- published: 27 Jul 2010
- views: 595
Karen Kornbluh (born 1963) is Executive Vice President of External Affairs at Nielsen. She was previously an American government official, and expert on communications policy, international trade and issues affecting working families. A senior adviser to Barack Obama from the beginning of his Senate tenure throughout his 2008 presidential campaign, she has been called "Obama's brain". Obama appointed her as the U.S. Ambassador to the OECD.
Kornbluh attended Hunter College High School, earned a B.A. from Bryn Mawr College and a Master of Public Policy degree from the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.
Early in her career, Kornbluh was a Telesis management consultant to Fortune 500 high-technology companies and an economist at Alan Greenspan's economic forecasting firm, Townsend-Greenspan & Co. She worked for Senator John Kerry (D-MA) on the staff of the Commerce Committee and its Telecommunications Subcommittee.
Karen Kornbluh, US Ambassador to the OECD, on Jobs for the Future
Amb. Susan Rice Comments at Karen Kornbluh Swearing In
Education for Innovation: A Digital Townhall with Karen Kornbluh and Angel Gurria
Data for Social Good: Reaching Underserved Communities, Panel 1
Ambassador Kornbluh: G20 looks to women to get the world economy growing again
Global Responses to NSA Surveillance: Three Things to Know
كوربنلو: التكنولوجيا طريق مهم نحو الانفتاح والنمو
The Internet's Vast Impact on Economic Development
Collective Action Will Help Protect the Internet
A conversation with America's Digital Policy Pioneers
On July 27, 2010, NDN hosted the United States' Ambassador to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), Karen Kornbluh. Ambassador Kornbluh, who previously served as Senator Barack Obama's Policy Director and as Deputy Chief of Staff at the Treasury Department, discussed recent research on youth unemployment and what the US is doing at the OECD to address the high levels of youth unemployment brought on by the Great Recession.
US Ambassador to the UN SUSAN RICE offers comments at Swearing-in Ceremony of US Ambassador to the OECD KAREN KORNBLUH Treaty Room, Department of State -- Friday, 21 August 2009. (video taken by Steve Clemons, The Washington Note) Ambassador Rice offers important insights into Kornbluh's role in helping to shape Barack Obama's thinking and policy course. Kornbluh was the principal drafter of the 2008 Democratic Party Platform and is a policy pioneer in family work policy issues, telecommunications and broadband matters, and a wide range of other national economic challenges.
12/07/10 Remarks by Ambassador Karen Kornbluh, U.S. Permanent Representative, U.S. Mission to the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development and Secretary General Angel Gurria, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. The Digital Town Hall took place at the Newseum, located at 555 Pennsylvania Ave., N.W., Washington, DC 20001. This event is presented in partnership with and can be viewed live on the websites of The Aspen Institute, PBS NewsHour, Intel Corporation and The Information Technology & Innovation Foundation (ITIF). To learn more about the event, review the agenda and speaker bios, and join the conversation, visit the Innovation Economy website at theinnovationeconomy.org. In 2009, the Aspen Institute co-sponsored the inaugural Innovation Economy summ...
The Georgetown University McCourt School of Public Policy’s Massive Data Institute Georgetown University’s Beeck Center for Social Impact & Innovation presented a discussion on Unlocking Data Across Sectors, featuring opening remarks by Karen Kornbluh, Executive Vice President of The Nielsen Company and a panel discussion with Brian Reich, Director, HIVE Project, UN Refugee Agency; Andrew Flowers, Quantitative Editor, FiveThirtyEight, Zach Markovits, Director of City Programs, What Works Cities and Laura Quinn, Chief Operating Officer of Catalist. The panel was moderated by Hollie Russon Gilman, Fellow, Georgetown University.
U.S. Ambassador to the OECD Karen Kornbluh talks about how the G20 looks to women to get the world economy growing again, at the Pre-G20 Growing Economies through Women's Economic Entrepreneurship conference in Paris. This conference previews new pilot programs that will translate the G20 Global Partnership for Financial Inclusion (GPFI) report into action, while spotlighting shared efforts and raising broader awareness of barriers to women's economic empowerment. Companies, governments and civil society can and are doing more to address these barriers and fully unleash the potential of women's entrepreneurship. More information at http://usoecd.usmission.gov/g20-gender2.html
The revelations regarding the NSA's PRISM surveillance program have triggered a series of strong reactions from states, including U.S. allies. They have also sparked renewed debate over how to regulate the free flow of information through the global Internet. CFR Senior Fellow Karen Kornbluh highlights three things to know about the world reaction to the NSA surveillance leaks. Spy vs. Spy: Initial reactions, although strong, are muted, according to Kornbluh. This is because foreign intelligence services "engage in similar activities," she says. Moreover, when compared to the United States, foreign intelligence services possess less oversight, she says. President Obama's promise to review U.S.-intelligence-gathering mechanisms, she says, would work towards balancing security and privacy "...
