SUMMARY
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Former Ateneo School of Government Dean Antonio La Viña is the newest member of Rappler Inc’s Board of Directors in 2019, joining the Board on August 28 this year.
La Viña joins the current 6 members of Rappler Inc’s Board: Maria A. Ressa, Glenda M. Gloria, Solita “Winnie” Monsod, Fulgencio “Jun” S. Factoran Jr, Carlo Almendral, and Federico Prieto. (See Rappler Inc’s previous 2017-2018 Board of Directors here.)
Here are their brief profiles (in alphabetical order):
Carlo Almendral Carlo is a serial entrepreneur who had previously started venture-backed companies in games, financial inclusion technology, ecommerce, education, and data science. He has released over 30 technology products with millions of users. He currently sits on the corporate boards of an animation company, a cybersecurity company, and a cryptocurrency startup. In Carlo’s philanthropy work, he is currently heading the Innovation Council for The United Nations’ World Food Programme, serves on the Board of Governors for The Commonwealth Club, and is a board advisor for the Adopt A Pet Foundation. Carlo taught data science at UC Berkeley and social entrepreneurship at San Francisco State University and the University of San Francisco.Fulgencio ‘Jun’ S. Factoran Jr. (died on April 5, 2020)
Jun is the managing partner of Factoran & Associates Law Offices. He served various government posts, including secretary of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources from 1987 to 1992, and deputy executive secretary in the Office of the President of the Philippines from 1986 to 1987. He also served as the deputy executive secretary at Philippine National Oil Company.
Among other positions he holds include chairman of Geologistics Incorporated, Agility Inc, and GAIA South Incorporated; Jun obtained his Bachelor of Arts in Humanities (cum laude) and Bachelor of Laws degree (valedictorian) from the University of the Philippines, and his Master of Laws degree from the Harvard Law School.Glenda M. Gloria Glenda became a journalist shortly before the 1986 EDSA People Power Revolution. She worked as a reporter for the Philippine Daily Inquirer, The Manila Times, the Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism, and international news agencies. In the dying days of the Estrada administration, she co-founded Newsbreak, which started as a weekly news magazine and became one of the Philippines’ leading investigative reporting organizations. From 2008 to January 2011, she managed ANC, the ABS-CBN News Channel, as its chief operating officer. Glenda now manages the Rappler newsroom, merging traditional journalism with new forms of story-telling. She’s written numerous books including Under the Crescent Moon: Rebellion in Mindanao with Marites Dañguilan-Vitug, a book on the conflict in Mindanao that won the National Book Award. In 2011, she wrote The Enemy Within: An Inside Story on Military Corruption with the late Aries Rufo and Gemma Bagayaua-Mendoza. Glenda finished journalism at the University of Santo Tomas in Manila. A British Chevening scholar, she holds a master’s degree in political sociology from the London School of Economics and Political Science. She is a 2018 Nieman fellow at Harvard University.
Antonio ‘Tony’ La Viña Dr. Tony La Viña is a leader, teacher, thinker, and lawyer. He was Dean of the Ateneo School of Government from 2006 to 2016 and was Executive Director of the Manila Observatory from 2016 to 2017. He is currently teaching law, philosophy, governance, and politics in more than a dozen learning insitutions and is also the the director of the energy collaboratory of the Manila Observatory and the chair of the Forest Foundation of the Philippines. Tony also writes for Rappler’s Thought Leaders section. Previously, Tony was undersecretary of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources in the Philippines, a senior fellow at the World Resources Institute, and a co-founder of the Legal Rights and Natural Resources Center.
Solita ‘Winnie’ Collas Monsod
An economist, teacher, writer and broadcaster, Winnie was appointed the Philippines’ first socio-economic planning secretary after the fall of the Marcos dictatorship in 1986. She is professor emerita at the University of the Philippines’ (UP) School of Economics, where she taught starting 1983.
Winnie served at the United Nations Committee on Development Policy and was convenor and member of the Advisory Board of the UNDP Human Development Report. For 11 years, she was chairperson of the Philippine Human Development Network. She also served on the advisory board of the South Centre in Geneva and the Board of Trustees of the International Food Policy Research Institute based in Washington, DC, and was a member of the High Level Task Force of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights.
Winnie finished her degree in economics in UP and obtained her masters in economics at the University of Pennsylvania.
She is at present the chair of the Movement for Good Governance. Among many awards on leadership, governance and journalism, she was given the Most Outstanding Alumna Award by the UP Alumni Association in 2005.
Winnie writes a column for the Philippine Daily Inquirer and hosts GMA News TV’s weekly current affairs show “Bawal ang Pasaway kay Mareng Winnie” and appears twice weekly in “Unang Hirit,” also on GMA News.
Federico Prieto
Federico is a lawyer with litigation and corporate practice. For his litigation practice he handles criminal, civil, labor and tax cases. His corporate practice involves mergers & acquisitions, business organization and restructuring, IPO offering and regulatory compliance, among others. He is a 2006 graduate of San Beda University’s College of Law in Mendiola and was admitted to the Bar in May 2007. Federico is a lawyer and the corporate Secretary of Philippine Telegraph & Telephone Corp.
Maria A. Ressa Maria has been a journalist in Asia for more than 30 years – nearly a decade as CNN’s bureau chief in Manila, and another decade as the global network’s Jakarta bureau chief. She became CNN’s lead investigative reporter focusing on terrorism networks. In 2003, the Simon & Schuster group published her first book, the first from the region documenting the growth of Jemaah Islamiyah and its links to al-Qaeda, Seeds of Terror: An Eyewitness Account of Al-Qaeda’s Newest Center of Operations in Southeast Asia. In 1987, Maria was one of the founders of Probe, an independent production company. In 2005, she became the senior vice president of ABS-CBN’s news group, heading the largest multi-platform news operation in the Philippines for 6 years. Maria taught courses in politics and the press for her alma mater, Princeton University, and in broadcast principles at the University of the Philippines. Her latest book, From Bin Laden to Facebook, was part of her work as author-in-residence and senior fellow at the International Centre for Political Violence & Terrorism Research in Singapore. She is also the Southeast Asia Visiting Scholar at CORE Lab at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California. – Rappler.com
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