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Mark Malloch Brown has served as Deputy Secretary-General
of the United Nations since April, 2006. Before his current
appointment, he was the Secretary-General’s Chef de
Cabinet since January 2005. In that position, he worked closely
with the Secretary-General and the Deputy-Secretary General
on all aspects of UN work, including helping to set out an
ambitious reform agenda for the United Nations, much of which
was endorsed by world leaders at the World Summit in New York
last September.
Prior to becoming Chef de Cabinet, Mr. Malloch Brown served
as Administrator of the United Nations Development Programme
(UNDP), the UN's global development network, from July 1999
to August 2005. During that time, he was also the Chair of
the United Nations Development Group, a committee consisting
of the heads of all UN funds, programmes and departments working
on development issues.
During his tenure at the UNDP, Mr. Malloch Brown oversaw
a comprehensive reform effort that was widely recognized as
making the UNDP more focused, efficient and effective across
the 166 countries where it works and doubled its annual resources
to over $4 billion. His efforts included a major push to expand
UN support to developing countries in areas such as democratic
governance, a new advocacy dimension as reflected in pioneering
publications, including the Arab Human Development Reports,
and strengthened UNDP operational leadership in natural disasters
and post-conflict situations.
At the request of Secretary-General Annan, Mr. Malloch Brown
also led the UN system’s efforts to help support the
achievement of the Millennium Development Goals -- eight,
time-bound development targets with the overarching goal of
halving extreme poverty by 2015 -- which were approved by
world leaders at the UN Millennium Summit of September 2000.
Prior to his appointment with the UNDP, Mark Malloch Brown
served at the World Bank as Vice-President for External Affairs,
and Vice-President for United Nations Affairs from 1996 to
1999. He joined the World Bank as Director of External Affairs
in 1994. He is credited with having helped the Bank enhance
its outreach and expand its partnership with the United Nations
and non-governmental organizations. In 1997, he chaired the
United Nations Secretary-General's task force on the reform
of United Nations communications.
Before joining the World Bank, Mr. Malloch Brown was the
lead international partner from 1986 to 1994 in a strategic
communications management firm, the Sawyer-Miller Group, where
he worked with corporations and governments. He advised Corazon
Aquino of the Philippines when she ran against Ferdinand Marcos,
as well as other presidential and political candidates, particularly
in Latin America.
Mr. Malloch Brown founded The Economist Development Report,
a monthly report on the aid community and the political economy
for development. He served as the Report's editor from 1983
to 1986. Previously, from 1977 to 1979, he had been the political
correspondent of The Economist.
From 1979 to 1983, he worked for the Office of the United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). From 1979
to 1981, he was stationed in Thailand, where he was in charge
of field operations for Cambodian refugees. He was appointed
Deputy Chief of UNHCR's Emergency Unit in Geneva, undertaking
extensive missions in the Horn of Africa and Central America.
In 1981, the UNHCR and its staff were awarded the Nobel Peace
Prize. Active in human rights and refugee issues, he formerly
served as Vice-Chairman of the Board of Refugees International
in Washington, D.C., and has served on the advisory boards
of a number of non-profit organizations. Mr. Malloch Brown
was included in Time Magazine’s world’s 100 most
influential people in 2005.
A British citizen, Mr. Malloch Brown received a First Class
Honour’s Degree in History from Magdalene College, Cambridge
University, and a Master's Degree in Political Science from
the University of Michigan, and is the recipient of a number
of honorary degrees and awards. Aged 52, he is married with
four children.
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