MONDAY 9/20

REGISTRATION 9:00 AM - 10:00 PM Hudson Market Monday registration is strongly encouraged.

NETWORKING EVENT 2:00 PM - 6:00 PM CGI Exchange _• Metropolitan Ballroom, 2nd Floor This exhibition allows members to feature their ongoing commitments and explore new partnership opportunities.

WORKSHOP 5:30 PM - 7:00 PM | Sign-up required Media Training _• Conference Room D, Lower Level Presented by APCO, this panel discussion will give CGI members an opportunity to hear directly from members of the media. The panel will be led by Shelby Coffey, the former editor of the LA Times, and explore what makes a great story and how to effectively pitch journalists. TUESDAY 9/21

REGISTRATION 8:00 AM - 9:00 PM Hudson Market

PLENARY SESSION 10:00 AM - 11:30 AM Opening Plenary Session _• Metropolitan Ballroom, 2nd Floor The opening plenary session will frame the agenda for the three days to follow. World leaders will identify critical areas for action and collaboration across a multitude of sectors, ranging from education and the environment and energy to global health and economic empowerment.

KEYNOTE LUNCHES 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM | Sign-up required Economic Empowerment _• New York East, 3rd Floor Poverty persists as a transcendent challenge, but sound policy combined with human ingenuity offers solutions that can be brought to scale. This session will feature presentations on important issues within the area of Economic Empowerment.

Master of Ceremonies: Matthew Bishop, Business Editor and New York Bureau Chief , The Economist

Participants: Jennifer M. Granholm, Governor of the State of Michigan Rajiv Shah, Administrator, U.S. Agency for International Development

Education _• Empire East, 2nd Floor Quality education is the most important tool for all people to pave themselves a path to a better future. This session will feature presentations on important issues within the area of Education.

Master of Ceremonies: Laurene Powell Jobs, Founder and Chair of the Board, College Track

Participants: Geoffrey Canada, President and CEO, Harlem Children's Zone Vicky Colbert, Founder and Director, Fundación Escuela Nueva

Page 1 of 19 www.clintonglobalinitiative.org Environment and Energy _• New York West, 3rd Floor As the Earth's temperature rises, so does the will to find climate solutions. This session will feature presentations on important issues within the area of the Environment and Energy.

Master of Ceremonies: José María Figueres , Former President of the Republic of Costa Rica,

Participants: Richard Branson, Founder, Virgin Group

Global Health _• Empire West, 2nd Floor Investment in health not only alleviates suffering, but increases human capital and helps avoid inter-generational transmission of poverty. This session will feature presentations on important issues within the area of Global Health.

Participants: Sia Nyama Koroma, First Lady of the Republic of Sierra Leone

PLENARY SESSION 1:30 PM - 2:30 PM Empowering Girls and Women _• Metropolitan Ballroom, 2nd Floor Empowering girls and women is both smart policy and smart business. When given opportunities to learn and work, women can drive economic growth and development. For example, women are likely to reinvest significantly more of their income into their families than men do. In some countries, an increase of just 1 percent in girls’ education can boost GDP growth rates by 0.2 percent. Businesses, governments, and development organizations that fail to invest in women are missing out on important ways to improve productivity, develop new markets, and address global challenges. This plenary session will explore new ways to empower girls and women, such as incorporating more women-owned businesses into global supply chains. Panelists will also discuss strategies for enabling girls and women to access education, high-quality health care, and viable economic opportunities.

Participants: Katie Couric, Anchor & Managing Editor, CBS Evening News Melinda French Gates, Co-Chair and Trustee, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, President of the Republic of Liberia Muhtar Kent, Chairman and CEO, The Coca-Cola Company

GIRLS AND WOMEN BREAKOUT SESSIONS 3:00 PM - 4:00 PM | Sign-up required Access: The Key to Women's Economic Empowerment _• New York East, 3rd Floor When women are economically empowered, they earn income that they invest in the health and education of their families. They start businesses, employing not only themselves but others. They save money that can smooth family consumption and provide for emergencies. For many low-income women, the challenge is accessing fundamental tools—assets, property rights, technology, and information—that can help them start down the road to economic independence. This panel will examine the latest strategies in enabling women to serve as their own economic agents by expanding access to these four critical areas.

Participants: Leticia Brenyah, Women Economic Affairs Director, African Women Initiatives for Development and Empowerment (AWIDE), Coordinator, Productive Agricultural Linkages and Marketing Systems (PALMS) Tim Hanstad, President and CEO, Rural Development Institute (RDI) James Mwangi, Managing Director and CEO, Equity Bank Limited Dina Powell, Global Head of Corporate Engagement, Goldman Sachs Roshaneh Zafar, Managing Director, Kashf Foundation

Page 2 of 19 www.clintonglobalinitiative.org Preparing Girls for the World _• Empire East, 2nd Floor In many parts of the world, adolescent girls are the most vulnerable demographic group. They are more likely than boys to be forced out of school, face alarming risk of sexual violence and exposure to HIV/AIDS, and often are pressed into early marriage. Moreover, cultural practices highly constrain adolescent girls' mobility and relationships, making it hard to reach them with important messages and support. This panel will explore culturally sensitive approaches to preparing girls for the world, including effective strategies for increasing schooling, delaying marriage, promoting savings and entrepreneurship, encouraging the adoption of new technologies, and improving health awareness.

Commitment Presenter: Madeleine K. Albright, Chair, Albright Stonebridge Group

Participants: Shelly Esque, Vice President, Corporate Affairs and President, Intel Foundation, Intel Corporation Helene D. Gayle , President and CEO, CARE USA Tanvi Girotra , Founder, Becoming I - The Foundation; G(irls)20 2010 Delegate , Columnist, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Managing Director, The World Bank

Securing the Health and Safety of Girls and Women _• Empire West, 2nd Floor If girls and women are unsafe and unhealthy, families suffer, communities are poorer, and cycles of poverty are perpetuated. Yet there is a gender-based health crisis in many parts of the world today. Women account for 75 percent of new HIV cases among 15-45 year olds in sub-Saharan Africa; sexual violence is an epidemic worldwide; and hundreds of thousands of women die in childbirth each year. Panelists will discuss new innovations in improving women's health, reducing their vulnerability to HIV and violence, and engaging new players to enhance the well-being of girls and women.

Commitment Presenter: Angelique Kidjo, Grammy Winning Singer; Goodwill Ambassador, UNICEF; Co-founder, Batonga Foundation

Participants: Tina Brown, Founder and Editor in Chief, The Daily Beast Gary Cohen, Executive Vice President, BD Geeta Rao Gupta, Senior Fellow, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Ashley Judd, Board Member, Population Services International

SMALL GROUP DISCUSSIONS 4:30 PM - 6:00 PM | Sign-up required Action Network: Focus on Girls: From Education to Economic Empowerment _• Empire West, 2nd Floor This session will be built around an Action Network, a group of CGI members who have been working together throughout the year to coordinate action on this issue. Adolescent girls are one of the most underutilized resources in the world today. Data from the past three decades show the inextricable link between girls’ education and long-term social and economic benefits; studies show that closing the gender gap in education could boost per capita growth by .2 percent. Yet girls still face significant social and economic disadvantages. This Action Network will explore ways to ensure girls have access to high-quality education and economic opportunities.

