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Charles J
Brown
President and CEO
Charlie Brown has extensive leadership and policy experience in both
the non-profit sector and government. From 2001 to 2004, he was a Deputy
Executive Director of Amnesty International USA. In this leadership role, he
helped lead Amnesty’s strategic response to a range of human rights crises and
concerns, including September 11th, the war on terror, and conflicts in
Afghanistan and Iraq.
From 1999 to 2001 he was Chief of Staff for Assistant Secretary Harold Hongju
Koh in the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights & Labor (DRL) in the US Department
of State, and Director of DRL’s Office of Strategic Planning and External
Affairs. Brown advised the Assistant Secretary on all aspects of U.S. Government
human rights policy and was a member of the senior leadership team responsible
for designing, framing and implementing strategic solutions to a variety of
foreign policy challenges and opportunities. Prior to that he was Senior Advisor
on Public Affairs for DRL. He also served as spokesperson for US Delegations to
the UN Conference on the Establishment of an International Criminal Court, the
UN Commission on Human Rights, and the Community of Democracies.
From 1988-1998 he worked at Freedom House in a variety of positions, ultimately
as Director of Program Development. He is co-author of The Politics of
Psychiatry in Revolutionary Cuba and co-editor of Judges and Journalists in
Transitional Democracies.
Don Kraus
Executive Vice President
Don Kraus regularly speaks on panels and at seminars on the importance of UN
reform, UN peacekeeping and UN funding, as well as appearing regularly on TV and
radio. He has participated in panels on UN reform at the UN headquarters in New
York, and is also Citizens for Global Solutions chief lobbyist, working on the
Hill to keep officials up-to-date with the latest UN and peacekeeping
developments. Don Kraus has been quoted in several publications including The
Washington Post, The New York Times, St. Louis Post Dispatch, and National
Journal, as well as appearing on BBC World Service and local U.S. radio
stations. Kraus is also a regular contributor to Foreign Policy in Focus,
recently publishing “Getting Peacekeeping Right at the G8” and “De Mello’s
Delight”.
Kraus also edits the Global Solutions Rating Guide and administers the Global
Solutions Political Action Committee.
Heather B. Hamilton
Vice President and Chief of Staff
Heather Hamilton is a leading expert on the International Criminal Court and
U.S. policy towards the Court. She also speaks widely on U.S. global engagement
and public opinion on foreign policy issues, as well as on genocide, gender and
conflict, conflict prevention, the UN and the African Great Lakes region.
Hamilton spent six months in Kenya with the United Nations, where she conducted
research with Rwandan government officials, aid agencies and women's
organizations on women's roles in post-conflict reconstruction. Her findings
were published as a chapter in the Journal of Humanitarian Assistance's book,
The Future of the African Great Lakes Region.
Hamilton is a regular guest on panels and forums in DC and New York, and has
traveled widely throughout the US and abroad to speak on these issues. She also
appeared on CNN International and the BBC World Service to discuss the
International Criminal Court. Hamilton has been quoted in The New York Times,
The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, Financial Times and Foreign Policy
among other publications, as well as appearing regularly on radio and TV
debates. Hamilton is the co-chair of the Washington Working Group on the
International Criminal Court (WICC).
Harpinder Athwal
Vice President, Strategic Communications
(Currently on Leave)
As former Peace and Security Program Manager Harpinder Athwal speaks regularly on
peacekeeping missions and stability operations, specifically related to
Afghanistan, Liberia and Sudan. She is also the communications liaison for the
Washington, DC-based Partnership for Effective Peace Operations. Athwal has
participated in TV and radio debates on the war in Iraq, post-conflict
reconstruction issues, and the crisis in Liberia. Athwal also traveled to
Afghanistan in 2003 with the Council on Foreign Relations and as a result of the
trip co-authored an op-ed for the Christian Science Monitor, “Afghan Progress
Undermined by Drugs”. Athwal also writes regularly for Foreign Policy in Focus
and other industry journals, and has been quoted in such print media as The
Baltimore Sun. Athwal also edits the Global Solutions Quarterly and was a
parliamentary candidate in the UK’s 2001 General Election and participated in
various media interviews as part of the campaign in the UK.
Drew J. Asson
Deputy Director, Government Relations
Drew Asson coordinates all election-related activities including Global
Solutions PAC. He manages candidates that Citizens for Global Solutions and its
affiliated PAC have endorsed and/or supported. He is also working on linking
global issues to local concerns, and devotes a portion of his time to working on
global health issues. Drew is the main contact person on the UN Convention
on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). He helped build and sustain a coalition of
industry, government, social justice, military, and environmental groups in
support of Senate ratification. He has attended hearings and briefings, lobbied
Senate and House staffers, and provided background material to print and online
media.
Before coming to Citizens for Global Solutions, Drew worked as a computer
scientist. He received a BA from University of Rochester (1989) and an MS from
Johns Hopkins University (1992), both in computer science. He received an M.A.
in public anthropology from American University (2003), while studying cultural
anthropology, human rights, urban poverty, and approaches to peace. Drew is
strongly interested in global health policy and transitional justice mechanisms.
Valerie
Schrock
Director of People, Outreach & Advocacy
Val Schrock is an expert on political e-activism and grassroots mobilization. As
Outreach and Advocacy Director, Val set up and implemented an innovative
grassroots outreach program via the internet for Citizens for Global Solutions,
reaching new audiences and increasing our internet activist numbers by 300% in
the first year.
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