UNDP Accelerator Labs welcomes new female leaders to the largest learning network in development

Women in leadership: Achieving an equal future in a COVID-19 world

March 6, 2021
Author: UNDP Accelerator Labs

March 8, 2021 - In celebration of this year’s International Women’s Day and in line with the theme ‘Women in leadership: Achieving an equal future in a COVID-19 world’ we’re thrilled to introduce you to some of the newest women leaders joining a vibrant network of 91 Labs and 273 talents.  

They are leaders, data scientists, innovators, urban planners, designers, ethnographers, architects, creative thinkers and are all taking on leadership roles as UNDP’s Heads of Exploration, Experimentation, and Solutions Mapping.

By bringing in 93 new talents, 56% of which are women, UNDP aims at re-imagining development for the 21st century and test new ways of working to address social and environmental challenges.

Today more than ever, and as we need to build forward better from the COVID-19 crisis, it is time to finally fully harness the power of women’s leadership to realize a more equal, more inclusive and more sustainable future.

Which is why we are thrilled to share a sneak peek of our interview with 9 of these incredible leaders. Stay tuned as we share the full version (and meet more!) over the coming weeks.

Yulia Sugandi
Head of Solutions Mapping
UNDP Indonesia Accelerator Lab


With only a decade of action left, what ways can you contribute to reaching our collective Goals on time?

We want to accelerate collective action by building awareness about the value of social innovation. We are on a mission to build a resilient system against water-related disasters by addressing bottlenecks that prevent some low-income urban communities from developing their own solutions. 

Sesil Verdzadze
Head of Solutions Mapping
UNDP Georgia Accelerator Lab 


What is the first challenge you and the team aim to tackle? Why does it matter of your country today?

During our first 100 days, our Lab aims to tackle waste management (with a particular focus on plastics), raise awareness on climate data to a wider public, and identify how to support better uptake of e-services among the rural population and vulnerable groups. It is noteworthy to share that since the establishment of the UNDP Georgia Accelerator Lab, we have received several requests for cooperation and have already established new partnerships around sustainable packaging and awareness-raising campaigns against vaccination disinformation.

Ana Djú
Head of Solutions Mapping
UNDP Guinea Bissau Accelerator Lab


What is the first challenge you and the team aim to tackle? Why does it matter of your country today?

The first challenge me and the team aim to tackle is Guinea Bissau is the lack of quality public services in the country. This is important because how can the UNDP Accelerator Lab possibly consider any other areas to start with when the vast majority of the population does not have access to basic social infrastructure? It’s UBUNTU from here!

Claudia Olmedo
Head of Exploration
UNDP El Salvador Accelerator Lab


With only a decade of action left, what ways can you contribute to reaching our collective Goals on time?

  • By facilitating human-centered horizon scanning and future forecast processes that contribute to developing an inclusive ecosystem empowering citizen through actionable knowledge, sustainable infrastructure, and people-centered public policy design.

  • By exploring the crossroads between development challenges and the actors concerning them. 

  •  By transforming "extractive" research models into participatory models that "give back" actionable information to communities, organizations, and institutions.

Hassanatou Sow
Head of Solutions Mapping
UNDP Senegal Accelerator Lab


What is the first challenge you and the team aim to tackle? Why does it matter to your country today?

We are working on floods, a major and recurring problem causing lots of damage, specifically to vulnerable groups in Senegal. Exacerbated by climate change, floods are negatively impacting all sectors from education, health, economy, infrastructure, agriculture, to name a few. There is a need for urgent action to prevent floods and mitigate the risk.

Larissa Demel
Head of Experimentation
UNDP Panama Accelerator Lab


With only a decade of action left, what ways can you contribute to reaching our collective Goals on time?


By learning from the people closest to the problem and understanding their needs as well as solutions they've built. Our Lab has already been conducting field visits ranging from half-day solution safaris to week-long multi-community visits where we've trekked to landfills and interviewed communities and local policymakers on their perceptions of the solid waste value chain. These insights have become the base in building our first portfolio of experiments.

Neuza Buque
Head of Experimentation
UNDP Mozambique Accelerator Lab


What is the first challenge you and the team aim to tackle? Why does it matter to your country today?

We're exploring how data is produced and managed to inform decision-making in disaster and crisis management situations in Mozambique. As a country currently managing a few crises caused by natural disasters and political instability, data availability and quality is crucial to managing these fast-paced situations. We believe that in understanding and mapping out the existing systems, we can find gaps and opportunities for improvement that can lead to more efficient results.

Yomna Saleh
Head of Experimentation
UNDP Egypt Accelerator Lab


With only a decade of action left, what ways can you contribute to reaching our collective Goals on time?

I believe the key to acceleration is knowledge sharing and collective action. Finding the right way to work out loud without turning into an abstract noise is one thing that I am keen to achieve. This approach can only work by getting everyone on board, transfer a progressive mindset, and eventually building together.

Aldarsaikhan Tuvshinbat
Head of Exploration
UNDP Mongolia Accelerator Lab


What is the first challenge you and the team aim to tackle? Why does it matter to your country today?

UNDP Mongolia’s Accelerator Lab identified digital transformation in public service as the first challenge. The accelerated digitalization brings new opportunities, but it also exacerbates the existing inequalities. We believe extensive digital service delivery is inevitable, and our focus is to ensure that this impending future is inclusive.

Stay tuned to read the full interview and discover other members of the new 31 UNDP Accelerator Labs!  They bring a wealth of experience, creativity, innovation and vision to help us, together, create actionable insights and reimagine sustainable development for the 21st century. Share and follow us on @UNDPAccLabs

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