Moderator: Geeta Rao Gupta, Senior Fellow, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

Action Network: Promoting Safe Roads _• Liberty 3, 3rd Floor This session will be built around an Action Network, a group of CGI members who have been working together throughout the year to coordinate action on this issue. Every six seconds someone is killed or seriously injured on the world’s roads; 90 percent of these incidents occur in the developing world. Given that there are 1.3 million road deaths each year, this is a global epidemic comparable to malaria or tuberculosis. Through this Action Network, CGI members from across sectors are working to raise awareness of this critical health and development issue and are aligning resources to create supportive and safe roads for people across the globe.

Moderator: David Ward, Director General, FIA Foundation of the Automobile and Society

Page 3 of 19 www.clintonglobalinitiative.org Action Network: The Gulf Coast: From Disaster to Prosperity _• Riverside Suite, 3rd Floor This session will be built around an Action Network, a group of CGI members who have been working together throughout the year to coordinate action on this issue. The oil spill disaster in the Gulf of Mexico reminds us of the need to pay attention to a long-overlooked, yet critically important resource. Members of this Action Network will develop strategies to help build a social, political, and economic system in the region that: 1) values ecosystem function, 2) transitions to a diversified economy, 3) develops renewable energy resources, and 4) restores the natural systems, all while paying special attention to the need for broad public support and macro-level changes.

Moderator: Philippe Cousteau, CEO and Co-founder, EarthEcho International John Podesta, President and CEO, Center for American Progress

Community-Led Development in Conflict Areas _• Liberty 5, 3rd Floor This session will be driven by collaborative discussion among members. Innovative community-led development efforts are an important means of developing local capacity and improving governance, especially in fragile, war- torn countries. They can also be an effective way to include women in local decision-making. Mechanisms such as block grants dependent on women’s participation can bring women into community governance in new and profound ways. This session will address the National Solidarity Program in Afghanistan and other instances in which this model of community-led reconstruction has been used to empower women in conflict areas.

Moderator: Ashraf Ghani, Chairman and Co-founder, Institute for State Effectiveness

Human Trafficking _• Carnegie East, 3rd Floor This session will be driven by collaborative discussion among members. Some estimates put the number of victims of and slavery at more than 25 million people worldwide. This epidemic—the fastest growing criminal activity in the world—takes many forms, including , debt bondage, and child labor. This session will explore initiatives applying different approaches to the problem, including monitoring corporate supply chains, rehabilitating victims through training and income generation, and preventing trafficking through education and micro-land grants.

Moderator: Ruchira Gupta, Founder and President, Apne Aap Women Worldwide

Political Representation _• Riverside Ballroom, 3rd Floor This session will be driven by collaborative discussion among members. Women are still woefully underrepresented in most governments around the world, at both the national and local levels. Some countries have adopted quotas as a short-cut to improving women’s political representation. While quotas have certainly increased the number of women in government, are they translating into legislative gains or resource reallocations that empower women? This discussion will examine the emergence of female voices on the political stage and how it is affecting governance and legislative outcomes.

Remarks: Tarja Halonen, President of the Republic of Finland,

Moderator: Laura Liswood, Secretary General, Council of Women World Leaders, Aspen Institute

Savings and Financial Literacy _• Carnegie West, 3rd Floor This session will be driven by collaborative discussion among members. Having access to safe, flexible, and confidential savings accounts equips women and girls with tools they can use to build their own financial success and improve the economic health of their families and communities. Savings can boost self-esteem and increase the propensity among girls to start businesses, achieve higher education, or own homes—all of which have far-reaching implications for economic empowerment. This session will address how women can build skills, build assets, and gain confidence through savings and financial education.

Moderator: Robert Peck Christen, Director, Financial Services for the Poor, Global Development Program, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

Page 4 of 19 www.clintonglobalinitiative.org Women and the Environment: Innovation and Social Change _• New York West, 3rd Floor This session will be driven by collaborative discussion among members. The spread of new technologies in the developing world has improved women’s well-being with respect to health, safety, and income generation—while improving environmental outcomes at the same time. This session will explore products and services such as solar lights, cook-stoves, waste management, and resource protection. Members will discuss the best ways to engage women in the process of creating, adapting, and distributing these innovations, which both empower women and protect the environment.

Moderator: Stuart Hart, SC Johnson Chair in Sustainable Global Enterprise , Johnson Graduate School of Management, Cornell University

Women in the Middle East _• Liberty 4, 3rd Floor This session will be driven by collaborative discussion among members. In the past several decades, a quiet revolution has been occurring in the Middle East. Women have been making steady educational gains, closing gender gaps in school and even beginning to exceed men at the university level in several countries. Women are becoming a stronger presence in government, in business and in civil society. While the obstacles they face are still large, they are making gains throughout the region and becoming agents of change in their societies. This panel will examine some of the educational, social, and economic initiatives being led by and for women, which are driving reform efforts across the region.

Moderator: Hibaaq Osman, Founder and CEO, Karama

Women’s Health and HIV/AIDS _• New York East, 3rd Floor This session will be driven by collaborative discussion among members. Without good health, women cannot care for themselves or their children and they cannot be productive members of their communities. Yet social, economic, and political challenges render women and girls disproportionately vulnerable to HIV/AIDS. As a follow-up to the “Health and Safety of Girls & Women” breakout, this session will dive more deeply into exploring effective and innovative ways of preventing and treating HIV/AIDS in women and girls.

Moderator: Anu Gupta, Director, Corporate Contributions, Johnson & Johnson

Women’s Property Rights _• Liberty 1 & Liberty 2, 3rd Floor This session will be driven by collaborative discussion among members. Women account for 70 percent of the agricultural production in developing countries, yet own less than 5 percent of the world’s land. In much of the developing world, women do not have the right to own or inherit property. For women, securing land rights is an essential step in tackling poverty and hunger, enhancing security, and reducing unsafe migration and trafficking. In this session, members will discuss the efforts underway to ensure that women are granted land rights that are both legally and socially recognized.

Moderator: Craig DeRoy, President, Corporate Initiatives Development Group, LLC

SPECIAL SESSION 4:30 PM - 6:00 PM | Sign-up required Special Session: Profiting from the Poor? A Discussion on Microfinance IPOs _• Empire East, 2nd Floor Microfinance now brings over 150 million people access to financial services. What was once led by the nonprofit sector is increasingly linked to mainstream financial markets offering investors a range of ways to participate – through debt, equity, and other specialized instruments. This link has led many to question: are microfinance institutions (MFIs) and wealthy investors profiting from the poor? There is continued controversy over the level at which interest rates become exploitative; and now, with the public offering of a third MFI—SKS Microfinance—the question arises over appropriate means to raise microfinance capital. This session will provide a forum for a candid discussion on the topic.

