Diversity & Inclusion

In Conversation with Rebecca Cokley

Past

Aug 18, 2023

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Headshot of Rebecca Cokley

This Public Health Conversation Starter features Rebecca Cokely in conversation with Yvette Cozier, BUSPH Associate Dean for Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Justice. Rebecca shares about her role as Program Officer for U.S. Disability Rights at the Ford Foundation, her experience working for the Obama administration, and her advocacy for people with disabilities.

Our Conversation Starters engage leading thinkers in short discussions around issues of consequence in public health. This Starter is part of SPH Reads, our school-wide reading program hosted by the Office of Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Justice. In conjunction with this year’s book selection, Disability Visibility: First-Person Stories from the Twenty-First Century, Dean Cozier is having discussions with leaders who are working to advance the health of disabled populations.

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In Conversation with Rebecca Cokley

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Speakers

Rebecca Cokley

Rebecca Cokley

Program Officer, U.S. Disability Rights, Ford Foundation

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Biography

Rebecca Cokley is the program officer for the foundation’s first-ever U.S. Disability Rights program, which is focused on strengthening the field, building a pipeline of diverse leadership, promoting disability pride, and mobilizing resources toward disability rights work. She also serves as the foundation’s liaison to the President’s Council for Disability Inclusion in Philanthropy.

Prior to joining Ford, Rebecca was the cofounder and director of the Disability Justice initiative at the Center for American Progress, where she built out a progressive policy platform that protected the rights and services disabled people depend on for survival and also developed innovative solutions like a proposed disabled worker tax credit and increased access to capital for disability-owned small businesses. She also stewarded a campaign that resulted in an unprecedented 12 presidential candidates developing disability policy platforms.

Prior to her work at American Progress, she served as the executive director for the National Council on Disability, where she worked on sexual violence on college campuses, policing reform, and the civil rights of disabled parents. A three-time presidential appointee, Rebecca served in key policy roles at the Department of Education and the Department of Health and Human Services, as well as oversaw diversity and inclusion efforts for the Obama administration.

Rebecca is a frequent speaker and contributor on issues of public policy and disability inclusion in the media and at major national conferences. She has a bachelor’s degree in politics from the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Resources

A full transcript of this Conversation is available here