Grad brings fight to end human trafficking from Uganda to Kennedy School

Tuesday, May 23, 2017 - 12:41 in Psychology & Sociology

This is one in a series of profiles showcasing some of Harvard’s stellar graduates. From the day of her birth in Uganda, Agnes Igoye confronted a world where girls were not valued. Igoye’s mother, having already given birth to two girls, was expected by relatives and neighbors to produce a boy. Agnes’s arrival on March 8 (coincidentally International Women’s Day) was greeted as a bitter disappointment that bordered on “scandalous,” said Igoye, M.C./M.P.A .’17. “And so, growing up in that atmosphere, when you’re not valued as girls, even education becomes [very difficult]. Many girls don’t get the chance.” Thankfully, her parents knew the importance of education. Her father had put himself through school selling cassava roots, while her mother, a prodigy living in the bush, was “discovered” by missionary sisters who paid for her education. Both became teachers who bucked convention by insisting that their daughters (six of their eight children) get an...

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