Participants: Vikram Akula, Founder and Chairperson, SKS Microfinance Ltd Adam Davidson, Co-Founder and Co-Host, NPR’s Planet Money Mary Ellen Iskenderian, President and Chief Executive Officer, Women’s World Banking Muhammad Yunus, Founder and Managing Director, Grameen Bank

Page 5 of 19 www.clintonglobalinitiative.org TOPIC DINNERS 6:30 PM - 9:00 PM | Sign-up required The Climate War - Can It Be Won? Hosted by Duke Energy Join Eric Pooley, author of The Climate War and deputy editor of Bloomberg Businessweek, Fred Krupp, president of the Environmental Defense Fund, and Jim Rogers, chairman, president and CEO of Duke Energy in a lively discussion on the prospects to address climate change in the U.S. and globally.

Moderator: Eric Pooley, Author, The Climate War; Deputy Editor, Bloomberg Businessweek

Participants: Fred Krupp, President, Environmental Defense Fund Jim Rogers, Chief Executive Office, Duke Energy

TOPIC DINNERS 7:00 PM - 9:00 PM | Sign-up required A Shared Commitment: Innovative HIV/AIDS Programs and Partnerships Hosted by Chevron Today, more than 33 million people worldwide live with HIV/AIDS. The continued spread of HIV/AIDS threatens the health, stability and viability of our global communities. Cross-sector collaboration between businesses, NGOs, multilateral institutions and governments is critical to provide innovative thinking, on-the-ground knowledge and resources, and funding necessary to combat this widespread epidemic. The interactive discussion will focus on cutting-edge strategies in addressing HIV/AIDS, and the significant role of partnerships in fighting the epidemic. Ultimately, we seek to define effective solutions to advance a shared commitment in stemming the spread of this disease around the globe.

Remarks: Eric Goosby, Coordinator, United States Global AIDS

Moderator: Jane Nelson, Director, Corporate Responsibility Initiative, Harvard Kennedy School, Harvard University

Participants: Jessica Justman, Senior Technical Director, International Center for AIDS Care and Treatment Programs Charles MacCormack, President, Save the Children John Tedstrom, President and CEO, GBC

Eat. Play. Live. The Health of Our Children Depends On It Hosted by Blue Cross Blue Shield of North Carolina Eat. Play. Live. Three simple words that have the potential to significantly impact one of today’s most troubling health epidemics: childhood obesity. According to the Centers for Disease Control, childhood obesity has more than tripled in the last 30 years. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina and special guest U.S. Surgeon General Regina Benjamin examine this growing problem and what can be done – beginning with our youngest children – to reverse the trend. By eating right, playing more, and living a commitment to better health, a difference can be made. After all, the health of our children does depend on it.

Participants: Regina Benjamin, Surgeon General, United States Department of Health J. Bradley Wilson, President and CEO, BCBSNC

Protecting Living Oceans Hosted by the United Postcode Lotteries The Protecting Living Oceans Dinner is hosted by the United Postcode Lotteries, which raises funds for charities through a unique lottery system in The Netherlands, Sweden and the United Kingdom. One of the projects supported is “Postcode Lottery Project Oceans.” World Wildlife Fund, Greenpeace, and the Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) work together to protect the richness of life in the oceans, enlarge the consumer market for MSC-certified seafood, and help realize High Seas Marine Protected Areas. During the dinner, renowned nature photographer and film producer Mattias Klum will show us the magnificent beauty of our oceans and inspire us to act together to protect them for future generations.

Participants: Jan Eliasson, Member, The UN Millennium Development Goals Advocacy Group; Ambassador, the Postcode Lottery Mattias Klum, Photographer Kumi Naidoo, Executive Director, Greenpeace International Boudewijn J.M. Poelmann, Co-Founder and CEO, Nationale Postcode Loterij

Page 6 of 19 www.clintonglobalinitiative.org Responsible Banking Hosted by Standard Chartered Bank In recent years, banks have been maligned as the drivers of the current financial crisis. While financial institutions certainly played a role in the economic crisis, they also serve an important role in the recovery and will help drive economic growth in emerging markets. This conversation will look at innovative and institutional ways banks facilitate economic growth by ensuring financial inclusion, supporting small and medium-sized enterprises, growing employment opportunities, and creating wealth. It will also explore how other sectors can partner with financial institutions to ensure maximum impact.

Remarks: Lars H. Thunell, Executive Vice President and Chief Executive Officer, International Finance Corporation, World Bank Group

The Education Dividend: Increase College Completion to Drive the Economy Hosted by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation An intimate dinner and conversation about how the low post secondary completion rates in the U.S. are draining our local, state and national economies. To initiate our conversation we are assembling a small panel of representative stakeholders from education, business, and government who will engage the dinner guests in an informal discussion. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is proud to host this dinner and facilitate learning and dialogue about the postsecondary completion crisis in America, how it will impact business and communities, and why harnessing human potential through postsecondary attainment is critical to economic stability.

Participants: Michael Crow, President, Arizona State University Robert Mendenhall, President, Western Governors University Eduardo Padrón, President, Miami-Dade College

The Power of Purpose: Inspiring Your Organization to Improve and Save Lives Hosted by Procter & Gamble The organizations and leaders who will create the future will all have one characteristic in common; they will be “Purpose Inspired.” They will be driven to improve lives — not through philanthropy but through their core business strategies. Winning on Purpose will be the mantra and the accelerator of passionate employee engagement, life improvement innovations, and exceptional and sustainable performance. Jim Collins best-selling author of Good to Great said of Roy Spence, who will speak during the dinner: “Roy Spence is dedicated to the idea that true greatness comes in direct proportion to passionate pursuit of a purpose beyond making money and has inspired and changed leaders in every sector.”

Participants: Marc Pritchard, Global Marketing Officer, P & G Roy Spence, Author; Chief Executive Officer, GSD&M Idea City

TOPIC DINNERS 7:30 PM - 9:30 PM | Sign-up required Investing in Women and Girls Hosted by Goldman Sachs and their 10,000 Women Initiative This dinner will feature some of the world’s foremost thought leaders on the subject of investing in women and girls, and will focus on the innovative partnerships and interconnected benefits of empowering women across all sectors and pillars of development. The evening will include a discussion session moderated by New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof, and featuring Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, managing director of the World Bank, Jennifer Buffett, president and co-chair of the Novo Foundation, Zainab Salbi, co-founder of Women for Women International, and Christy Turlington Burns, CARE advocate for maternal health. The program will also feature remarks by Melanne Verveer, ambassador-at-large for global women’s issues, U.S. Department of State, and Ruth Simmons, president of Brown University.

Remarks: Ruth Simmons, President, Brown University

Moderator: Nicholas Kristof, Columnist, The New York Times

Participants: Jennifer Buffett, President and Co-Chair, NoVo Foundation Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Managing Director, The World Bank Zainab Salbi, Founder and CEO, Women for Women International Christy Turlington Burns, Advocate for Maternal Health, CARE

WEDNESDAY 9/22

Page 7 of 19 www.clintonglobalinitiative.org REGISTRATION 8:00 AM - 9:00 PM Hudson Market

PLENARY SESSION 9:00 AM - 10:00 AM Strengthening Market-Based Solutions _• Metropolitan Ballroom, 2nd Floor Taken in their totality, the institutions that constitute today's global marketplace are arguably humanity's most powerful innovation. Yet, until recently, the majority of the world's population has neither benefited from ever-growing volumes of exchange on global markets, nor had the opportunity to realize its full entrepreneurial and inventive potential. The natural environment has similarly been excluded from the calculus of global exchange. Today, a tremendous opportunity exists to direct the power of markets toward the goal of shared and sustainable development—increasing opportunity for the global majority today while at the same time ensuring that the natural environment is preserved for generations to come. This session will engage exceptional leaders in business and government in a conversation about using markets to source and scale solutions to global challenges.

