Mora Fernández
Mora Fernández is a Mexican ARTivist, consultant, human rights defender, survivor, and advocate for victims of child sexual abuse with 25 years of international experience creating innovative, disruptive, and radical advocacy and artistic projects to end rape culture, heal trauma, and change public policies. She is the Founder and CEO of La Casa Mandarina AC (Mexico) and co-director of FORCE: upsetting rape culture (Baltimore), both organisations devoted to ending sexual violence through ARTivism. Mora is the co-investigator of a research project with the University of York on artivist knowledge, resistance, and impact on sexual and gender violence in Mexico.
Sona Mitra
Sona Mitra is a feminist economist from India and currently the Director- Policy and Research at IWWAGE, an initiative of LEAD at Krea University, India. For the last two decades, she has worked in the area of women, labour, and development. She has extensively investigated the issues of women's labour force participation in the region, especially in India, engaging with the care economy, data on women's work, and gender-responsive budgeting. Sona's work at IWWAGE was very recently honoured at the Asia-Pacific Ministerial Conference on the Beijing+30 Review.
Sohini Shoaib
Sohini Shoaib is a queer feminist activist working for nearly a decade in the flood-ravaged Kosi-Seemanchal area of Bihar, one of the poorest states in the east of India. As part of a union of informal workers, Jan Jagran Shakti Sangathan (JJSS), Shoaib works with landless labourers, marginal farmers, rural youth and other oppressed communities to help mobilise and unionise under people’s leadership, for people’s rights – whether they be those of land, labour, caste annihilation and gender justice, to address gaps in governance or violence by the State. Furthermore, Shoaib is a part of larger movements and campaigns around the right to work, food sovereignty, social security and health, transparency and accountability in governments, democratic rights and for queer and feminist interventions in the country.
Ngqabutho Nceku Mpofu
Ngqabutho Nceku Mpofu (He/Him), commonly known as Butho has extensive experience in the South Africa civil society space, having worked in it for twelve years on the right to health and the right to basic education. He started at SECTION27 before moving to the Treatment Action Campaign (TAC), working as the Policy, Communications, and Research Manager. Together with multiple comrades, Ngqabutho has been privileged to have worked on some of the most momentous issues and projects in the country since 2010, including but not limited to the Limpopo textbooks case, Life Esidimeni, and the Ritshidze project. He has also worked on membership and community literacy on issues such as the NHI Bill and on campaigns calling on the state to declare TB a national health emergency and access to medicines. Ngqabutho is passionate about promoting data-driven advocacy efforts in the Global South, assisting community-led monitoring efforts from Rwanda, Liberia, Cameroon, Mozambique and Zimbabwe. His research interests lie in the field of migration, with a specific interest in statelessness. His work at the SCIS will focus on looking at how some of the most vulnerable and marginalised groups - stateless people in South Africa - navigate space and access healthcare in the country.