Judge(s)

CO-CHAIR
Martin Dickson

Deputy Editor 
Financial Times

 



Martin Dickson was appointed Deputy Editor of the Financial Times in 2005. In his previous position as City Editor he edited the highly respected Lombard column, and prior to that he was the Financial Editor. He joined the FT in 1977 as a writer on African and diplomatic affairs. Mr Dickson started in journalism as a graduate trainee at Reuters and had postings in Africa and Turkey. In May 2006, he was named joint winner of the Wincott Foundation awards in the senior financial journalist category. He was voted Business Journalist of the Year in the 2005 Business Journalist of the Year awards, also winning in the category for the best opinion writer. He has a history degree from Trinity Hall, Cambridge and a BSc in economics from London University.


CO-CHAIR
Nena Stoiljkovic
Vice President, Business Advisory Services
IFC

Nena Stoiljkovic is IFC's Vice President for Business Advisory Services and a member of its Management Team. She leads more than 1,000 Advisory Services staff in 84 offices across 66 countries, and heads IFC's work to set standards in sustainability.
 
IFC's Advisory Services are organized in four practices: Access to Finance, Investment Climate, Sustainable Business, and Public-Private Partnerships. Working with private sector clients, IFC's Advisory Services work to increase access to finance, and to improve standards and transform markets with more sustainable and responsible business practices. Working with governments, they help improve the investment climate, especially for small and medium enterprises, and facilitate partnerships with the private sector to provide essential services such as infrastructure.
 
Ms. Stoiljkovic also oversees IFC's Environment, Social, and Governance Department, which helps clients address challenges and opportunities on environmental, social, and corporate governance issues; and its Inclusive Business Models Group, which connects people, resources, and ideas to support inclusive business clients that target low-income people at the base of the economic pyramid.
 
A Serbian national, Ms. Stoiljkovic became Vice President in September 2011. She was previously IFC's Director for Eastern Europe and Central Asia, where she provided successful leadership to a region particularly hard hit by the financial crisis and demonstrated the powerful impact of integrating IFC's Investment and Advisory Services.
 
Ms. Stoijkovic joined IFC in 1995 as an Investment Officer, and has since worked in Asia, the Middle East, North Africa, Southern Europe, and Central Asia. In 2005, she relocated to Istanbul as Senior Manager in the Southern Europe and Central Asia Department, where she led business development and assumed country management responsibilities for seven IDA/Post-conflict countries in the Balkans and Central Asia.
 
Prior to joining IFC, Ms. Stoiljkovic worked as a Consultant at the Economic Institute of Belgrade. She holds an MBA from the London Business School.
 

Dr Isher Judge Ahluwalia
Chairperson
Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations


Dr Isher Judge Ahluwalia is Chairperson of the Board of Governors of the Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations (ICRIER). Dr Ahluwalia received the Padma Bhushan award from the President of India in 2009 for her services in the field of education and literature. She is a Member of the National Manufacturing Competitiveness Council and Chairperson of the Government of India's High Powered Expert Committee on Urban Infrastructure. She was Chairperson of the Board of Trustees of the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), Washington, D.C. from 2003-06, and is currently a Board Member of the International Water Management Institute (IWMI). She was a Member of the Eminent Persons Group of the Asian Development Bank (ADB) in 2006-07. Dr Ahluwalia received a B.A. from Presidency College, Calcutta University, an M.A. from the Delhi School of Economics, and a Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), all in Economics.


David Harris
Head, Responsible Investment
FTSE Group



David Harris joined FTSE in 2002, and is responsible for the FTSE4Good, the FTSE KLD Sustainability, and the FTSE Environmental Markets Indices. His responsibilities include overseeing index management, corporate engagement with index constituents, managing research partnerships, and developing new responsible investment indices. Previously, Mr Harris worked for Arthur D. Little's Global Environment and Risk Practice, developing sectoral sustainability strategies and programmes, and with PricewaterhouseCooper's climate change consulting team. He is a graduate of both Imperial College London and Oxford University, and also serves as a board director for the UK Sustainable Investment and Finance association (UKSIF).


Mary Ellen Iskenderian
President and CEO
Women's World Banking
 



Mary Ellen Iskenderian is President and CEO of Women's World Banking (WWB), the world's largest network of microfinance institutions and banks. Ms Iskenderian leads the WWB global team, based in New York, in providing hands-on technical services and strategic support to 40 top-performing microfinance institutions and banks in 28 countries in Africa, Asia, Eastern Europe, Latin America and the Middle East. WWB's network members consistently rate among the top three microfinance institutions in their countries and 74 percent of their clients are poor women entrepreneurs.

Prior to WWB, Ms Iskenderian worked for 17 years in senior management at IFC, where her numerous leadership positions included Director of Partnership Development, Director of the Global Financial Markets Portfolio and Director of the South Asia Regional Department. Previously, she worked for the investment bank Lehman Brothers.  

Ms Iskenderian is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and the Board of Kashf Microfinance Bank in Pakistan. She holds an MBA from the Yale School of Management and a Bachelor of Science in International Economics from Georgetown University's School of Foreign Service. 


Herman Mulder
International Sustainable Development Advisor



Herman Mulder, an initiator of the Equator Principles, was Head of Group Risk Management at ABN AMRO from 1998 - 2006, and a key driving force behind the Dutch bank's emergence as a pioneer of sustainable banking. He was previously Head of Global Structured Finance at ABN AMRO (1995-98). After retiring from the bank, he has dedicated himself, as an independent advisor and board member, to all dimensions of sustainable development, including voluntary business codes of conduct, climate change, value chain, microfinance, social entrepreneurship, development finance, and fair trade. He advises the UN Global Compact, the World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD), the Club de Madrid, the Taellberg Foundation, Oxfam Novib (the Dutch affiliate of Oxfam), and Earth Charter International. He is a board member of the Global Reporting Initiative, UTZ Certified, Dutch National Committee for International Cooperation and Sustainable Development (NCDO), Dutch National Contact point for OECD Guidelines (NCP), Business in Development (BiD), ABN AMRO Foundation India, and the CBI (Consensus Building Institute) in Boston. He is a Knight of the Royal Order of Orange-Nassau for his work in sustainable development.