President Obama Appoints Friend of ESP

Please join us at Entertainment & Sports Plus in congratulating our good friend and fellow Oberlin College graduate, Jacqueline A. Berrien, on her nomination by President Barack Obama to head the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

Jacqueline’s efforts in labor & employment mirror our efforts in the sports business industry.

Her success and commitment to the cause of fairness is no surprise to those who know Oberlin, one of the finest institutions of higher learning in the country, the first White school to admit Blacks in 1835, and a key stop along the Underground Railroad the informal network of secret routes and safe houses used by 19th century Black slaves in the United States to escape to free states and Canada with the aid of abolitionists who were sympathetic to the cause.

Jacqueline Berrien Nominated to Chair EEOC

President Obama said, "Jacqueline Berrien has spent her entire career fighting to give voice to underrepresented communities and protect our most basic rights. Each of us deserves a fair chance to succeed in our workplace and make a contribution to this nation, and I’m confident that Jacqueline’s passion and leadership will ensure that the Equal Employment Opportunity

 

 

Commission is living up to that mission. I look forward to undertaking this important work with Jacqueline in the months and years ahead."

Ms. Berrien has served as Associate Director-Counsel of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund (LDF) since September 2004. In that position, she assists with the direction and implementation of LDF’s national legal advocacy and scholarship programs. Ms. Berrien served from 2001 to 2004 as a Program Officer in the Ford Foundation’s Peace and Social Justice Program, where she administered more than $13 million of grants to promote greater political participation by underrepresented groups and remove barriers to civic engagement. Prior to joining the Ford Foundation, Ms. Berrien was an Assistant Counsel with LDF and directed the Fund’s voting rights and political participation work. For eight years before that, Ms. Berrien was a staff attorney with the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights and the American Civil Liberties Union. Berrien has also taught in trial advocacy programs at Fordham and Harvard law schools and served on the adjunct faculty of New York Law School. She began her legal career clerking for the Honorable U.W. Clemons, the first African-American appointed to the U.S. District Court in Birmingham, Alabama. Ms. Berrien is a graduate of Harvard Law School, where she served as a General Editor of the Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review. She received her Bachelor of Arts degree with High Honors in Government from Oberlin College and also completed a major in English.

     

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