Saran Kaba Jones

Saran Kaba Jones (born on 21 June 1982) is a clean water advocate and social entrepreneur from Liberia. She is the founder of FACE Africa, an organization working to strengthen water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) infrastructure and services in rural communities across sub-Saharan Africa.[1] She is World Economic Forum Young Global Leader and a 2016 TIME Magazine Next Generation Leader.[2] Her work with FACE Africa has been profiled in the Boston Globe,[3] and CNN Inside Africa.[4][5]

Saran Kaba Jones
Headshot of Jones
Born (1982-06-21) June 21, 1982
NationalityLiberian/American
Occupation(s)Founder and CEO of FACE Africa
WEF Young Global Leader 2013
Websitewww.faceafrica.org

Background and education

She was born from Monrovia, Liberia where she lived up the age of eight years and she moved with her parents and 3 brother to Cote de 'Ivoire in 1989 because to the civil war that broke out. She lived there for two years with her mother's family and they moved to Egypt in 1991 when her father was appointed ambassador of the government of Liberia to the middle east. She spent four years in Egypt and two years in Cyprus before moving to the United States for college at Lesley college, Cambridge Massachusetts then transferred to Harvard College where she studied Government and International Relations. [6]

Career

She spent five years working for a private equity for the Singapore government's Economic Development Board, a job she left in August 2010 to concentrate on FACE Africa.[6]

Awards and recognitions

2015

  • MTV Africa Music Leadership Award

2013

  • Guardian UK: listed as one of Africa's 25 Top Women Achievers[7]
  • 2013 World Economic Forum Young Global Leader [8]

2012

  • Longines/ Town&Country "Women Who Make A Difference' Award[9]
  • Black Enterprise as one of 10 International Women of Power to Watch
  • Daily Muse "12 Women to Watch"

2011

  • Applause Africa "Person of the Year" award
  • Voss Foundation's Women Helping Women Honoree
  • Huffington Post "Greatest Person of the Day"[10]
  • Forbes Magazine's 20 Youngest Power Women In Africa[11]

References

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