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Ambassador Andrew Young
Ambassador
Andrew Young’s humanitarian efforts and influence have spanned
the globe. From his beginnings as an ordained minister and top
aide to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. during the civil rights movement to
his current position as founding principal and chair of Good Works International,
an organization that embraces his long-held mission of facilitating economic
development in the Caribbean and Africa, Ambassador Young has dedicated
himself to improving the lives of all people, particularly those in Africa
and the Diaspora.
His “good works” have taken him to more than 150 countries,
including 48 of 53 countries in Africa. Through his leadership,
countries throughout the world have created a successful model that combines
religion, education, democracy and free enterprise in ways that support
the public good.
Ambassador Young has received honorary degrees from more than 60 institutions,
including his alma mater, Howard University, Swarthmore College, Duke
University, Emory University, Clark Atlanta University, the University
of Georgia and Morehouse College, which named its Center for International
Affairs in his honor. He has also received honorary degrees from international
educational institutions including the University of Pretoria South Africa
and the University of Maiduguri Nigeria. Georgia State University’s
School of Policy Studies, which carries his name, is one of the best
policy schools in the United States.
Ambassador Young served in the United States Congress and as United
States Ambassador to the United Nations during the Carter Administration.
In 1996, he was awarded the Olympic Order, the highest award of the Olympic
Movement, for his work as International Vice President for Law Engineering
and Chair of the Centennial Olympic Games hosted in Atlanta.
Ambassador Young serves or has served on numerous corporate boards of
directors and advisory boards including the Southern African Enterprise
Development Fund, the Leon H. Sullivan Foundation, The Martin Luther
King Jr Center for Nonviolent Social Change, Diversapack, Barrick Gold,
United Nations, AMC and Atlanta Falcons.
While mayor of the City of Atlanta for two terms, Young helped attract
1100 new businesses and 70 billion dollars in private investments, and
created one million new jobs. His leadership helped the City to earn
the international reputation it holds today. The author of two books,
A Way Out of No Way and An Easy Burden, Young continues to call Atlanta
home where he lives with his wife, Carolyn McClain Young. He is the father
of three daughters and one son and the grandfather of six.
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