Participants: Robert E. Diamond Jr., President and Chief Executive designate, Barclays PLC Thomas L. Friedman, Foreign Affairs Columnist, The New York Times Valerie B. Jarrett, Senior Advisor and Assistant to the President for Intergovernmental Affairs and Public Engagement, The White House Fadi Ghandour, Founder and CEO, Aramex International Iqbal Quadir, Founder and Director, Legatum Center for Development and Entrepreneurship; Professor of Practice, MIT

MARKET-BASED SOLUTIONS BREAKOUT SESSIONS 10:30 AM - 11:30 AM | Sign-up required Advancing Development By Design _• New York West, 3rd Floor Design and technological innovation are two of the core drivers of global development. Over the past decade new and unexpected collaborations have set off an explosion of novel design and social innovation concepts—from footpumps that have increased incomes for millions of small farmers to plans for carbon-neutral construction at the scale of an entire city. In this panel several contributors to the revolution in design for development discuss how to approach the design of new products and services in a way that turns customers into partners and challenges into opportunities.

Participants: Beth Comstock, Senior Vice President & Chief Marketing Officer, GE Debra Dunn, Associate Consulting Professor, Stanford University d.school Elizabeth Hausler, Founder and CEO, Build Change Larry Irving, Vice President, Global Government Affairs, Hewlett-Packard Co. Sathya Jeganathan, Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, Chengalpattu Medical College, India David Kuria, Chief Executive Officer, Ecotact Limited

Market-Based Solutions for Protecting the Environment _• New York East, 3rd Floor Earth's natural infrastructure provides truly essential services on which life depends. When human activity degrades ecosystems, human societies must rely on their own imperfect and costly substitutes for essentials such as clean water, breathable air, and healthy food. People in the poorest places are the ones least able to make such substitutions, and thus the most dependent on ecosystem services. Market-oriented pioneers are introducing innovations to ensure the provision of ecosystem services by inducing investment in the environment. This panel will explore the most inventive and effective market-based solutions for protecting the environment.

Commitment Presenter: Wangari Muta Maathai, Founder and Chair, The Green Belt Movement

Participants: Matt Kistler, Senior Vice President of Marketing, Walmart Mindy Lubber, President, Ceres M. Sanjayan, Lead Scientist, The Nature Conservancy Jeffrey Swartz, President and CEO, The Timberland Company

Page 8 of 19 www.clintonglobalinitiative.org Supply Chains of Opportunity _• Empire East, 2nd Floor Large corporations can no longer afford to extract resources and source inputs without concern for the people and places to which they are connected via global supply chains. Risks of unexpected disruptions and adverse publicity are only two of the motivations for this shift. Increasingly, global corporations are also realizing that 21st century competitiveness requires success in strengthening relationships and expanding opportunities along supply chains. This panel will explore how corporations can increase profits and build better products by improving the lives of people and enhancing the sustainability of places along their supply chains.

Participants: Bethlehem Tilahun Alemu, Managing Director and Founder, soleRebels Klaus Kleinfeld, Chairman and CEO, Alcoa Inc. Jean Pierre Martial, President and Founder, Integrated Sustainable Development Partners Jane Nelson, Director, Corporate Responsibility Initiative, Harvard Kennedy School, Harvard University Frederick Payton, Executive Director, AgroFrontera

SMALL GROUP DISCUSSIONS 12:00 PM - 1:30 PM | Sign-up required Action Network: Addressing Violence Against Girls and Women _• Riverside Suite, 3rd Floor This session will be built around an Action Network, a group of CGI members who have been working together throughout the year to coordinate action on this issue. Violence against girls and women is a problem of pandemic proportions. The estimates that at least one of every three women globally will be beaten, raped, or otherwise abused during her lifetime. CGI members in this Action Network will be working to address these issues through the following sub-groups: U.S. Focus; Girls & Violence; Mechanisms for Financing; Gaps in Research; Changing the Normative Climate; Engaging Men & Boys; Violence & Linkages to HIV; and Evaluation and Documentation of Best Practices.

Moderator: Geeta Rao Gupta, Senior Fellow, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

Action Network: Collaborative Technologies for Social Change _• Empire West, 2nd Floor This session will be built around an Action Network, a group of CGI members who have been working together throughout the year to coordinate action on this issue. The rapid pace of technological innovation has created unprecedented opportunities for people and organizations to connect and collaborate online. Some CGI members have used collaborative technologies to create entirely new projects, while others use these tools to enhance communications and networking around commitments that already exist. This Action Network will explore how members can leverage their technological expertise and the influence of the social web to deepen their social impact and enhance their CGI commitments.

Moderator: Rachel Botsman, Author and Social Innovator, Collaborative Consumption

Action Network: Pathways to Employee Engagement _• Liberty 3, 3rd Floor This session will be built around an Action Network, a group of CGI members who have been working together throughout the year to coordinate action on this issue. Today, employees want to work for companies with values that reflect their own. This Action Network, anchored by Edelman and the International Business Leaders Forum, will explore how companies can develop human capital; improve education, economic empowerment, and global health; and provide employees with opportunities to make a difference. The group will develop strategies for building connections between a company and its stakeholders while building employee skills, competencies, morale, and motivation.

Moderator: Gary Grates, President and Global Managing Director, Edelman Change and Employee Engagement

Page 9 of 19 www.clintonglobalinitiative.org Capitalizing on the Infrastructure Imperative in the United States _• Liberty 4, 3rd Floor This session will be driven by collaborative discussion among members. Blackouts, bridge collapses, and breeched levees have reminded us in recent years that the U.S. will have no choice in coming decades but to invest in a renewal of its physical infrastructure. This infrastructure imperative represents a potential burden to taxpayers. However it also represents an opportunity to drive job creation on a large scale. This panel will focus on strategies to capitalize on the infrastructure imperative in the U.S. and the opportunities for entrepreneurs, corporations, and new employees that this transition will create.

Moderator: Lesa Mitchell, Vice President, Kauffman Foundation

Micro-franchises _• New York East, 3rd Floor This session will be driven by collaborative discussion among members. Micro-franchising is a powerful and proven way to create opportunities and options for low-income people. By developing a “business in a box” with a low capital requirement, organizations can empower entrepreneurs in the developing world while simultaneously delivering critical goods and services, such as health information or products. This session will outline the principles of micro-franchising and seek to identify specific opportunities where micro- franchising can be used to expand access to goods and services in the health, energy, and other sectors.

