Alumni Directory Display

Audrey Atencio website photoAudrey Atencio 2014-2015 Fellow with UN World Food Programme, Uganda Georgetown University Class of 2014

Alumni Update:

Audrey is currently the Systems Lead of One Acre Fund’s Zambia program, where she leads the Logistics, Procurement, and Business Operations (internal finance/data) teams, as well as technology integrations.

Fellow Bio:

Audrey majored in International Politics with a Certificate in International Development at Georgetown University School of Foreign Service. While in school, she interned at the Office of the Special Envoy for Sudan and South Sudan at the U.S. Department of State, TechnoServe, the Grameen Foundation, the Center for Global Development, and the International Fund for Agricultural Development. Audrey brought her interest in development and international affairs back to campus through her extracurricular activities. She worked with the Social Innovation Public Service Fund to allocate $50,000 annually to fund innovative service and research projects. She also worked with the Hilltop Microfinance Initiative’s Client Recruitment and Development teams to find new clients and donors to grow the small microfinance institution. In past years, she managed fundraising efforts to raise $24,000 for ‘charity: water’ and helped plan four major conferences with the Georgetown International Relations Club. While working with WFP in Uganda, Audrey hopes to explore East Africa and learn more about food security and humanitarian response operations.

Anu Atre 2014-2015 Fellow with International Rescue Committee (IRC), Ethiopia Colorado College Class of 2013

Anu is from San Luis Obispo, California and graduated from Colorado College in 2013 with a degree in Sociology and a minor in Nonviolence. Anu’s primary interests lie in refugee affairs and post-conflict reconciliation. While at Colorado College, she conducted a senior thesis on migrant receptivity in small-town America through a case study of a rural Colorado town experiencing a rapid influx of East African refugees. Anu spent a semester studying post-genocide restoration and peacebuilding in Rwanda and Uganda. While in Rwanda, she carried out an independent study on the relationship between community-based conservation and empowerment in the villages surrounding Volcanoes National Park. She has interned at the National Geographic Society and the African Community Center, a refugee resettlement nonprofit in Denver. Anu currently works at OMNI Institute, a social research nonprofit evaluating grant-funded programs surrounding juvenile justice and behavioral health. While in Ethiopia, Anu is excited to learn some Amharic, participate in Ethiopian traditions, and explore the Bale Mountains, the Simien Mountains, and the numerous surrounding national parks.

Byron Austin 2009-2010 Fellow with mothers2mothers, South Africa Princeton University Class of 2007

Alumni Update:

After his fellowship, Byron stayed on with mothers2mothers for another two years. He moved back from Cape Town to New York City, where he got married and started at Rabin Martin, a global health strategy consulting firm. After about a year and a half at the firm, he transitioned onto the Corporate Contributions team at Johnson & Johnson. Funnily enough, in this new role, he manages a mothers2mothers grant and work with Rabin Martin on communications strategies for portfolios. Full circle!

Fellow Bio:

Byron is a comparative literature major from Morris Plains, NJ. After graduation, he had a short stint at a notable fashion magazine, yet spent more than 1.5 years at Bloomberg Finance, LP where he managed a small team in the client services department. Through Princeton, Byron was able to study abroad in Spain and Argentina in addition to volunteer for Child Family Health International in Oaxaca, Mexico. While in Cape Town for his fellowship, Byron looks forward to working at a NGO and tackling many issues that were addressed in his senior thesis in the real world!

Jennifer Austin 2006-2007 Fellow with International Rescue Committee (IRC), Liberia Princeton University Class of 2005

Alumni Update:

Jennifer is currently in her first year of the two-year Master’s Degree in Public Administration in International Development at the Harvard Kennedy School, studying development economics and policy. She is interested in climate change policy and economics, and currently hunting for an internship in that field for this summer.

After her fellowship in Liberia in 2006-2007, Jennifer stayed at the IRC for an additional 6 months as the Field Manager in the Lofa County Field office, where she managed logistics for IRC programs in the County. She moved home at the end of 2007 and joined President Obama’s presidential campaign as a volunteer and then full-time Field Organizer. Jennifer worked in the Communications Office at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in the Department of Commerce in Washington, DC for two and a half years during President Obama’s first Administration and was the Press Secretary for the State of Pennsylvania for his re-election campaign in 2012. She spent the time between the 2012 campaign and starting school catching up with family and friends and travelling to a few new countries!

