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Cherie Blair
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Wife of former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, leading lawyer and committed campaigner for women’s rights, Cherie Blair set up the Cherie Blair Foundation for Women in 2008 to help women build small and growing businesses in Africa, South Asia and the Middle East so that they can contribute to their economies and have a stronger voice in their societies.

Cherie studied law at the London School of Economics and was called to the Bar in 1976. She became a Queen’s Counsel in 1995 and in 2000 co-founded Matrix Chambers from which she continues to practice as a barrister. Cherie currently also sits as a Recorder, as part-time judges are known, and is an accredited mediator. In 2007, she was awarded the Eleanor Roosevelt Val-Kill medal in recognition of her high ideals and courageous actions. Cherie also holds Honorary Degrees at the Open University and Liverpool Hope University.

As well as fighting for human rights in her professional career, Cherie is an active campaigner on equality and human rights issues. In addition to founding her own charity, she remains closely involved with charities with a special emphasis on women and children. She is a member of the International Center for Research on Women’s leadership council, ambassador for the GSMA mWomen Programme, honorary vice president of Barnados, president of the Loomba Foundation, ambassador for Scope, trustee of Africa Justice Foundation and patron of a number of charities, including Breast Cancer Care and SolarAid.

Entries by Cherie Blair

Invest in Women and Everyone Benefits

(15) Comments | Posted April 26, 2013 | 11:41 AM

This week saw the start of the RaiseForWomen Challenge, an initiative to help nonprofits that focus on women, gain funds and greater recognition. By raising awareness of 80 different women's organizations across the country, the Challenge will help to highlight the many different ways in which we can...

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Promoting Women's Economic Participation in India

(6) Comments | Posted March 21, 2013 | 8:46 AM

Since the horrific rape and murder of a student in New Delhi in December 2012, debates have raged about the social and economic status of women in India. The brutal act revealed to the world that even in 2013, Indian women are treated as second class citizens.

How can this...

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Barnardo's Calls for Change to Sentencing Guidelines in Child Sexual Exploitation Cases

(38) Comments | Posted March 10, 2013 | 7:00 PM

Child sexual exploitation is an appalling crime that devastates lives, and the legal system in this country has a crucial role in protecting children from such abuse by bringing the perpetrators to justice.

The legal process can also be important in helping victims of child sexual exploitation to recover from...

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How Rose Heilbron Inspired Me and a Generation of Women

(30) Comments | Posted February 26, 2013 | 6:00 PM

As a child growing up in my grandmother's house in Liverpool, there was one name that always made my grandmother excited: Rose Heilbron. Rose was an advocate, and when she was arguing a case before a jury at the Liverpool Assizes my grandmother would follow her cases avidly, sometimes even...

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Make a Change Through Mentoring

(33) Comments | Posted February 3, 2013 | 6:00 PM

Back in the 70s, when I was looking for my first job in the law, it was hard to be taken seriously as a woman lawyer. It was commonplace for women candidates to be told, "we don't take women" or "we've already got a woman", comments that would be unthinkable...

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A New Year's Resolution to Benefit the World: Education for Women

(36) Comments | Posted January 4, 2013 | 5:24 PM

In the holiday spirit of peace on Earth and good will toward men, I would argue that more good will toward women, notably in terms of education, would contribute to more peace on Earth.

The plight of women in many regions of the world remains dire. Two-thirds of the illiterate...

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The Next Mobile Revolution: Boosting Women's Entrepreneurship Via Mobile Money

(6) Comments | Posted December 18, 2012 | 6:25 AM

For Marion, the challenge of starting her own business was not lack of initiative - she had plenty - but rather dearth of start-up capital. At 20 years old, Marion dropped out of school because she didn't have sufficient school fees. In Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, where she lives, this...

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The Mobile Phone as an Important Tool for Women Entrepreneurs in India

(15) Comments | Posted December 2, 2012 | 6:00 PM

The beauty of modern technology is that it has vastly speeded up communication and the transmission of information, helping businesses to become more efficient and productive. But this acceleration poses a real challenge for many small business owners who can get left behind if they aren't "up to speed". It's...

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Putting the Rule of Law Behind Women's Rights

(58) Comments | Posted November 25, 2012 | 6:00 PM

All over the world, the infrastructure of justice is failing women. In some cases, it is the laws themselves that legitimise discrimination - whether on property rights, freedom of movement or women's control over their own bodies. In many more societies, however, the problems stem from a justice system which...

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The Women's Prize for Fiction

(32) Comments | Posted October 14, 2012 | 7:00 PM

I was an early reader and by the age of 10 I had read every book in my local children's lending library in Liverpool, and was given a special dispensation by the head librarian to gain entry to the adult library.

That love of books has stayed with me and...

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We Can't Afford to Ignore Half the Population

(135) Comments | Posted September 27, 2012 | 4:08 AM

Writing from New York where I have been lucky enough to attend both the UN General Assembly and the Clinton Global Initiative, I have been struck by the mainstreaming of issues relating to women and girls at both events.

I have been fortunate enough to work with the Clinton...

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Behind Every Successful Man is a Woman? Let's Reverse That Saying

(184) Comments | Posted March 7, 2012 | 6:00 PM

It used to be said that behind every successful man was a woman. They meant, of course, a wife. It was a clumsy way of recognising women's contribution within marriage and the part this sacrifice played in helping husbands advance in their careers.

But as we celebrate International Women's Day,...

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Why Women Should Become Mentors

(85) Comments | Posted January 23, 2012 | 6:00 PM

It's over 100 years since the women's rights movement was born, but some predict it will be another 100 years before women executives in the UK finally achieve equal pay.

The UK of course is not the only country where this problem still exists. A sizeable pay gap between...

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Justice, Stability and Prosperity: Building Fair Legal Systems for Africa

(12) Comments | Posted January 5, 2011 | 11:20 AM

Co-authored by Philip Riches and Suella Fernandes.

Access to decent security and justice services, such as the police and courts, is as an important development goal as clean water, healthcare and education. Indeed, robust legal systems, independent and transparent judiciaries and clear, comprehensible laws are crucial for creating the conditions...

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