Women Waging Peace
Log In
  HOME ABOUT US CONTACT US PRESSROOM RESOURCES SEARCH
   

 REGIONS
 Africa
 Americas
 Asia
 Europe
 Middle East

 THEMES
 Conflict Prevention
 Peace Negotiation
 Post-Conflict
     Reconstruction


 OUR WORK
 Building the Network
 Making the Case
 Shaping Public Policy

 IN THEIR OWN VOICES
 Rose Kabuye,
    Rwanda

 Sumaya Farhat-Naser,
    Palestinian

 Neela Marikkar,
    Sri Lanka


 PUBLICATIONS


Nanda Pok
Cambodia

Nanda Pok is the founder and Executive Director of Women for Prosperity, a nongovernmental organization based in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. A refugee who fled to the United States just before Pol Pot took control of the country, Ms. Pok returned to Cambodia in 1992, determined to be part of the reconstruction and development of her nation. She publishes a bimonthly magazine to promote the concept of women in leadership and has trained over 5,000 women to hold political office. In the most recent elections, 613 of the 953 women elected were trained by her organization.

Ms. Pok's peace-building activities include:

  • organizing "Peace for Prosperity," a program sponsored by the United Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM) that promotes nonviolence, voter education, and the participation of women in government through work with politicians, voters, and the media;
  • acting as an official monitor during the general election in 1998;
  • chairing the coordinating committee for the commune council election, which trained and placed observers at every polling station during the February 2002 election and provided voter education to the general public;
  • lobbying various branches of government for democratic reforms in election law as a member of the board of directors of the Coalition for a Free and Fair Election;
  • organizing workshops to train women to become effective leaders and conducting grassroots training sessions in leadership, politics, legal rights, and democracy to help the women of Cambodia attain the skills they need to be an effective part of the political machine and amplify their calls for peace;
  • coordinating roundtable discussions that promoted dialogue to prevent conflict in local elections;
  • organizing a committee to ban landmines in her country; and
  • planning protest marches with other human rights groups to gain the attention of the nation's policymakers.

back to Building the Network

return to top