Now based in New York, Mary Robinson is currently the president of
Realizing Rights: The Ethical Globalization Initiative. Its mission is
to make human rights the compass which charts a course for globalization
that is fair, just, and benefits all.
Mrs. Robinson was the first woman president of Ireland (1990-1997)
and served as United Nations high commissioner for human rights from
1997 to 2002. She has spent most of her life as a human rights
advocate. Born Mary Bourke in Ballina, County Mayo (1944), the daughter
of two physicians, she was educated at the University of Dublin (Trinity
College), King’s Inns Dublin and Harvard Law School to which she won a
fellowship in 1967.
As an academic (Trinity College Law Faculty 1968-90), legislator
(senator 1969-89) and barrister (1967-90. Senior Counsel 1980, English
Bar 1973) she has always sought to use law as an instrument for social
change, arguing landmark cases before the European Court of Human Rights
as well as in the Irish courts and the European Court in Luxembourg. A
committed European, she also served on expert European Community and
Irish parliamentary committees.
In 1988, Mrs. Robinson and her husband founded the Irish Centre for
European Law at the Trinity College. Ten years later she was elected
chancellor of the University.
The recipient of numerous honours and awards throughout the world,
Mary Robinson is a member of the Elders, co-founder and former chair of
the Council of Women World Leaders and vice president of the Club of
Madrid. She is chair of the GAVI Alliance Board. She chairs the Fund for
Global Human Rights and is honorary president of Oxfam International
and patron of the International Community of Women Living with AIDS
(ICW). She is president of the International Commission of Jurists.
Mary Robinson serves on several boards including the Global Compact
and the Mo Ibrahim Foundation. She is a member of the Royal Irish
Academy and the American Philosophical Society and chairs the Irish
Chamber Orchestra.