مقابلة قناة "الحرة" مع كارين كوربنلو السفيرة الأميركية السابقة لدى منظمة التعاون الاقتصادي والتنمية. Originally published at - http://www.alhurra.com/a/karen-kornbluh-dnc-interview/316961.html
Karen Kornbluh, U.S. Ambassador to OECD: Success of the internet, globally, resulted from a concerted effort; that same commitment is needed to ensure its continued growth and innovation. More: http://bit.ly/i2WOai
Karen Kornbluh, U.S. Ambassador, OECD: The internet is a powerful tool and we need collective action to protect it and ensure that it's available and accessible for everyone. More video: Principles of Internet Governance http://is.gd/XqdX3k
Larry Irving, Ambassador Bill Kennard, Ambassador Karen Kornbluh and Michael Powell speak about regulating the Internet. (c) Progressive Policy Institute
TRENDS: CYBERSECURITY, PRIVACY & THE FUTURE Cybersecurity and Risk Management: What Should Managers Be Doing Now? Material Dangers: Identifying Potential Threats and Defending Your Business Edward M. Stroz, Founder and Executive Chairman, Stroz Friedberg The Evolving Cybersecurity Legal Landscape: What Managers Need to Know Andrew Tannenbaum, Cybersecurity Counsel, IBM Global Trends: The Internet, Privacy and Data Management Ambassador Karen Kornbluh, Executive Vice President, External Affairs, Nielsen Discussion and Q & A with Edward Stroz, Andrew Tannenbaum and Ambassador Karen Kornbluh
On December 4, 2013, PPI honored Larry Irving, Ambassador Bill Kennard, Ambassador Karen Kornbluh, Ira Magaziner, and Michael Powell as digital policy pioneers at our event "Enabling the Internet: A Conversation with America's Digital Policy Pioneers." Each of these individuals made important contributions to that led to the exponential growth and the Internet's rapid emergence as a tool for communication, information access, global commerce and social networking. PPI brought them together on one stage to continue our ongoing conversation about how government can collaborate with private enterprise to take advantage of technology as a major engine of the U.S. economy. These leading architects of U.S. digital policy, looked back to the early debates and key decisions over Internet regulati...
•Rebecca Arbogast Senior Vice President, Global Public Policy Comcast Corporation •Donald Gips Venture Partner Columbia Capital Former United States Ambassador •Karen Kornbluh Executive Vice President, External Affairs Nielsen Senior Fellow for Digital Policy, Council on Foreign Relations •Chip Pickering Chief Executive Officer Comptel Moderator •Phil Weiser Dean University of Colorado Law School Executive Director Silicon Flatirons Center
The first attempt at establishing a national minimum wage, a part of 1933's sweeping National Industrial Recovery Act, was struck down by the Supreme Court in 1935. But in 1938, under the Fair Labor Standards Act, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed into law a minimum hourly wage of 25 cents—$4.07 in today's dollars. Three-quarters of a century later, we are still debating the merits of this cornerstone of the New Deal. Do we need government to ensure a decent paycheck, or would low-wage workers and the economy be better off without its intervention? For: James A. Dorn For: Russell Roberts Against: James Bernstein Against: Karen Kornbluh Like on us Facebook: http://bit.ly/IQ2onFacebook Tweet at us: http://bit.ly/IQ2Twitter Subscribe to us: http://bit.ly/IQ2onYouTube
A panel conversation with HKS Alumni: Paula Broadwell U.S. Army Reserve Major; Assistant Professor for the U.S. Military Academy and Author; MC/MPA '08 Hon. Stephen Donnelly Member of Parliament, Independent TD for Wicklow and East Carlow, Ireland; MPA/ID '08 Amb. Karen Kornbluh Consultant; Former Ambassador to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development; MPP '88 Peter J. Koutoujian Sheriff, Middlesex County, Massachusetts; MPA '02 David T. Ellwood (Moderator) Dean, Harvard Kennedy School of Government
The Georgetown University McCourt School of Public Policy’s Massive Data Institute Georgetown University’s Beeck Center for Social Impact & Innovation presented a discussion on Unlocking Data Across Sectors, featuring opening remarks by Karen Kornbluh, Executive Vice President of The Nielsen Company and a panel discussion with Brian Reich, Director, HIVE Project, UN Refugee Agency; Andrew Flowers, Quantitative Editor, FiveThirtyEight, Zach Markovits, Director of City Programs, What Works Cities and Laura Quinn, Chief Operating Officer of Catalist. The panel was moderated by Hollie Russon Gilman, Fellow, Georgetown University.
The Georgetown University McCourt School of Public Policy’s Massive Data Institute Georgetown University’s Beeck Center for Social Impact & Innovation presented a discussion on Unlocking Data Across Sectors, featuring opening remarks by Karen Kornbluh, Executive Vice President of The Nielsen Company and a panel discussion with Brian Reich, Director, HIVE Project, UN Refugee Agency; Andrew Flowers, Quantitative Editor, FiveThirtyEight, Zach Markovits, Director of City Programs, What Works Cities and Laura Quinn, Chief Operating Officer of Catalist. The panel was moderated by Hollie Russon Gilman, Fellow, Georgetown University.