Resilience is Key - Sound Familiar?
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Judith Rodin is a pioneer, innovator, change-maker and global thought-leader. For over two decades Rodin led and transformed two global institutions: The Rockefeller Foundation and the University of Pennsylvania. A ground-breaking executive throughout her career, Dr. Rodin was the first woman named to lead an Ivy League Institution and was the first woman to serve as The Rockefeller Foundation’s president. A research psychologist by training, she was one of the pioneers of the behavioral medicine and health psychology movements. Dr. Rodin’s leadership ushered The Rockefeller Foundation into a new era of strategic philanthropy that emphasized partnerships with business, government, and the philanthropic community to address and solve for the complex challenges of the 21st century. As president, Rodin recognized that the Foundation’s funding alone was unable to spur the kind of systemic change necessary to solve the key challenges facing the world. Responding to that dynamic, Rodin led the Foundation in a sweeping transformation that modernized all operational and programmatic aspects of The Rockefeller Foundation. Rodin looked for new spaces where there was momentum for innovation, identified places where Rockefeller could use its influence to leverage additional financing and engage private and public sector partners to ensure impact continues after Rockefeller grantmaking ends. Building on the Foundation’s history of creating and developing the field of public health and the Green Revolution, under this new form of strategic philanthropy, Rodin championed two whole new fields that are now pervasive: resilience and impact investing. Under her presidency, the Foundation invested more than half a billion dollars and leveraged billions more in resilience programs including establishing 100 Resilient Cities, the creation and growth of urban resilience-building strategies and investments around the globe.

As a result of her vision, in 2015 Fast Company named The Rockefeller Foundation one of the top ten innovative non-profits in the world. When Dr. Rodin was named president of the University of Pennsylvania in 1994, she was not only the first woman named to lead an Ivy League institution, but was the first Penn graduate to serve as its president. She came to Penn from twenty two years at Yale University where she had served as a faculty member, Dean of the Graduate School and Provost. At Penn, Dr. Rodin presided over an unprecedented decade of growth and progress that transformed the institution, its campus, and the community, taking the university from sixteenth to fourth in U.S. News and World Report national rankings. Under her leadership, Penn doubled its research funding, tripled both its annual fundraising and the size of its endowment, and attracted record numbers of undergraduate applicants, including its most selective classes in history. The University also engineered a comprehensive, internationally acclaimed neighborhood revitalization program in West Philadelphia. Dr. Rodin has served as a member of the board for several leading corporations including Aetna. AMR, EDS, Citigroup, Laureate Education, Inc. and Comcast NBCUniversal. She has been named to Forbes’ 100 Most Powerful Women list, Crains Most Powerful Women in New York list, as well as the National Association of Corporate Directors’ (NACD’s) 2011 Directorship 100, in recognition of her work promoting the highest standards of corporate governance. In 2009 US News and World Report honored her in their list of America’s Best Leaders. A widely recognized international leader in academia, science, and development issues, Dr. Rodin is a sought-after speaker for influential global forums, including the World Economic Forum, the Council on Foreign Relations, Habitat III, the Global Forum at the Vatican, and the United Nations General Assembly. In 2014, she was a co-chair of the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting in Davos. Dr. Rodin also served as a member of the African Development Bank’s High Level Panel and a founding board member of the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa, US Artists and ArtPlace. A pioneer of the behavioral medicine and health psychology movements, Dr. Rodin was trained as a research psychologist. After completing her Ph.D. at Columbia University in 1970, she joined the faculty of New York University as an assistant professor of psychology. She moved to Yale in 1972. She was promoted to associate professor in 1975, named a full professor of psychology in 1979, and added the title of professor of medicine and psychiatry, under the School of Medicine, in 1985.
https://cdia.asia/2013/08/18/100-resilient-cities-centennial-challenge/
https://www.slideshare.net/RockefellerFound/d631b84b1efe41685a-3gm6b18ip https://www.rockefellerfoundation.org/profile/judith-rodin/
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https://www.preventionweb.net/publications/view/43300
https://www.preventionweb.net/publications/view/43291
https://www.rockefellerfoundation.org/profile/judith-rodin/
https://resilientmelbourne.com.au/takeover-melbourne/
https://www.melbourne.vic.gov.au/about-council/committees-meetings/meeting-archive/pages/future-melbourne-committee-17-may-2016.aspx
https://www.smartcitiesdive.com/news/100rc-members-global-resilient-cities-network/572138/
https://masterurbanresilience.com/where-did-100-resilient-cities-go-understanding-the-evolution-of-rockefeller-foundation-urban-resilience-program/