Daniel Eisenhut
Daniel Eisenhut grew up in Israel and moved to Switzerland in 1997. It was while serving in the Israeli military that he discovered both his creative side and the strength of women. In his work, he strives to make underrepresented people visible while questioning social norms. This has taken him all over the globe to paint marginalized groups. He is currently working on his newest project, “one thousand leaders”, a continuation of “red lipstick leaders”, for which Daniel painted 100 female leaders from Switzerland.
Robin Errico
Robin Errico has over 30 years of professional experience and is currently the Chief Risk Officer for EY in Switzerland and a member of its Management Committee.
Apart from being an Assurance Audit Partner serving multinational United States (US) and Swiss listed companies, she is the Diversity & Inclusion Leader for EY in Switzerland, carrying out her passion to work closely with EY’s most important assets, the People. This role carries a significant purpose and underscores the importance of a diverse and inclusive culture as well as driving Inclusive Leadership at EY.
Thania Paffenholz
Dr. Thania Paffenholz is an internationally recognized expert in support of peace processes with 25 years of work experience as an academic, a policy advisor, and a practitioner. She is the Director of the Inclusive Peace and Transition Initiative (IPTI) at the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies in Geneva. Dr. Paffenholz’s main fields of expertise are: mediation and inclusive peace process design, women's representation and influence (for which she conducted a remarkable study: Making Women Count, Not Just Counting Women), and gender mainstreaming in peace and political transition processes, strategy development for actors involved in mediation and peacebuilding, inclusive peace negotiations and implementation including National Dialogues, civil society in peace processes, planning and evaluation of peace processes, as well as the development-peace nexus. In recognition of her work, Dr. Paffenholz received the prestigious Wihuri International Prize in 2015.