Julie Dorf
Julie Dorf (born February 28, 1965) is an international human rights advocate best known as the founding executive director of OutRight Action International (then known as the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission).[1] She started the organization in 1990 and served as executive director until 2000.
Activisim
As scholar Ryan Thoreson describes in his book Transnational LGBT Activism, Dorf "built the organization from a grassroots group in the style of ACT-UP or Queer Nation into a more professional 501(c)(3) that became an authoritative source for information about LGBT rights globally."[2]
Dorf was subsequently on staff at the Horizons Foundation, a San Francisco Bay Area LGBT philanthropic organization before becoming a senior advisor at the Council for Global Equality, an organization she helped create and which advocates for LGBT-inclusive American foreign policy.[3]
A leader in the movement toward international LGBT equality for many decades, a few of Dorf's other activities include: co-founding the Pink Triangle Coalition on reparations for homosexual victims of Nazi persecution; implementing the Russia Freedom Fund to assist LGBT activists in the former Soviet Union battling anti-gay laws and serving on numerous boards and advisory boards. Over the years she has served as an independent consultant for WPATH, Open Society Institute, Global Fund for Women, Arcus Foundation, and Fenton Communications/J-Street Project. Julie currently serves on the board of directors of Freedom to Marry and PowerPAC; on the advisory boards of Human Rights Watch's LGBT Rights Program and IGLHRC; as well as on the Northern California Finance Committee of J-Street.
References
- ↑ Julie Dorf, Senior Advisor, Council for Global Equality". Retrieved June 3, 2017.
- ↑ Thorson, Ryan (May 12, 2015). Ryan Thoreson on the Struggles, Achievements and Foibles of a Quarter Century of Transnational LGBT Activism, queered spaces & queerer ecologies. Retrieved June 3, 2017.
- ↑ "About us". Council for Global Equality. 2010. Retrieved June 4, 2017.