Английская Википедия:Anna Gifty Opoku-Agyeman

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Anna Gifty Opoku-Agyeman (born 1996) is a Ghanaian-born American activist and writer. She is a co-founder and former CEO of the Sadie Collective, as well as a co-founder and co-organizer of Black Birders Week.

Early life and education

Opoku-Agyeman was born in Kumasi, Ghana, and moved to the United States as a child.[1]

Opoku-Agyeman graduated from St. John's Parish Day School in Ellicott City, Maryland in 2007,[2] and from Glenelg Country School, also in Ellicott City, in 2014.[3] In 2019, she earned a B.A. in mathematics with a minor in economics from the University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC).[4] As an undergraduate, Opoku-Agyeman was a Meyerhoff Scholar and NIH MARC U*STAR Scholar, and was enrolled in the UMBC Honors College.[5][6][7]

After graduating from college, Opoku-Agyeman attended the American Economic Association’s summer training program, which aims to increase diversity in economics "by preparing talented undergraduates for doctoral programs in economics and related disciplines".[5][8] She then spent the 2019–2020 academic year enrolled in the Harvard University Research Scholar Initiative postbaccalaureate program.[5] While Opoku-Agyeman was in the Harvard postbaccalaureate program, she was a research assistant to an economics professor at Harvard Graduate School of Education[9] and was affiliated with the National Bureau of Economic Research.[10] She is currently a doctoral student in Public Policy and Economics at the Harvard Kennedy School[11] as a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellow,[12] a Ford Foundation Graduate Fellow,[13] and a Women and Public Policy Program Doctoral Fellow.[14] In 2023, she was among those selected for Forbes 30 Under 30 Local Boston class.[15]

Career

The Sadie Collective

In 2018, Opoku-Agyeman and Fanta Traore co-founded a nonprofit organization called the Sadie Collective, which aims to increase the number of Black women working in quantitative data fields, including economics, data science, and public policy.[16][17][18][19] The collective offers mentorship and hosts programming, including the annual Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander Conference for Economics and Related Fields.[16][17][18] Opoku-Agyeman served as the CEO of the organization until March 2021.[1][10][19][20][21] Several of her published works and media features, which advocate for the advancement and inclusion of black women in economics, have been the result of collaboration with Lisa D. Cook, a Professor of Economics and International Relations at Michigan State University.[10][22][23]

Black Birders Week

In 2020, Opoku-Agyeman co-founded and co-organized Black Birders Week, a series of online events organized to highlight and celebrate Black birders, naturalists, and outdoor enthusiasts.[24][25][26][27] Her aim was to improve the visibility of Black people in non-stereotypical situations,[28] and to advocate for science organizations to give Black people the platform and resources to engage in engagement and outreach activities.[29][27][30] Additionally, the inaugural Black Birders Week produced content in collaboration with the National Audubon Society and the Monterey Bay Aquarium.[31]

Publications

Academic publications

Selected other publications

References

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External links

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