Madeleine Albright was the first woman to become a United States Secretary of State. Appointed by President Bill Clinton in 1996, she came up the ranks from being campaign fund-raiser to a security adviser to a UN ambassador. In 2001, she left her position to found the Albright Group, an international consulting firm. She also sits on the board of directors for the Council on Foreign Relations.
Profile
Madeleine Albright (born May 15, 1937, Prague, Czech. [now Czech Republic]) Czech-born American public official who served as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations (1993–97) and who was the first woman to hold the cabinet post of U.S. secretary of state (1997–2001).
Marie Jana Korbel was the daughter of a Czech diplomat. After the Nazis occupied Czechoslovakia in 1939, her family fled to England. Although she spent most of her life believing that they had fled for political reasons, she learned in 1997 that her family was Jewish and that three of her grandparents had died in German concentration camps. The family returned to Czechoslovakia after World War II, but the Soviet-sponsored communist coup made them refugees again, and by 1948 they had settled in the United States.
Korbel graduated from Wellesley (Massachusetts) College (B.A., 1959) and married Joseph Albright, a member of the Medill newspaper-publishing family. After earning a master's degree (1968) from Columbia University, New York City, she worked as a fund-raiser for Sen. Edmund Muskie's failed 1972 presidential campaign and later served as Muskie's chief legislative assistant. By 1976 she had received a Ph.D. from Columbia and was working for Zbigniew Brzezinski, Pres. Jimmy Carter's national security adviser.
During the Republican administrations of Presidents Ronald Reagan and George Bush in the 1980s and early '90s, Albright worked for several nonprofit organizations, and her Washington, D.C., home became a salon for influential Democratic politicians and policy makers. She also was professor of international affairs at Georgetown University, Washington, D.C., from 1982 to 1993. After the election of Pres. Bill Clinton, a Democrat, in 1992, Albright's political star began to rise, and Clinton named her ambassador to the United Nations in 1993. At the UN she gained a reputation for tough-mindedness as a fierce advocate for American interests, and she promoted an increased role for the United States in UN operations, particularly those with a military component. Her nomination to the position of secretary of state was unanimously confirmed by the Senate in 1997.
She left government service in 2001 and founded the Albright Group, a consulting firm based in Washington, D.C. A frequent columnist on foreign affairs issues, she served on the board of directors of the Council on Foreign Relations. She authored the memoir Madam Secretary (2003) and the policy primers The Mighty and the Almighty: Reflections on America, God, and World Affairs (2006) and Memo to the President Elect (2008).
From : www.biography.com