Martina Vandenberg
Martina E. Vandenberg (born c. 1968[1]) is an American lawyer, activist,[2] and nonprofit executive.[3] She is the founder and president of the Human Trafficking Legal Center,[4][5][6] a nonprofit that trains pro bono lawyers to seek restitution for human trafficking victims.[7] Early life and educationVandenberg grew up in Gilroy, California.[1] She attended Pomona College, where she studied international relations and was president of the student body.[1] After graduating in 1990, she earned a masters degree in Russian/East European studies[2] from Oxford University as a Rhodes Scholar.[4] In 1992, at the age of 24, she moved to Russia and founded the country's first rape crisis center.[2] She became a Truman Scholar in 1998,[8] and earned a J.D. from Columbia Law School.[4] CareerVandenberg was a researcher for Human Rights Watch, for which she authored two reports, "Hopes Betrayed: Trafficking of Women and Girls to Post-Conflict Bosnia & Herzegovina for Forced Prostitution" and "Kosovo: Rape as a Weapon of 'Ethnic Cleansing.'" She was also a partner at Jenner & Block LLP, where she focused on commercial litigation and investigations of companies that illegally bribed foreign governments to advance their business interests.[4] In 2012, she founded the Human Trafficking Legal Center with support from the Open Society Foundations.[4] The center is a nonprofit that trains pro bono lawyers to seek restitution for victims of human trafficking. As of 2021[update], she has trained more than 4000 attorneys.[4] RecognitionIn 2020, she was the commencement speaker at Pomona,[8] and was awarded an honorary doctorate.[9] References
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