Caroline Kende-Robb

Caroline Kende-Robb (born May 23, 1963, Fleetwood, United Kingdom) is the Executive Director of the Africa Progress Panel, a foundation chaired by Kofi Annan, the former Secretary General of the United Nations.

Kende-Robb was born in Fleetwood and grew up in Anchorsholme, a suburb of Blackpool, in the early sixties. Her father, Robert Laundry Thomas Robb, was a Fighter Pilot who flew Spitfires during the Second World War. Kende-Robb is the sister of John Robb, a British music journalist, author, punk musician, and social commentator.

Kende-Robb graduated from Liverpool University, where she earned a BA (Hons) in Geography, and completed a MSc in Social Policy at the London School of Economics and Political Science. She is married to Michael Kende and they have three daughters.

Career

Prior to joining the Africa Progress Panel, Kende-Robb worked for the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank for 16 years in the regions of Europe and Central Asia, Africa, and East Asia and the Pacific regions. As a senior manager, at the World Bank, Kende-Robb implemented loans and grants and conducted policy research on a range of global issues including the links between macroeconomic policies and poverty outcomes, conflict and fragility, climate change, social justice, and financial crises.

Kende-Robb was the first Poverty and Social Development Advisor recruited by the International Monetary Fund. In this role she managed the introduction of a poverty and social perspective to their macroeconomic programs and policy dialogue.

Kende-Robb began her career in 1983 where she spent five years as a manager in the private sector. From 1989–1993, she lived in The Gambia, where she worked for the European Union and The Gambian Government as a Business and Community Development Advisor for Voluntary Service Overseas. Based in Tanji, a small village, on the country’s Atlantic coast, Kende-Robb worked on an artisanal fisheries development project. She then became the West Africa Field Director for Africa Now, a civil society organization, and later joined the UNDP in The Gambia.

Africa Progress Panel

Since 2011, Kende-Robb has been the Executive Director of the Africa Progress Panel. In this role, she works closely with Kofi Annan, who is the Chair of the Panel. Other members of the Panel include Michel Camdessus, Peter Eigen, Bob Geldof, President Olusegun Obasanjo, Graça Machel, Linah Mohohlo, Robert Rubin, Tidjane Thiam and Strive Masiyiwa. The Africa Progress Panel was formed at Gleneagles G8 Summit, 2005, as a recommendation from the Commission for Africa Report.

The Africa Progress Panel is a unique policy and research organization, with high level access and global reach, influencing policy through a multitude of approaches such as discrete interventions, public advocacy, political mentoring, leveraging and convening, partnering and networking, and policy analysis.

Kende-Robb leads the publication of the Africa Progress Panel’s flagship reports. The reports constitute a significant body of knowledge and have effectively influenced policy: Jobs, Justice and Equity: Seizing opportunities in times of global change (2012); Equity in Extractives: Stewarding Africa's natural resources for all (2013); Grain, Fish, Money: Financing Africa's Green and Blue Revolutions(2014); and Power People Planet (2015).

Kende-Robb is a Non-Executive Director for Mara Social Media and an Ambassador for the Wildlife Justice Commission. She is also a member of the World Economic Forum’s Global Future Councils, and previously was on the WEF’s councils on Justice and Africa. Kende-Robb is the author of many publications including, “Can the Poor Influence Policy?” a book co-published by the World Bank and the IMF.

Kende-Robb has appeared on various TV and radio shows including TV5 Monde, BBC and CNBC. She writes for various newspapers and blogs including The Guardian, Huffington Post and allAfrica.

Selected publications

Books and book chapters

Journal articles and papers

References

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