed in Asia, Europe and North America.
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