Dr. Gro Harlem
Brundtland Director-General Emeritus, World Health
Organization
Dr.
Gro Harlem Brundtland was born in Oslo, Norway,
on 20 April 1939.
A medical doctor and Master
of Public Health (MPH), Gro Harlem Brundtland
spent 10 years as a physician and scientist in
the Norwegian public health system. For more than
20 years she was in public office, 10 of them
as Prime Minister. In the 1980s she gained international
recognition, championing the principle of sustainable
development as the chair of the World Commission
of Environment and Development (the Brundtland
Commission).
Dr. Brundtland's first choice
of career was neither environmentalist nor politician,
but to become a doctor like her father. He was
a specialist in rehabilitation medicine, a skill
much in demand following the Second World War.
When Gro Harlem was 10 years old, the family moved
to the United States where her father had been
awarded a Rockefeller scholarship. The seeds of
internationalism were sown in the young Gro.
Dr. Brundtland inherited
another passion from her father - political activism.
At the age of seven, she was enrolled as a member
of the Norwegian Labour Movement in its children's
section and has been a member ever since, leading
the Labour Party to election victory three times.
The sense of global awareness
that began in her childhood developed when, as
a young mother and newly qualified doctor, Gro
Harlem Brundtland won a scholarship to the Harvard
School of Public Health. Here, working alongside
distinguished public health experts, Dr. Brundtland's
vision of health extending beyond the confines
of the medical world into environment issues and
human development began to take shape.
Returning to Oslo and the
Ministry of Health in 1965, the next nine years
were to be very hectic for Dr. Brundtland. At the
Ministry she worked on children's health issues
including breastfeeding, cancer prevention and
other diseases. She worked in the children's department
of the National Hospital and Oslo City Hospital
and became Director of Health Services for Oslo's
schoolchildren. All this at the same time as bringing
up her own family and representing Norway in international
conferences.
Such energy, enthusiasm
and commitment brought an unexpected change of
career. In 1974, Dr. Brundtland was offered the
job of Minister of the Environment. At first,
believing she did not have enough experience of
environmental issues, she was reluctant to accept
the post. But her conviction of the link between
health and the environment changed her mind.
During the 1970s she acquired
international recognition in environmental circles
and a political reputation at home. In 1981, at
the age of 41, she was appointed Prime Minister
for the first time. Gro Harlem Brundtland was
the youngest person and the first woman ever to
hold the office of PrimeMinister in Norway. With
two other periods as Prime Minister from 1986-1989
and 1990-1996, Dr. Brundtland was Head of Government
for more than 10 years.
Throughout her political
career, Dr. Brundtland has developed a growing
concern for issues of global significance. In
1983 the then United Nations Secretary-General
invited her to establish and chair the World Commission
on Environment and Development. The Commission,
which is best known for developing the broad political
concept of sustainable development, published
its report Our Common Future in April 1987.
The Commission's recommendations
led to the Earth Summit - the United Nations Conference
on Environment and Development (UNCED) in Rio
de Janeiro in 1992.
Dr. Brundtland finally stepped
down as Prime Minister in October 1996. In her
successful bid to become Director-General of the
World Health Organization her many skills as doctor,
politician, activist and manager have come together.
Dr. Brundtland was nominated
as Director-General of the World Health Organization
by the Executive Board of WHO in January 1998.
The World Health Assembly elected her for the
position on 13 May 1998.
In her acceptance speech
for the World Health Assembly, Dr. Brundtland said:
"What is our Key mission? I see WHO's role
as being the moral voice and the technical leader
in improving health of the people of the world.
Ready and able to give advice on the key issues
that can unleash development and alleviate suffering.
I see our purpose to be combating disease and
ill-health - promoting sustainable and equitable
health systems in all countries".
Dr. Gro Harlem Brundtland
took office on 21 July the same year.