Sheetal maulik biography of barack obama

  • In 2014, I was appointed
  • Annual National AAPI Day Against Bullying & Hate

    Sarah Ha, Senior Director of Strategy, Coalition for Asian American Children and Families (CACF) (she/her)

    Sarah Ha is the Senior Director of Strategy at the Coalition for Asian American Children and Families (CACF), where she spearheads the organization’s comprehensive strategy to drive impactful change for marginalized Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) communities across New York. She oversees policy advocacy, membership and coalition-building, and leadership development programs, ensuring they align with CACF’s mission to enhance the health, well-being, and safety of marginalized AAPI children and families.

    With over 20 years of experience driving strategic transformations in the racial and social justice, nonprofit, education, and social impact sectors, Sarah specializes in strategic partnerships, cross-racial coalition building, organizational strategy, leadership development, and diversity, equity, inclusion, and belonging (DEIB) capacity building. A Professional Diversity Coach and trained Intergroup Dialogue Facilitator, she leverages her narrative as the daughter of working-class immigrants, caregiver, and satellite child to her professional practice, fostering environments of growth, healing, and transformation.

    Before joining CACF, Sarah founded Jayu Consulting, LLC, a strategy coaching and consulting firm dedicated to empowering social impact leaders and organizations to deepen their connections and amplify their transformative impact. As Vice President of National Community Alliances at Teach For America (TFA), she led external engagement strategies with national civil rights and mission-aligned organizations, building intersectional partnerships across Black, Native, AAPI, Latinx, immigrant, and LGBTQ+ communities. Her leadership at TFA included founding the AAPI Community Alliances, which mobilized and developed AAPI leaders to drive systemic change in education, earning her team nat

  • Dr. Shah shared her
  • Blog

    Sarah Ha, Senior Director of Strategy, Coalition for Asian American Children and Families (CACF) (she/her)

    Sarah Ha is the Senior Director of Strategy at the Coalition for Asian American Children and Families (CACF), where she spearheads the organization’s comprehensive strategy to drive impactful change for marginalized Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) communities across New York. She oversees policy advocacy, membership and coalition-building, and leadership development programs, ensuring they align with CACF’s mission to enhance the health, well-being, and safety of marginalized AAPI children and families.

    With over 20 years of experience driving strategic transformations in the racial and social justice, nonprofit, education, and social impact sectors, Sarah specializes in strategic partnerships, cross-racial coalition building, organizational strategy, leadership development, and diversity, equity, inclusion, and belonging (DEIB) capacity building. A Professional Diversity Coach and trained Intergroup Dialogue Facilitator, she leverages her narrative as the daughter of working-class immigrants, caregiver, and satellite child to her professional practice, fostering environments of growth, healing, and transformation.

    Before joining CACF, Sarah founded Jayu Consulting, LLC, a strategy coaching and consulting firm dedicated to empowering social impact leaders and organizations to deepen their connections and amplify their transformative impact. As Vice President of National Community Alliances at Teach For America (TFA), she led external engagement strategies with national civil rights and mission-aligned organizations, building intersectional partnerships across Black, Native, AAPI, Latinx, immigrant, and LGBTQ+ communities. Her leadership at TFA included founding the AAPI Community Alliances, which mobilized and developed AAPI leaders to drive systemic change in education, earning her team national recognition, including the 2018 Leadership

  • Indian Americans are citizens
  • List of Indian Americans

    Not to be confused with List of Native Americans of the United States or List of indigenous people of the Americas.

    Indian Americans are citizens or residents of the United States of America who trace their family descent to India. Notable Indian Americans include:

    This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources.

    Academics

    Nobel Prize recipients

    • Har Gobind Khorana (1922–2011), Nobel Prize in Medicine, 1968
    • Subramanyan Chandrasekhar (1910–1995), Nobel Prize for Physics, 1983
    • Venkatraman Ramakrishnan (b. 1952), Nobel Prize in Chemistry, 2009; Former President of the Royal Society, (2015–2020)
    • Abhijit Banerjee (b. 1961), Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, 2019; Ford Foundation International Professor of Economics at Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Deans and presidents

    • Rakesh Khurana (born 1967), dean of Harvard College
    • Neeli Bendapudi (born 1962), president of University of Louisville
    • Jamshed Bharucha (born 1956), former president of Cooper Union, (2011–2015); former dean of arts & sciences at Dartmouth College and former provost at Tufts University
    • Vijay K. Dhir (born 1943), former dean of the UCLAHenry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science, (2003–2016)
    • Ravi V. Bellamkonda (born 1968), Vinik Dean of Engineering at Duke UniversityEdmund T. Pratt Jr. School of Engineering
    • Dinesh D'Souza (born 1961), former president of The King's College, New York, (2010–2012)
    • Anjli Jain (born 1981), executive director of Campus Consortium
    • Dipak C. Jain (born 1957), former dean of INSEAD, (2011–2013); former dean of the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University, (2001–2009)
    • Vistasp Karbhari, former president of the University of Texas at Arlington, (2013–2020)
    • Pramod Khargonekar (born 1956), control th

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