Yasmin Alibhai-Brown

Yasmin Alibhai-BrownYasmin Alibhai-Brown came to the UK in 1972 from Uganda after completing her undergraduate degree at Makerere University where she was awarded an exceptional first class degree in English. She went to Oxford as a post-graduate student and was awarded an M.Phil in literature in1975. She is a journalist who has written for  The Guardian, Observer, The New York Times, Time Magazine,  Newsweek, The Evening Standard, the Mail and other newspapers and is now a regular columnist on The Independent. She is also a radio and television broadcaster and author of several books. Her book, No Place Like Home, well received by critics, was an autobiographical account of a twice removed immigrant. From 1996 to 2001 she was a Research Fellow at the Institute for Public Policy Research which published True Colours on the role of government on racial attitudes. Tony Blair launched the book in March 1999. She is a senior fellow at the Foreign Policy Centre. In 2000 she published, Who Do We Think We Are?  published in the US too, an acclaimed book on the state of the British nation and another book, After Multiculturalism which looks at the globalised future. She advises various key institutions on race matters. She is also a regular international public speaker in Britain, other European countries, North America and Asian nations. She is a diversity adviser to global companies and organisations. She is a governor of the Royal Shakespeare Company and is on the board of Metal, an innovative arts organisation headed by Jude Kelly who runs the South Bank Centre in London.

In  2001 she was appointed an MBE for services to journalism in the new year's honours list. In July 2003  Liverpool John Moore’s University made her an Honorary Fellow. In 2003 she returned her MBE as a protest against the new imperial and illegal war in Iraq . In September 2004, she was awarded an honorary degree by the Oxford  Brookes University . In April 2004, her film on Islam for Channel 4 won an award and in May 2004, she received the EMMA award for best print journalist for her columns in the Independent. In September 2004, a collection of her journalistic writings, Some of My Best Friends Are was  published by Politicos. In 2005/6 she went on stage with her one woman show, written and performed by her, commissioned and directed by the Royal Shakespeare Company  as part of  their new work festival. In 2006 the show had two London runs and went to other locations. It was highly praised by the Times, Independent and local paper critics. In 2007 the show was taken to India – to great acclaim.
 
In 2005, she was voted the 10th most influential black/Asian woman in the country in a poll and in another she was among the most powerful Asian media professionals in the UK. She is currently writing a book titled Exotic England. She is married and has a grown up son and teenage daughter.