
Jeanne Betsock (Ginger) Stillman consults in non-profit management, international public health, gender issues and program development. She has served as a staff member or independent consultant with non-governmental organizations, international organizations and universities in the US and 20 other countries. She is President of Strategies for Development, Inc., a consulting firm established in 1998.
Stillman serves as the Vice President of Membership and is the former President of the United Nations Association of the USA Southern New York State Division. She has served as co-chair of the Mid-Atlantic Regional Conference and Members Day at the UN since 2011. As a Middle Atlantic Representative to the Council of Chapters and Divisions Steering Committee, from 2007-2009 she chaired its Sub-Committee on Communications. In the UNA Westchester Chapter, she served as Executive Director and as a Board member and Secretary, and led development of many innovative programs including “Peace Makes the World a Better Place,” which works with 3rd grade students in Yonkers Public Schools. She produces the video series Going Global with the UN, which can be viewed online through Richland Community College, Dallas, Texas – http://www.rlc.dcccd.edu/modelun/videos.php.
Stillman edited the 11-volume Training Course in Women’s Health (1993), and supervised the translation into French of a training course on HIV/AIDS. She designed and led training programs for health professionals in the US, many sub-Saharan African countries, Tunisia, Haiti . In Pakistan, she was a trainer and evaluator in a project working to build latrines and teach basic hygiene in Afghan refugee camps. She was part of a team in 2004 which drafted a Five-Year Master Plan for Rural Development for the Government of Madagascar.
Stillman holds a BA from the American University School of International Service, an MSPH from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Public Health, and carried out doctoral coursework at Columbia University. She was Associate Editor of the two-volume International Encyclopedia of Population (Macmillan/Free Press, 1982). Honors include Who’s Who in Medicine and Healthcare, Who’s Who in America, and Who’s Who of American Women.
Stillman serves as the Vice President of Membership and is the former President of the United Nations Association of the USA Southern New York State Division. She has served as co-chair of the Mid-Atlantic Regional Conference and Members Day at the UN since 2011. As a Middle Atlantic Representative to the Council of Chapters and Divisions Steering Committee, from 2007-2009 she chaired its Sub-Committee on Communications. In the UNA Westchester Chapter, she served as Executive Director and as a Board member and Secretary, and led development of many innovative programs including “Peace Makes the World a Better Place,” which works with 3rd grade students in Yonkers Public Schools. She produces the video series Going Global with the UN, which can be viewed online through Richland Community College, Dallas, Texas – http://www.rlc.dcccd.edu/modelun/videos.php.
Stillman edited the 11-volume Training Course in Women’s Health (1993), and supervised the translation into French of a training course on HIV/AIDS. She designed and led training programs for health professionals in the US, many sub-Saharan African countries, Tunisia, Haiti . In Pakistan, she was a trainer and evaluator in a project working to build latrines and teach basic hygiene in Afghan refugee camps. She was part of a team in 2004 which drafted a Five-Year Master Plan for Rural Development for the Government of Madagascar.
Stillman holds a BA from the American University School of International Service, an MSPH from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Public Health, and carried out doctoral coursework at Columbia University. She was Associate Editor of the two-volume International Encyclopedia of Population (Macmillan/Free Press, 1982). Honors include Who’s Who in Medicine and Healthcare, Who’s Who in America, and Who’s Who of American Women.