Sami Ayele 2020-2021 Fellow with African Leadership Academy, South Africa Johns Hopkins University Class of 2019

Sami, born and raised in South Seattle, graduated from Johns Hopkins University with a degree in the natural sciences and international studies. His work experiences in undergrad ranged from cancer research at the University of Michigan to digital health software and business development in Lagos, Nigeria at a startup he credits with opening his eyes to opportunities on the continent. This professional interest goes well with his language background – having studied Mandarin Chinese, Arabic, and Wolof through courses and a study abroad program where he conducted research on youth organizing in Sufi communities in Senegal, Italy, and France. Sami interned at Bloomberg Philanthropies where he supported early stage public-private partnerships across youth employment and business verticals. After a scholarship program in Taiwan just before COVID-19 hit the US, he is excited to be working with the African Leadership Academy.

Anna Bachan 2017-2018 Fellow with African School of Economics, Benin New York University Class of 2017

Alumni Update:

Currently, she is working as a consultant for the International Organization for Migration (IOM) Regional Office for West and Central Africa. Her work focuses on a regional research project to assess recruitment and protection mechanisms for migrant workers from the region abroad, primarily in the ECOWAS and Gulf Cooperation Country regions.

Fellow Bio:

Anna graduated in May 2017 with a Bachelor’s degree in Global Liberal Studies (concentrating on Politics, Rights, and Development) and double minoring in French, and Public Policy and Management. Anna has worked for several nonprofit organizations throughout her academic career, from Girl Rising, a documentary campaign to promote girl’s education, to Human Rights Foundation, an organization which supports political dissidents in countries with authoritarian governments. Her interest in development work in Africa was strengthened last summer, which she spent in Dakar, Senegal, interning and conducting research for her thesis on female migration and its’ impact on social and economic development. Anna returned to Senegal for a month last January to finish her research, and was awarded the best thesis overall in NYU’s Global Liberal Studies class of 2017. In her free time, Anna loves to read and hike, she is an avid backpacker, adventurer, and “Couchsurfer”. Lastly, she can’t wait for the fellowship to explore Benin, continue her research, make new friends and practice her French!

Noor Badri 2024-2025 Fellow with Botswana Baylor (formerly BIPAI Botswana), Botswana University of California, San Diego Class of 2024

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Noor Badri is a recent graduate from the University of California, San Diego. She received her Bachelor’s degree in Global Health with a minor in Human Rights and Migration. Originating from Sudan, Noor’s dual Sudanese-American heritage has enriched her with a profound cultural insight into both the global North and South. At UC San Diego, Noor held various leadership positions in many organizations including the Student Promoted Access Center for Education & Service, the Muslim Student Association, the Sudanese Student Association, and served as an ambassador for the University of California Global Health Institute. Noor’s professional journey includes serving remotely as a public health intern at Training, Research, Education for Driving Safety at UC San Diego School of Medicine, significantly contributing to driving safety initiatives as well as working as a lab intern at UCSD’s Displacement and Health Research Lab studying the Arab-refugee population in San Diego. She was also involved with the local refugee youth community in San Diego vis-a-vis the Majdal Center mentorship which she founded and directed. Noor aspires to work for organizations dedicated to health equity that view health as a human right. In her own life, Noor is very outspoken about global socio-political issues, often attending protests. She is deeply interested in working with under-served and marginalized communities in the global south that experience the repercussions of colonialism, climate change, and displacement. Following the Princeton in Africa fellowship, Noor plans to attend graduate school and receive a Master’s in Public Health before formally entering the workforce.

Ornella Baganizi 2019-2020 Fellow with Mainsprings, Tanzania American University Class of 2019

Ornella Baganizi graduated from American University with a degree in International Studies focusing on Global Inequality and Development and a regional focus in Sub-Saharan Africa. Her family is from Rwanda, but she was born in Quebec, Canada, and speaks fluent French. As a child, Ornella spent a few years living in Bamako, Mali. She has interned for Voice of America in the Central Africa Division, where she assisted in the production of two live radio shows. She also interned for the Office of Senator Chuck Schumer. She was a 2017 Boren Scholarship recipient to study Swahili in Tanzania. She also studied abroad in Kenya and interned at a community-based radio station in the Kivuli Center for at-risk youth. Her senior year of college, Ornella organized and led an Alternative Break trip to Arusha, Tanzania, which focused on the legacy of Pan-Africanism and the rights of marginalized communities. Ornella is passionate about youth development through artistic expression. She is excited to return to Tanzania as a Princeton in Africa Fellow at Mainsprings and looks forward to be working with young women.