Moderator: Chuck Slaughter, President, Living Goods

Seeding Societal Renewal _• Carnegie West, 3rd Floor This session will be driven by collaborative discussion among members. In post-conflict and post-disaster environments, the failure of government to provide basic services, combined with a lack of formal regulatory constraints, can create tremendous opportunities for entrepreneurs. Ample evidence exists of entrepreneurial initiatives thriving in failed states or regions beset by anarchy. The session will focus on a few examples that illustrate how entrepreneurship and market-based solutions are not an afterthought to societal renewal, but rather its core driver.

Remarks: Fred Hochberg, Chairman and President, Export-Import Bank of the United States

Moderator: Robert Lemelson, Director, The Lemelson Foundation

Supporting High-Growth Firms _• Carnegie East, 3rd Floor This session will be driven by collaborative discussion among members. In rich countries as in poor, most job growth comes from the most rapidly growing 10 percent of new ventures. The entrepreneurs who create and propel these high-growth firms thus play a critical role in the creation of economic prosperity. This session will address innovative financing mechanisms needed to drive capital to high-growth firms. It will also explore the growing inclusion of social and environmental metrics in investment decisions made by corporations and investment funds.

Moderator: Laurie Spengler, President and CEO, ShoreBank International

Supporting the Next Generation of Market-Based Innovators _• New York West, 3rd Floor This session will be driven by collaborative discussion among members. A new generation of entrepreneurs and innovators is taking the potential of markets to transform society as a given. The remarkable young innovators who will be spotlighted in this session are prototyping solutions to global challenges that are both market-based and human-centered and thus well-suited to today’s constantly changing, globally connected world. This session will explore the strategies being pursued by this new generation of market-based innovators, and the public/private partnerships that will enable their success.

Moderator: Jessica Jackley, Founder and CEO, Profounder

SPECIAL SESSION 12:00 PM - 1:30 PM | Sign-up required Page 10 of 19 www.clintonglobalinitiative.org Special Session: Addressing Cancer in the Developing World: Health Equity and an Overlooked Public Health Crisis _• Empire East, 2nd Floor Cancer is the top non-communicable killer in the world, claiming eight million lives a year. Currently, over half of new cancer cases and almost two-thirds of cancer deaths occur in low and middle income countries. In a time in which health is increasingly appreciated as a human right, access to prevention and treatment for the 28 million people worldwide facing cancer is often not available. This special session will focus on efforts underway to increase access to effective diagnosis and quality treatment for cancer in the developing world. It will also explore the work undertaken as a result of two CGI commitments made in 2008 by Lance Armstrong and Felicia Knaul, with partners including Paul Farmer of Partners In Health and Princess Dina Mired of Jordan.

Participants: Charles-Patrick Almazor, Director, Public Sector Partnership, Artibonite Department, Partners In Health Lance Armstrong, Founder and Chairman, LIVESTRONG Paul Farmer, Co-Founder, Partners In Health; Chair of the Department of Global Health and Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School; Chief of the Division of Global Health Equity, Brigham and Women’s Hospital; UN Deputy Special Envoy for Haiti Sanjay Gupta, Chief Medical Correspondent, CNN Felicia Knaul, Director, Harvard Global Equity Initiative; Founder, Cáncer de mama: Tómatelo a Pecho HRH Princess Dina Mired, Director General, King Hussein Cancer Foundation

PLENARY SESSION 2:00 PM - 3:00 PM Harnessing Human Potential _• Metropolitan Ballroom, 2nd Floor Economic prosperity and human development in the modern era require more and better employment opportunities as well as a highly-trained workforce that can adequately fill new, more advanced jobs. Yet labor market dysfunction, insufficient investment in human capital, and global health challenges all pose obstacles to increased productivity and employment. This plenary session will explore the range of strategies needed to better harness human potential in societies around the world. Discussion will focus on three major issues: how to create a macro environment that fosters entrepreneurship and job creation across the globe; how to broaden access to knowledge and training in order to build a global workforce that meets the needs of the 21st century economy; and how to link efforts between government, business, civil society and academic institutions in support of these goals.

Participants: Laura Bush, Former First Lady of the United States Jack Ma, Chairman and CEO, Alibaba Group Shakira Mebarak, Founder, The Barefoot Foundation Rajendra Pawar, Founder & Chairman, NIIT Group

HUMAN POTENTIAL BREAKOUT SESSIONS 3:30 PM - 4:30 PM | Sign-up required Beyond Microfinance: The Next Stage of Economic Development _• New York West, 3rd Floor Microfinance has proved successful at creating small-scale productive enterprises that raise living standards and reduce poverty. However, in order to "move the needle" of economic prosperity and job creation, it is critical to unleash the capabilities of high-potential entrepreneurs who can scale their ventures into businesses that have a real impact on overall economic growth. Unfortunately, small and medium-sized enterprises often lack the knowledge, access to capital, and management expertise necessary to grow their businesses into economically meaningful enterprises. This panel will discuss the means by which the public and private sectors can nurture high-potential entrepreneurship for maximum economic impact.

Commitment Presenter: Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Managing Director, The World Bank

Participants: Rangina Hamidi, Founder and President, Kandahar Treasure Van Jones, Senior Fellow, Center for American Progress Luis Alberto Moreno, President, Inter-American Development Bank Jacqueline Novogratz, Chief Executive Officer, Acumen Fund

Page 11 of 19 www.clintonglobalinitiative.org Democratizing Education: The Key to Global Economic Growth _• New York East, 3rd Floor Access to education is a critical determinant of economic success, yet billions of the world's citizens cannot enjoy the benefits of greater knowledge and skills. Recently, a combination of technological, academic, and business innovations has begun to break down traditional barriers and improve access to education and information. These trends have the potential to create an expanding global workforce with unprecedented access to higher education – a powerful new foundation for sustained global economic growth. The panel will explore how societies can leverage this new open environment to boost economic prosperity while addressing the continued obstacles to global sharing of knowledge.

Participants: Anya Kamenetz, Author, DIY U and Journalist, Fast Company Magazine Vivian Onano, Ambassador, Global Give Back Circle Eduardo Padrón, President, Miami Dade College Pamela Passman, Corporate Vice President and Deputy General Counsel, Global Corporate and Regulatory Affairs, Microsoft Corporation Shai Reshef, Founder and President, University of the People

Youth Unemployment: The Next Great Global Challenge _• Empire East, 2nd Floor Today, more than one of every six people worldwide is between the ages of 15 and 25 - the largest youth "bulge" in human history. Nearly 90 percent of those roughly 1.2 billion young people live in the developing world and face significant barriers to economic success. Without a focus on entrepreneurship, many societies will face the challenge of dealing with a disgruntled, under-employed younger generation. This panel will explore how entrepreneurship programs, technology, new methods of education, and public-private partnerships can address what is both an unprecedented job creation challenge as well as an historic opportunity to harness human potential.

