Margee Ensign to Keynote Women’s Leadership Dinner at ACE2018
February 05, 2018

Few academic leaders have faced a humanitarian crisis or braved a violent extremist group.

The keynote speaker at ACE2018’s Women’s Leadership Dinner has done both, even as she was tasked with building a sustainable strategic plan and securing funding for a transforming institution. 

Margee Ensign, president of Dickinson College (PA), will speak to leading in the face of opposition during her address at ACE’s 100th Annual Meeting, March 10-13 in Washington, DC.

The Women’s Leadership Dinner is scheduled for Saturday, March 10 from 7:00-9:00 p.m. Those who wish to attend the dinner may purchase tickets here.

Before being named Dickinson’s 29th president last year, Ensign served for seven years as president of the American University of Nigeria (AUN), a private university founded on the U.S. model of university education. AUN is located in one of three Nigerian states that have been under a state of emergency because of the Islamist militant group Boko Haram. To deal with the crisis, Ensign co-founded and led a response to the escalating violence, which successfully promoted peace in the area through education, empowerment, and community development while feeding 300,000 refugees fleeing the fighting. Ensign also offered aid to the girls who escaped the infamous Chibok kidnappings, bringing them to the university and facilitating a scholarship for them and others who would eventually also escape Boko Haram.

Widely lauded for her expertise in international higher education—including its role in economic and social development and as an agent of social change—Ensign presented at the World Economic Forum in 2014. She is also an extensively published scholar.

Prior to AUN, she served in various roles at the University of the Pacific in California, Columbia University (NY), and Tulane University (LA) and has taught as a visiting professor at Georgetown University and American University in Washington, DC She earned her B.A. from New College in Florida and her Ph.D. in international political economy from the University of Maryland.

The Women’s Leadership Dinner also will feature the presentation of the Donna Shavlik Award, an annual honor that recognizes sustained and continuing commitment to women's advancement in higher education, either in colleges and universities or in national positions.

ACE2018, the country’s premier higher education event, offers an environment of open dialogue where hundreds of senior higher education leaders will network, hear from newsmakers, and share ideas for tackling common issues in practical ways.

The Women’s Leadership Dinner is sponsored by TIAA. 

Visit the ACE2018 website​ for additional information and to register. Join the conversation on Twitter at #ACE2018DC.