Anika Rahman
Anika Rahman has spent her life and career fighting for women’s rights and dignity. Her passion was ignited by her childhood where she watched as her grandmother, mother and aunt struggled against the institutionalized sexism in their native Bangladesh. From them she learned courage, tenacity and the will to always fight for justice.
When she was eighteen, Anika came to the United States to attend Princeton's Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. She then went on to earn a Juris Doctorate from Columbia Law School. In reflecting on those years now, Rahman says that in the four years she spent at Princeton there were many people to admire, but not once did she have a professor who was a woman of color.
Upon graduation from law school, Anika joined the New York law firm Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton. Following her passion for social justice, it wasn't long before she made the jump to nonprofit work. In 1993, Anika began her nonprofit career as the staff attorney for the Center for Reproductive Rights, the world's foremost legal organization for women's reproductive rights. She became the director of International Programs, where she developed a global program dedicated to helping women around the world fight for equality and legal protections. She also led the Center's policy team and gained important experience in the connections between advocacy, legal and communication strategies to effect change. While at the Center, Anika built her nonprofit management and fundraising skills growing a staff of 20 and raising an annual budget of $2.25 million.
In her work she saw first hand the broad and devastating impacts of discrimination and injustice. In 2004, Anika became the president of Americans for UNFPA (United Nation's Population Fund). The United Nations Population Fund is the world's largest funder of reproductive health programs and an anchor for women throughout the world as they strive for health access and equality. As the president of Americans for UNFPA, Anika honed her skills as a nonprofit executive and fundraiser. She focused on significantly expanding their fundraising, dramatically increased their resources during her tenure and negotiated a $37 million bequest for UNFPA and Americans for UNFPA. She was instrumental in raising awareness in this country of the global fight for women's rights and of America's critical role in it.
International Women’s Day: Miles to Walk, in the US and Across the Seas
by Anika Rahman, Ms. Foundation for Women
March 9, 2011 - 9:19am (Print)
2011 marks the 100th anniversary of International Women's Day -- a day for the celebration of women worldwide.
Poor Women Pay the Price in the Right’s War on Women’s Health
by Anika Rahman, Ms. Foundation for Women
February 23, 2011 - 1:06pm (Print)
Subjecting women and other vulnerable communities to reductions in health care access in the name of budget cuts and moral wranglings over abortion is both dangerous and absurd.