Participants: Ronald Bruder, Founder/Chief Executive Officer, Education for Employment Foundation António Guterres, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, Former Prime Minister, Portuguese Republic Reeta Roy, President and CEO, The MasterCard Foundation Melanne Verveer, Ambassador-at-Large for Global Women's Issues, U.S. Department of State Nkululeko Yeni, Student, African Leadership Academy

SPECIAL SESSION 3:30 PM - 4:30 PM | Sign-up required Special Session: Building Partnerships to Empower the World’s Smallholder Farmers _• Empire West, 2nd Floor Smallholder farmers are inordinately vulnerable to changes in climate, poor training, market vicissitudes, and lack of access to inputs such as seeds and fertilizers. Many smallholders, even those with quite modest levels of output, can be at least as efficient as larger farms. But the formalized markets require higher levels of capitalization, supply chain management around product scheduling, higher quality, and closer supply chain collaboration. Helping farms access these opportunities requires early and active participation of buyers. This session will address how corporations can help farmers build better lives for themselves, while strengthening their supply chains, protecting the environment, and promoting the long-term health and prosperity of the communities where they do business.

Moderator: Hal Hamilton, Co-Director, Sustainable Food Lab

Master of Ceremonies: Tensie Whelan, President, Rainforest Alliance

Participants: Jim Carrey, Actor and Founder, Better U Foundation David Griswold, Founder and President, Sustainable Harvest Coffee Importers Safira Gerald Lazaro Gwimo, Coffee Quality Control Manager, Kanyovu Coffee Cooperative Tom Vilsack, Secretary of Agriculture, U.S. Department of Agriculture

SMALL GROUP DISCUSSIONS 5:00 PM - 6:30 PM | Sign-up required

Page 12 of 19 www.clintonglobalinitiative.org 100% Inclusion: Creating Opportunity for the World’s Biggest Minority _• Liberty 4, 3rd Floor This session will be driven by collaborative discussion among members. According to the UN, approximately 650 million people — close to 10 percent of the world’s population — live with a disability. As such, they constitute the world’s largest minority. Achieving 100 percent inclusion of people with disabilities is not only a moral imperative, it is smart business. The focus of this session will be a discussion of strategies and models for increasing economic opportunities for people with disabilities.

Moderator: Caroline Casey, Founder, Kanchi

Action Network: Helping Haiti Build Back Better _• Empire West, 2nd Floor This session will be built around an Action Network, a group of CGI members who have been working together throughout the year to coordinate action on this issue. This Action Network builds on the momentum sparked by President Clinton’s Call to Action in 2008, after Haiti was devastated by four hurricanes. CGI member organizations responded to the call with over $100 million in commitments, and since that time they have renewed and scaled up their efforts. Meetings are now held monthly and many new commitments have been developed through the Action Network. Focus areas include education, energy, water & shelter, environment, culture, and business development.

Moderator: Denis O'Brien, Chairman, Digicel

Green Buildings and Energy Efficiency _• Riverside Suite, 3rd Floor This session will be driven by collaborative discussion among members. In recent years, building retrofits have come to the fore as an immediately actionable and cost effective answer to the crisis of global warming. Furthermore, green buildings are a powerful tool for advancing investments in low-income housing, creating good jobs with sustainable wages, and modernizing community infrastructure. This session will look at the promise and challenge of green building retrofits, focusing on issues of financing and overcoming existing market barriers through policy and private sector innovation.

Remarks: Arah Schuur, Cities Initiative: Buildings Program Director, William J.

Moderator: Jason McLennan, Chief Executive Officer, International Living Building Institute

Green Jobs: Preparing for the Green Economy _• Carnegie East, 3rd Floor This session will be driven by collaborative discussion among members. Concern about climate change has spurred the rapid growth of new industries designed to either improve the workings of existing sectors or to serve as green alternatives to current businesses. As the world turns its focus to sustainable development and green growth, new skills will be needed and new economic opportunities will be created. This session will look at emerging trends in the green economy and discuss how societies can prepare their citizens for the jobs of the future.

Moderator: Gregory Unruh, Director, Lincoln Center for Ethics, Thunderbird School of Global Management

Page 13 of 19 www.clintonglobalinitiative.org Investing Internally: How Companies Can Invest in Their Supply Chain for Maximum Social and Business Benefit _• Carnegie West, 3rd Floor This session will be driven by collaborative discussion among members. Many multinational companies have come to realize that long-term success means creating value not just for shareholders but for employees, customers, and communities as well. One area that has attracted considerable interest and attention has been a company’s supply chain. Supply chain investment and development can have a significant impact on human prosperity in developing economies. This session will explore successful examples of supply chain investment that have brought both economic and social benefits.

Remarks: Michael H. Posner, Assistant Secretary; Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor, U.S. State Department

Moderator: Reuben Abraham, Professor and Executive Director , Centre for Emerging Markets Solutions, Indian School of Business

Non-Communicable Diseases and Chronic Conditions _• Liberty 3, 3rd Floor This session will be driven by collaborative discussion among members. Chronic and non-communicable diseases (NCDs) such as cancer, diabetes, heart disease, and respiratory disease are currently responsible for 60 percent of deaths worldwide. They are a major cause of poverty and a barrier to economic development, yet their prevalence in the developing world is often overlooked. In this session, members will discuss how best to align efforts to counteract rising trends in NCD mortalities and to build out health systems to support those living with these conditions

Moderator: Tom Kalil, Deputy Director for Policy, White House Office of Science and Technology Policy

The STEM of the Pyramid: Investing in the Building Blocks of Productive Capacity _• New York West, 3rd Floor This session will be driven by collaborative discussion among members. Scientific and mathematical literacy is an increasing critical skill in today’s economy. Individuals with strong science, technology, engineering, and mathematical (STEM) capabilities will be much better positioned to benefit from globalization than those that lack these skills. This session will focus on how STEM education can be leveraged to improve the economic competitiveness of individuals and societies.

Remarks: Ben Sangari, Chairman and CEO, Sangari Group

Moderator: Amy Rosen, President and CEO, Network for Teaching Entreprenuership

Unleashing Employees as a Driver of Development and Innovation _• New York East, 3rd Floor This session will be driven by collaborative discussion among members. Businesses have the power and obligation to unleash the power of their enterprises to sustain the people they employ, the societies in which they do business, and the natural environments on which they rely. Smart companies can do this in a way that utilizes their most valuable resource: their human capital. This session will address how progressive organizations are harnessing the energy of their employees in ways that simultaneously improve workforce engagement, create positive change, and deliver business value.

Moderator: Dov Seidman, Chief Executive Officer, LRN

SPECIAL SESSION 5:00 PM - 6:30 PM | Sign-up required

Page 14 of 19 www.clintonglobalinitiative.org Special Session: “Meeting of the Minds” on CNBC _• Metropolitan Ballroom, 2nd Floor The Future of the Global Economy: Investing in Human Capital Confronted with some of the world’s most pressing problems, global leaders must act in the interests of both shareholders and society. Today’s global marketplace is one of humanity’s most influential tools to drive society toward sustainable development and increased opportunity. However, corporations and governments must make smart decisions in order to develop a 21st century workforce and lay a foundation for the decades to come. This session, moderated by Maria Bartiromo and taped for broadcast on CNBC, will explore how leaders, corporations, and governments can invest in human capital to rebuild the global economy and create a new paradigm for prosperity.

