Jessica Horn

Jessica Horn

Jessica Horn at AWID 2016
Born Jessica Horn
Occupation Poet, Feminist writer , women's rights activist
Alma mater Armand Hammer United World College of the American West, Smith College , London School of Economics
Genre Poetry, Social and Political commentary
Website
www.stillsherises.com

Jessica Horn (born 1979) is an African feminist activist, writer, poet,[1] and technical advisor on women's rights [2][3] with roots in Uganda. Her work focuses on women’s rights, bodily autonomy and freedom from violence, and African feminist movement building. She was named as an African woman changemaker by ARISE Magazine and as one of Applause Africa’s 40 Africans Changemakers under 40.

Early life and Education

Horn was born in England to a Ugandan mother and father from the United States, and grew up in Lesotho and Fiji.[4] She went on to complete her International Baccalaureate at the Armand Hammer United World College of the America West. She was awarded a Bachelor of Arts degree (Magna Cum Laude) in anthropology from Smith College in 2001 and a Master of Science (Distinction) degree in gender and development from the London School of Economics and Political Science in 2002.[2]

Career

Horn began her formal career in women's rights at the organisation RAINBO where she worked as coordinator of Amanitare- the African Network on Sexual and Reproductive Rights. She went on to manage funding for women’s rights and minority rights at the Sigrid Rausing Trust, one of the largest private human rights funders in Europe. She then went on to found Akiiki Consulting, where she worked with human rights funders, policy institutions and activist organisations including the Stephen Lewis Foundation, International Rescue Committee, Action Aid, Association for Women's Rights in Development, Ford Foundation East Africa, and the United Nations. This included extensive travel and work in conflict-affected countries in Africa. She currently works as Director of Programmes at the African Women's Development Fund.

As an action researcher, Horn was awarded a Soros Reproductive Health and Rights Fellowship in 2003 and conducted research on feminist responses to Female Genital Mutliation (FGM) in Egypt. She wrote two monographs on the impact of Christian fundamentalism on women's rights in Africa for the Association for Women's Rights in Development (AWID) Challenging Religious Fundamentalisms initiative. She is the lead author of the Cutting Edge Pack on Gender and Social Movements produced by BRIDGE at the Institute for Development Studies, University of Sussex in 2013.

Horn has served as an advisor to philanthropic and women's rights initiatives including Mama Cash, Urgent Action Fund-Africa, Comic Relief, the Kings College Conflict, Security & Development Group Knowledge Building and Mentoring Programme; and the journal Development. She worked as commissioning editor of Our Africa on openDemocracy 5050 from 2011 to 2015. She is a founder member of the African Feminist Forum Working Group.[5][6]

Poetry

Jessica Horn won the IRN Fanny Ann Eddy Poetry Prize in 2009 for her poem "They have killed Sizakele" and the Sojourner Poetry Prize judged by June Jordan in 2001 for her poem Dis U.N: For Rwanda. Her prose-poem Dreamings was profiled in the International Museum of Women’s online exhibition Imagining Ourselves. She is also the author of a collection Speaking in Toungues (Mouthmark, 2006) [4] which is included in the collected Mouthmark Book of Poetry alongside poets Warsan Shire , Malika Booker and Inua Ellams. Her work has been featured on the Pan-African poetry platform Badilisha Poetry Radio.[7]

As an activist poet, Horn has used poetry as a medium to discuss human rights abuses [8] and explore the concept of revolutionary love, including through poetry platform The Love Mic.

Selected publications

Research and analysis

Poetry collections

Poems

Awards

References

  1. "Jessica Horn" imow.org. Retrieved December 9, 2014
  2. 1 2 "Jessica Horn" africanfeministforum.com. Retrieved December 9, 2014
  3. "Jessica Horn" aljazeera.com. Retrieved December 9, 2014
  4. 1 2 "Jessica Horn" a-gender.org. Retrieved 9 December 2014
  5. "Jessica Horn" womens-forum.com. Retrieved December 9, 2014
  6. "Artists & Speakers" wow.southbankcentre.co.uk. Retrieved December 9, 2014
  7. "Jessica Horn" badilishapoetry.com. Retrieved 9 December 2014.
  8. "Jessica Horn approaches AIDS work with poise and poetry" theglobeandmail.com. Retrieved 9 December 2014.

External links

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