The Shirley and Leonard Goldstein Lecture
on

Human Rights 2002

"Easy Targets: Children and Human Rights"


 

The Goldstein Lecture on Human Rights 2002, Easy Targets: Children and Human Rights,  will be presented by Jo Becker, Children's Rights Advocacy Director for the HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH. The lecture will be held Wednesday, September 25, 2002, 7:00 p.m. at the William Thompson Alumni Center.

Jo Becker is the Children's Rights Advocacy Director for Human Rights Watch, an independent organization that conducts regular, systematic investigations of human rights abuses in some seventy countries around the world. Ms. Becker represents Human Rights Watch before the press, government officials, and the general public, and works with other non-governmental and international organizations to stop abuses against children, including the use of children as soldiers, hazardous child labor, and ill-treatment during detention.

Ms. Becker was the founding chairperson of the International Coalition to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers and serves on the steering committee of the U.S. Campaign to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers. She has testified before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on the issue of child soldiers and recently returned from a three-week investigative mission along the Thai-Burma border to document child recruitment in Burma. 

Her writing has appeared in the Washington Post, New York Times, International Herald Tribune, Christian Science Monitor, Miami Herald and numerous magazines. She is also author of Human Rights Watch reports on the detention of unaccompanied minors by the US Immigration and Naturalization Service and worldwide violence against children.

Prior to joining the staff of Human Rights Watch, Ms. Becker was the executive director of the Fellowship of Reconciliation (FOR), a national interfaith peace and justice organization.

Ms. Becker has an International Baccalaureate from the Lester B. Pearson United World College of the Pacific, a BA from Goshen College (IN), and a Master's degree in Political Science from the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University.

In addition to human rights work, she is a part-time potter and recently exhibited her work for the first time at a regional arts and crafts show. She also enjoys kayaking, gardening and rollerblading. She lives outside of New York City with her husband and their two cats.

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