Moderator: Maria Bartiromo, Anchor, CNBC

Participants: President , Founding Chairman, Clinton Global Initiative, 42nd President of the United States Andrew N. Liveris , Chairman and CEO, The Dow Chemical Company Peter Sands, Group Chief Executive, Standard Chartered Bank

NETWORKING EVENT 8:30 PM - 10:30 PM An Evening at MoMA _• Museum of Modern Art CGI members come together to celebrate the CGI Annual Meeting. This event is hosted by Ambassador Gianna Angelopoulos-Daskalaki.

THURSDAY 9/23

REGISTRATION 8:00 AM - 9:00 PM Hudson Market

PLENARY SESSION 9:00 AM - 10:00 AM Enhancing Access to Modern Technology _• Metropolitan Ballroom, 2nd Floor In the past decade, transformative technologies have allowed people around the world to lead safer, healthier, and more fulfilling lives. Today new technology makes it possible to leapfrog over old models of infrastructure, wire rural villages for cell phones and clean energy, and provide unprecedented access to information. These breakthroughs are enabling smart use of limited resources, transforming business processes, and opening new opportunities for civic engagement. However, many of the world's poor have yet to feel the benefit of these new technologies. In developed countries, too, deployment of advanced technology has not kept pace with its potential. This plenary session will address how technology can play a major role in meeting our greatest global challenges, and explore how institutions must adapt to manage the opportunities and trade-offs presented by technology-driven innovation.

Participants: John Chambers, Chairman and CEO, Cisco Jack Dorsey, Chief Executive Officer, Square; Co-founder and Chairman, Twitter Ory Okolloh, Founder and Executive Director, Ushahidi Zhengrong Shi, Chairman and CEO, Suntech Power Holding Co., Ltd. Ratan N. Tata, Chairman, Tata Sons Krista Tippett, Journalist, Public Radio Host and Author, American Public Media

TECHNOLOGY BREAKOUT SESSIONS 10:30 AM - 11:30 AM | Sign-up required Clean Technology and Smart Energy: Deploying the Green Economy _• Empire East, 2nd Floor From smart homes, to smart cities, to a smart electricity grid, clean technology has the potential to transform the way we live and work. In developed countries that have built up an existing infrastructure around polluting energy, deployment can be difficult, even when technology is proven and the economics are right. Increasingly, developed and developing countries are engaged in "reverse innovation," in which changes at the bottom of the pyramid offer new ways of doing business for society at large. This session will look at strategies for overcoming market barriers to take projects from R&D to commercial deployment.

Participants: Nadia K. Al Dossary, CEO and Partner, Al Sale Eastern Co. Ltd Gary Hattem, President, Deutsche Bank Americas Foundation, Deutsche Bank John Holdren, Science and Technology Advisor to President Barack Obama and Director, White House Office of Science and Technology Policy Tri Mumpuni, Executive Director, IBEKA Conrad van Oostrom, Chief Executive Officer, OVG Real Estate

Page 15 of 19 www.clintonglobalinitiative.org Democracy and Voice: Technology For Citizen Empowerment and Human Rights _• New York East, 3rd Floor All over the world, people are demanding the freedom that unfettered social media can provide. Recent news events - from the use of Twitter in to Google's withdrawal from China - have demonstrated that many people now see access to information technology as a basic human right. The global information commons raises serious questions, however, about politics, governance, access, privacy, intellectual property, and cultural change. This session will look at the impact of digital information on social causes, government reforms, civil society, and the broader economy - and it will anticipate what's coming next.

Participants: Arianna Huffington, Co-founder and Editor In Chief, The Huffington Post Mohamed Ibrahim, Chairman, Mo Ibrahim Foundation Ashton Kutcher, Co-chair, Demi and Ashton Foundation Omid Memarian, Journalist, IPS News Agency Pierre Omidyar, Founding Partner, Omidyar Network Under Secretary of State Maria Otero, Under Secretary of State for Democracy and Global Affairs, U.S. Department of State

Mobile Revolution: Transforming Access, Markets, and Development _• New York West, 3rd Floor Mobile information and communications technologies are quickly and cheaply transforming the world's poorest nations. Universal access to data through mobiles is helping small-holder farmers and fishermen overcome physical barriers to get their products to market, even as it helps girls and women overcome cultural barriers to staying in school or launching a business. Mobile applications are improving health, educational, and economic outcomes, but far more powerful than the devices themselves are the transformative business models that they enable. This session will address new ways that companies and nonprofits can turn mobile phones into powerful tools of social innovation.

Commitment Presenter: Jack Dorsey, Chief Executive Officer, Square; Co-founder and Chairman, Twitter

Participants: Cherie Blair, Founder, Cherie Blair Foundation for Women Mohammad Kilany, Co-Founder, Souktel Mobile Phone Job Service Molly Melching, Executive Director, Tostan Judith Rodin, President, The Rockefeller Foundation Clive Thompson, Contributing writer, Wired and New York Times Magazine John W. Stanton, Chairman , Trilogy International Partners LLC

SMALL GROUP DISCUSSIONS 12:00 PM - 1:30 PM | Sign-up required Action Network: Investing for Social and Environmental Impact _• Empire West, 2nd Floor This session will be built around an Action Network, a group of CGI members who have been working together throughout the year to coordinate action on this issue. Increasingly, investors are measuring returns not only in financial terms, but also based on social and environmental impact. This Action Network aims to grow the marketplace of impact investing. The group is intended for investors hoping to learn more about impact investing, as well as those seeking to network with others already investing for social and/or environmental returns. Discussion topics will include impact investment products, social and environmental impact measurement, and catalyzing capital as a individual investor, wealth advisor, foundation, or financial institution.

Moderator: Amit Bouri, Director of Strategy & Development, Global Impact Investing Network Ron Cordes, President, The Cordes Foundation

Action Network: Maternal and Infant Survival _• Liberty 3, 3rd Floor This session will be built around an Action Network, a group of CGI members who have been working together throughout the year to coordinate action on this issue. Healthy children need healthy mothers. Each year more than 500,000 women die from pregnancy- and childbirth-related complications. The UN estimates that in low-income countries, one out of every 12 children dies before the age of five. Despite being prioritized by the Millennium Development Goals, maternal and child health have shown little improvement in many parts of the world. CGI members are focused on various facets of the problem, including improving prenatal and obstetric care, eliminating mother to child transmission of HIV, ensuring access to pediatric drugs and care kits, and employing cross-sectoral partnerships to create change.

Moderator: Geeta Rao Gupta, Senior Fellow, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

Page 16 of 19 www.clintonglobalinitiative.org Action Network: Post-Conflict Education _• Riverside Suite, 3rd Floor This session will be built around an Action Network, a group of CGI members who have been working together throughout the year to coordinate action on this issue. With over half of the worlds’ out-of-school children residing in conflict-affected environments, CGI members have joined forces to address educational needs in such settings. Young people can become an incredible advantage to developing nations if their energy and skills are harnessed and directed in productive ways. Members of this Action Network will discuss how to leverage public-private partnerships, technology, and other strategies and resources to improve education in post-conflict communities. In particular, this group will focus on youth education, entrepreneurship, and employment in such settings.

