Former
First Lady Rosalynn Carter has worked
for more than three decades to improve
the quality of life for people around
the world. Today, she is an advocate
for mental health, early childhood immunization,
human rights, and conflict resolution
through her work at The Carter Center
in Atlanta, Ga. The Center is a private,
nonprofit institution founded by former
President and Mrs. Jimmy Carter in 1982.
A full partner with the president
in all the Center's activities, the
former First Lady is vice chair of
the Center's Board of Trustees. She
created and chairs The Carter Center's
Mental Health Task Force, an advisory
body of experts, consumers, and advocates
promoting positive change in the mental
health field. Each year, she hosts
the Rosalynn Carter Symposium on Mental
Health Policy, bringing together leaders
of the nation's mental health organizations
to address critical issues. Mrs. Carter
emerged as a driving force for mental
health when, during the Carter administration,
she became active honorary chair of
the President's Commission on Mental
Health, which resulted in passage
of the Mental Health Systems Act of
1980.
Mother of four, Mrs. Carter has maintained
a life-long dedication to issues affecting
women and children. In 1991, she launched
with Mrs. Betty Bumpers, wife of U.S.
Senator Dale Bumpers of Arkansas,
"Every Child By Two," a
nationwide campaign to publicize the
need for early childhood immunizations.
She served on the Policy Advisory
Board of The Atlanta Project, a program
of The Carter Center addressing the
social ills associated with poverty
and quality of life citywide, from
the program's inception in 1991 until
its transfer to Georgia State University
in 1999. In 1988, she convened with
three other former first ladies the
"Women and the Constitution"
conference at the Center to assess
that document's impact on women.
Outside the Center, Mrs. Carter is
president of the board of directors
for the Rosalynn Carter Institute
for Caregiving at Georgia Southwestern
State University, which was established
in her honor on the campus of her
alma mater in Americus, Ga. Through
research, education, and training,
the RCI promotes the mental health
and well-being of individuals, families,
and professional caregivers; delineates
effective caregiving practices; builds
public awareness of caregiving needs;
and advances public and social policies
that enhance caring communities. In
1996 she became honorary chair of
the call-to-action campaign for end-of-life
care, Last Act Partnership, a national
coalition of individuals and organizations
advocating more compassionate care
for those who are dying. She also
works for Habitat for Humanity, a
network of volunteers who build homes
for the needy, and Project Interconnections,
a public/private nonprofit partnership
to provide housing for homeless people
who are mentally ill. She served as
distinguished centennial lecturer
at Agnes Scott College in Decatur,
Ga., from 1988-92 and is currently
a distinguished fellow at the Emory
University Department of Women's Studies
in Atlanta.
Since
graduating from Georgia Southwestern
College in l946, Mrs. Carter has received
many honors, among them the Volunteer
of the Decade and "Into the Light"
awards from the National Mental Health
Association; the Award of Merit for
Support of the Equal Rights Amendment
from the National Organization for
Women; the Notre Dame Award for International
Service; the Eleanor Roosevelt Living
World Award from Peace Links; the
Kiwanis World Service Medal from Kiwanis
International Foundation; the Jefferson
Award from the American Institute
for Public Service; the Georgia Woman
of the Year Award from the Georgia
Commission on Women; the Rhoda and
Bernard Sarnat International Prize
in Mental Health from the Institute
of Medicine; the United States Surgeon
General's Medallion; and the Presidential
Medal of Freedom, America's highest
civilian honor. In 2001 she was inducted
into the National Women's Hall of
Fame.
She has written four books: her autobiography
"First Lady from Plains";
"Everything To Gain: Making the
Most of the Rest of Your Life,"
a book about life after the White
House co authored with President Carter;
"Helping Yourself Help Others:
A Book For Caregivers" (with
Susan K. Golant); and "Helping
Someone with Mental Illness: A Compassionate
Guide for Family, Friends, and Caregivers"
(with Susan K. Golant), which was
selected as the winner of the 1999
American Society of Journalists and
Authors Outstanding Book Award in
the service category. She continues
to travel and speak throughout the
world and enjoys fly-fishing, bird-watching,
and biking in her free time.
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