Kalee Kreider

Kalee Kreider (born 1971) is the Head of Communications at National Geographic Society. She was the former environmental adviser and spokesperson for Al Gore. In this role, she helped developed the materials for An Inconvenient Truth. She is a Senior Adviser for the United Nations Foundation.

Kalee Kreider
Amy Kalee Kreider
Born1971
EducationHistory
Alma materRollins College (BS)
EmployerNational Geographic Society
Al Gore's Office
Fenton Communications

Education and early career

Kreider was born in Columbus, Ohio.[1] She studied history at Rollins College, which she graduated in 1992.[2] She joined Rollins College because of Pedro Pequeño, an anthropologist.[2] She began her career as a Truman Fellow in the Clinton Administration.[3][4] She was selected as the White House Scholar-in-Residence, where she worked on the Clinton Crime Bill.[2] She left the White House to set up a non-governmental organization called Ozone Action.[2] She worked for Greenpeace and the National Environment Trust (now one of The Pew Charitable Trusts).[2][5] During her time at Greenpeace, Kreider negotiated the Kyoto Protocol.[2][6]

Career

After the 2000 United States presidential election, it became obvious that the Kyoto Protocol was not going to be ratified.[2] Kreider left climate policy, and started a position at Fenton Communications.[2] She was recruited to Al Gore's team to help write a speech about the Iraq War.[2]

Kreider moved to Nashville, Tennessee, where she moved in 2006 to join the Office for Al Gore.[1] She served as Gore's environmental adviser.[1] During this time, she researched and marketed Al Gore's best-selling books and the film An Inconvenient Truth.[3] The work she did with Gore contributed to his Nobel Peace Prize.[2]

In 2013 Kreider established her own consultancy, Kreider Strategies LLC. The consultancy provided information about climate change and technology. In 2019 she was made Chief of Content at the National Geographic Society, where she will lead corporate communications and public affairs.[7]

She is a Senior Adviser for the United Nations Foundation and Vulcan Inc..[3] She has called for more women to be involved with monitoring and mitigating climate change.[1]

Personal life

Kreider is married to Jack Pratt, a farmer turned politician.[2]

gollark: Interesting perspective I guess, though I don't know how effective it it is at that.
gollark: I mean, it does to some extent, but it teaches it in odd ways which are kind of orthogonal to regular programs.
gollark: Okay, why do you like Scratch being taught?
gollark: Actually, there's an argument to be made that you might get people who are more *interested* in programming if they learn it independently rather than being forced to at school.
gollark: Yes. But they mostly teach Scratch and stuff.

References

  1. Graves, Lucia. "Women Saving the Planet: Kalee Kreider of the United States". Pacific Standard. Retrieved 2019-06-04.
  2. "Kalee Kreider '92 | Alumni Profile | Spring 2009 | Rollins Magazine". www.rollins.edu. Retrieved 2019-06-04.
  3. "Kalee Kreider". unfoundation.org. 2019-04-02. Retrieved 2019-06-04.
  4. "Kalee Kreider (Moderator)". World Bank Live. 2015-08-26. Retrieved 2019-06-04.
  5. "CNN.com - Transcripts". www.cnn.com. Retrieved 2019-06-04.
  6. Journal, John J. Fialka and Jackie CalmesStaff Reporters of The Wall Street. "Clinton Unveils Plan to Reduce Emissions of Greenhouse Gases". WSJ. Retrieved 2019-06-04.
  7. "National Geographic Society Names Kalee Kreider Chief of Content, Communications and Public Affairs". National Geographic Society Newsroom. 2019-06-03. Retrieved 2019-06-04.
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