Moderator: Meredith Lee, Program Manager, The Mastercard Foundation Rebecca Winthrop, Senior Fellow and Director, Center for Universal Education , Brookings Institute

Cradle to Cradle: Green Chemistry, Supply Chains, and the End of Waste _• Carnegie East, 3rd Floor This session will be driven by collaborative discussion among members. Through the highly active Rethinking Waste Action Network, members are exploring new opportunities to reduce waste through producer innovation, supply chain restructuring, waste-to-energy solutions, and better product design. This session will focus on establishing goals and protocols that can be used by businesses, governments, and nongovernmental organizations to address the waste threats posed by rising use of technology. A key objective of this session is also to promote information exchange between advocates of waste reduction, green design, and clean technology.

Moderator: William McDonough, Founder, Cradle to Cradle Products Institute

e-Healthcare on the Front Lines _• New York West, 3rd Floor This session will be driven by collaborative discussion among members. CGI members are strengthening health systems and transforming delivery of care by using new technologies and approaches, including mobile phones, remote telemedicine, and electronic medical records. These innovations can improve quality of care, empower front-line workers, and provide remote populations with basic services. This session will provide an opportunity for members to discuss these technological innovations, with the goal of improving health outcomes by forging effective and scalable coalitions among corporations, governments, and NGOs.

Moderator: Tom Kalil, Deputy Director for Policy, White House Office of Science and Technology Policy

Urban Technology Exchange: Connecting Cities and Managing Global Growth _• Carnegie West, 3rd Floor This session will be driven by collaborative discussion among members. Unplanned growth in rapidly developing countries leads to urban slums and creeping sprawl. In many countries, infrastructure must be modernized to meet human needs and build a foundation for lasting prosperity. This session will look at the needs of developing countries as they confront growth challenges, and explore how technology can improve the functioning of communities and drive global economic opportunity. It will also focus on establishing a marketplace for exchanging best practices in global infrastructure development.

Wiring Rural Communities for Education and Development _• New York East, 3rd Floor This session will be driven by collaborative discussion among members. Approximately 75 million children worldwide are denied their basic right to an education, and a majority live in remote, rural communities. CGI commitment makers are currently piloting innovative models to improve access to and the relevance of education in rural communities. This includes leveraging ICT solutions, curriculum-sharing, online teacher training, and teacher-less classrooms. This session will look at Cisco’s 2007 Sub-Saharan African Development commitment as a case study to focus more broadly on the unique delivery challenges of education in rural settings.

Remarks: Zika Abzuk, Senior Manager, Corporate Affairs, Cisco

Moderator: Ángel Cabrera, President, Thunderbird School of Global Management

Page 17 of 19 www.clintonglobalinitiative.org Women and the Digital Vanguard _• Liberty 4, 3rd Floor This session will be driven by collaborative discussion among members. With over 4 billion devices in use around the planet, mobile phones have presented an incredible opportunity to distribute life-changing services in the developing world. A recent report published by the GSMA and Cherie Blair Foundation for Women revealed that 300 million women are currently not able to access mobile phones. This session will highlight a range of commitments designed to empower women through the mobile distribution of life-changing services.

Moderator: Katrin Verclas, Co-Founder, MobileActive.org

SPECIAL SESSION 12:00 PM - 1:30 PM | Sign-up required Special Session: Investing in the World’s Forests _• Empire East, 2nd Floor Investing in forests should not be seen as a luxury for the rich — in fact, forests can be a key tool for economic empowerment. Communities that sell forest products harvested in a sustainable way have access to a source of income that can last for generations. Furthermore, communities can receive payment for protecting their forests by receiving certification from UN-REDD (United Nations Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation). In this session, panelists will address the role that forests play in sequestering carbon, and the work that needs to be done to empower local populations to earn a living from forests while protecting them at the same time

Moderator: John Podesta, President and CEO, Center for American Progress

Participants: Bharrat Jagdeo, President, Cooperative Republic of Guyana Wangari Maathai, Founder and Chair, The Green Belt Movement Jonathan Pershing PhD, Deputy Special Envoy for Climate Change, U.S. Department of State

SPECIAL SESSION 2:00 PM - 3:30 PM | Sign-up required Special Session: The Recovery in Haiti _• New York East and New York West, 3rd Floor The devastating earthquake that struck Haiti on January 12 killed over 200,000 people, left millions more homeless, and destroyed much of the already- precarious national infrastructure. However, with this terrible disaster comes the opportunity rebuild Haiti in a way that addresses the long term well-being of the Haitian people. With the creation of the Interim Haiti Recovery Commission (IHRC), established in April 2010 by the government of Haiti, important progress is underway. The IHRC is working to coordinate the efforts of the international community including donor governments, NGOs, and private sector entities to ensure that projects are in line with the Haitian government’s priorities and initiatives, and the needs of the Haitian people. This session will convene key government and business leaders to discuss what recovery looks like today and how the international community can contribute.

Participants: Jean-Max Bellerive, Prime Minister, Republic of Haiti President Bill Clinton, Founding Chairman, Clinton Global Initiative; 42nd President of the United States Magalie Noel Dresse, President, Caribbean Craft Haiti Adam Goldstein, President and CEO, Royal Caribbean International Maryse P. Kedar, Director, Progress and Development Foundation Mati Kochavi, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, AGT Denis O'Brien, Chairman, Digicel

PLENARY SESSION 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM Closing Plenary Session _• Metropolitan Ballroom, 2nd Floor President Clinton will highlight the accomplishments of the 2010 Annual Meeting, recognize notable commitments, and deliver summary remarks with his priorities for future action.

Participants: President Bill Clinton, Founding Chairman, Clinton Global Initiative, 42nd President of the United States Bill Gates, Co-chair and Trustee, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Michelle Obama, First Lady of the United States

SPECIAL EVENT 6:00 PM - 7:30 PM

Page 18 of 19 www.clintonglobalinitiative.org Cocktail Reception _• Empire East and Empire West, 2nd Floor Light dinner fare will be served at this pre-reception to the Clinton Global Citizens Awards.

SPECIAL EVENT 8:00 PM - 10:00 PM Clinton Global Citizen Awards _• Metropolitan Ballroom, 2nd Floor President Clinton will recognize extraordinary individuals who have demonstrated visionary leadership in solving pressing global challenges. Award recipients will be leaders whose efforts transcend borders, change lives, and set an example for us all.

Remarks: President Bill Clinton, Founding Chairman, Clinton Global Initiative, 42nd President of the United States

Master of Ceremonies: Ben Stiller, ,

Participants: Maria Bartiromo, CNBC Host, Anchor

Awards Presenter: Festus Mogae, Former President of the Republic of Botswana, Salma Hayek Pinault, President, Salma Hayek Foundation

Musical Entertainer: Don Henley

SPECIAL EVENT 10:00 PM - 11:30 PM Closing Reception _• Empire East and Empire West, 2nd Floor The closing reception to the Annual Meeting, where late dinner and dessert will be served from local New York City restaurants.

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