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Leading Women

Thursday, November 15, 2007

The Honorable Olubanke King-Akerele, Liberia’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, and The Right Honorable Kim Campbell, Canada’s nineteenth and first female Prime Minister, are participating in a summit of women world leaders in New York. They weigh in on women and political power and world affairs.

Guests:

Kim Campbell and Olubanke King-Akerele

Comments [5]

NA from New York


We should expand this discussion beyond the stated benefits of gender leadership and highlight what every individual can contribute to creating World Peace. Rearranging the gender of leadership may be a step in the right direction but the world needs a certain threshold of Peace Promoting individuals to secure invincibility.

Brian, there is a scientifically proven solution you can research and report to the listeners. Your no stranger to this approach. www.permanentpeace.com

Nov. 15 2007 02:12 PM
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marilynn mendelson from New York City

Re writers commenting after the fact - An episode of Law and Order had a woman Assistant Distric Attorney say in her final episode that the reason she was fired (in her capacity on the program, not in real life) was that she was a lesbian.

This was completely gratuitous. Nothing in the previous episodes hinted at such.

Nov. 15 2007 12:09 PM
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CH from NYC

Is there any discussion in the summit concerning "honor" killings of women, which apparently follow women even as they emigrate to other countries in an attempt to preserve their lives and the lives of their children.

Nov. 15 2007 10:34 AM
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Shannon Copeland from Edgewater, New Jersey

The argument that women will "wimp out" is so unfounded and yet, so exhausted in recent decades...
If anything, a mothering tendency in leadership is to seriously weight the risk/value of sending one's citizens to war. Not at all present in our own current administration's tendency to toss more young people into the fight-pit without pause.

Nov. 15 2007 10:21 AM
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adam abel from brooklyn

I applaud these women for their work and courage. I would like to point out that we use the term "post 9/11 World" to talk about a turning point globally. However, many places around the World have been having their own 9/11 for a long time. We do not have a patent on suffering. And in order to address real security we need to recognize the terrorism within disease, lack of health care, climate change, and all the other actual threats all over the World that claim more lives than the terrorism we hear and see in our media.

Nov. 15 2007 10:20 AM
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