Biography
Judith Bruce joined the Council in 1977. She is a senior associate and policy analyst with the Poverty, Gender, and Youth program. Through policy analysis, evidence-based intervention design and capacity building, she has changed the way we think about quality of care from the client’s perspective and about the potential of the poorest, most excluded girls. Bruce leads efforts to develop programs that protect the well-being and expand opportunities of the poorest adolescent girls in the poorest communities. The programs often include social support, mentoring, and meaningful educational opportunities including financial literacy and health information and access. Her work engages local organizations, governments, NGOs, and donors in a multi-country effort to place adolescent girls at the center of the global health and development agenda. She was among the first to illuminate the scope and negative impact of child marriage—including violence and discrimination. Earlier in her career, she published the family planning quality-of-care framework, which was instrumental in the global shift in family planning programs from target-driven approaches to a focus on quality, as defined by a program’s ability to meet clients’ needs. The framework remains the foundation for defining the goals and evaluating the outcomes of family planning and reproductive health programs. Recently, she served as co-chair of the UN Expert Group Meeting on the elimination of all forms of discrimination and violence against the girl-child. She has been a member of the Council on Foreign Relations since 1977. In 1993 she received the Association for Women in Development’s bi-annual award for outstanding contributions to the field. A graduate of Harvard University, Bruce has written extensively on population policy, the quality of reproductive health services, adolescent girls’ status in the developing world, and women’s access to and control of resources inside and outside the household.
Regional Focus
Central America, Central and Southern Asia, Eastern and Southern Africa, Eastern Asia, Middle East and North Africa, North America, South America, Southeast Asia, West and Central Africa