top of page
4b5dfcab274b2941c66ec8b405222cf1c3dd7a0975a4fe992dd173e3edbcba65.jpg

MAHAM JAVAID

Maham Javaid is an intern at Women's eNews. She is completing a graduate degree in Near Eastern studies at New York University and her work has appeared in Al Jazeera and Foreign Policy.


Tweeters Pipe Up on Forum for Women’s Business

Sakena Yacoobi of the Afghanistan Institute of Learning proved particularly quotable. The conference she joined is part of the 2015 annual International Women’s Day Forum and was widely tweeted about via #USCCFwomen.

  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • X
Merin-The-Innocents.jpg

(WOMENSENEWS)– Sakena Yacoobi, who started an institute dedicated to rebuilding education and health systems in Afghanistan, turned out to be a big star on Twitter today.

At a forum for female business empowerment, the founder of the Afghanistan Institute of Learning spoke about women’s ability to bring about all sorts of change; in the household, the community and the entire nation.


Other advice and experience that she imparted was tweeted about:

Leaders must be patient, things won't change overnight. Show respect for the culture you work in & gain partners- Dr Yacoobi #USCCFWomen— Charlotte Cooper (@CTrouper) March 5, 2015

Yacoobi was part of the second day of a forum organized by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Foundation, United Nations Office for Partnerships and UN Women held at the United Nations offices in New York City.

The agenda was "to explore empowerment solutions that bridge opportunity gaps and result in increased economic agency and independence for women and girls around the world."


The conference was organized as part of the 2015 annual International Women’s Day Forum and it was widely tweeted about on social media with #USCCFwomen.

Issues relating to women’s health and well being in the workplace were raised by the Levi Strauss Foundation, an organization "pioneering social change by funding community programs that advance justice and provide opportunities for disadvantaged people around the globe."

Some comments emphasized that that the biggest hurdle is ignorance of women’s importance to the work force and the need for investing in women.

Dina Dublon: lack of corporate awareness of existence of or need for expertise in investing in women & girls #IWD2015 #usccfwomen— kara gerson (@karagerson) March 5, 2015

The New York Times’ The Upshot column recently release data showing that more large companies in the United States are run by men named John. In light of that one theme of the Twitter posting stream was fitting: "what companies can do for women."

"Women Entrepreneurs is not a nice to have. It is smart for business" said @DianeMelley. http://t.co/4A91plQlYq #USCCFwomen— Doris B Gonzalez (@DorisBGonzalez) March 5, 2015

You can watch a live webcast of the conference here.




Would you like to Send Along a Link of This Story? https://womensenews.org/story/entrepreneurship/150305/tweeters-pipe-forum-womens-business

  • Instagram
  • Facebook
  • X

Author

Related Articles

Subscribe to our newsletter

You can unsubscribe from the newsletter at any time. Have a question? Contact us or review our privacy policy for more information.

Support Independent and Factual Journalism

Add paragraph text. Click “Edit Text” to update the font, size and more. To change and reuse text themes, go to Site Styles.

bottom of page