Haja Bah 2021-2022 Fellow with Mount Elgon Ecosystem Trust (MEET), Kenya Skidmore College Class of 2021

Haja is from Freetown, Sierra Leone. She attended United World College, Red Cross Nordic from 2015 to 2017 where she transitioned to Skidmore College New York to complete her Bachelor of Arts Degree in environmental studies. Haja will be working with EL-KOONY Center in Kitale Kenya, as a Communications and Marketing Fellow. Haja is very interested in the field of development and looks forward to gaining new skills while learning Swahili. Moreover, she is very excited to learn more about issues affecting women, especially period poverty to see how best she can improve and expand her social enterprise, uman4uman, a Sierra Leonean-based business that produces reusable sanitary pads for women and girls.

Desiree Bailey 2011-2012 Fellow with Equal Education, South Africa Georgetown University Class of 2011

Alumni Update:

Desiree is an English teacher at Saint Ann’s School in Brooklyn Heights, NY, although she was recently granted a leave to attend a graduate creative writing program at NYU.

Fellow Bio:

Desiree (Georgetown ‘11) is an English major and African Studies minor. She was born in Trinidad and Tobago and lives in Queens, NY. Desiree has a deep interest in education and was involved in the DC Public Schools System through programs such as DC Reads and DC Schools. She is also involved in the written and performing arts, performing original poetry on campus and around DC. Desiree pursued her love for education and the arts while studying abroad at the University of the Western Cape in South Africa. She is excited to return for a year and hopes to deepen her knowledge of the nation’s history and culture.

Our History

In 1999, a group of Princeton alumni, faculty, and staff launched Princeton in Africa as an independent affiliate of Princeton University inspired by the University’s informal motto, “Princeton in the Nation’s Service and in the Service of All Nations.” In 2010, the program opened up to include graduates of any US accredited university in order to meet the growing demand from host organizations and allow more young professionals access to the unique opportunities afforded by PiAf. During the past 20 years, we have placed over 600 Fellows with more than 100 organizations in 36 countries, while developing more strategic partnerships across Africa and creating more opportunities for our alumni community to engage with the continent and with one another.

Testimonials

The International Rescue Committee has been so fortunate to have had a longstanding relationship with Princeton in Africa since our very first Fellows landed in Rwanda in 1999.  Whether it was Emily or Renee in 1999 or the 110 Fellows across 14 IRC countries over the years, we have been blessed by the relationship, the quality of the Fellows and the impact on what IRC does on the ground every single day.

Brian Johnson
Chief Human Resources Officer
International Rescue Committee

My fellowship has been the most impactful personal and professional development opportunity of my life. I wanted a post-college experience that would push my limits, expand my comfort zone, and help me discern the next steps in my career journey. And this has been the case.

Ryan Elliott
2014-15 Fellow
Baylor Pediatric AIDS Initiative in Lesotho

I can honestly say that this year has changed my life and my view of what’s possible for the future. Princeton in Africa isn’t just a one-year fellowship, it’s an introduction to a particular way of life and a new way of thinking about the world. I feel like so many doors are open now that I never would have considered before.

Katie Fackler
2010-11 Fellow
UN World Food Programme

My Princeton in Africa fellowship was everything I could have hoped for and much more. The myriad of experiences makes my head swim, and it has strengthened my desire to help underserved populations worldwide.

David Bartels
2006-2007 Fellow
Baylor Pediatric AIDS Initiative

Princeton in Africa was an invaluable experience for me. I learned an infinite amount through my work and through living in Uganda. I also realized that I want to continue working on African issues as long as I can.

Alexis Okeowo
2006-2007 Fellow
The New Vision

The International Rescue Committee’s experience with Princeton in Africa has been exceptional. Each Fellow brings excellent writing and analytical skills as well as unique interests and passions that enrich the program and the field office environment. We were so pleased we expanded the program to more field offices.

Susan Riehl
Human Resources, IRC

The Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation has been working in Africa for over 11 years through its Secure the Future program.  One common theme in all aspects of program implementation is having passionate, energetic individuals on the ground who can think outside the box and then transfer the skills for sustainability.  The Princeton In Africa Fellows have been a huge asset in this regard and our programs and patients have been better for it.

John Damonti
President, Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation