INSEAD Professor Ludo Van der Heyden Honoured for Championing Economic Empowerment of Women

INSEAD PROFESSOR LUDO VAN DER HEYDEN HONOURED FOR CHAMPIONING
ECONOMIC EMPOWERMENT OF WOMEN

Governance expert earns award from International Alliance for Women for his
contributions to enhance global prosperity and spur greater Board diversity

Fontainebleau (France), Singapore and Abu Dhabi - April 11, 2014 - Ludo Van der Heyden, professor of technology and the Mubadala Chair in Corporate Governance & Strategy at INSEAD, has been named a recipient of the "TIAW World of Difference 100 Award" for 2013. The honour is conferred annually to up to 100 recipients around the world by The International Alliance of Women (TIAW), a global nonprofit based in Washington, D.C., whose programmes and resources are dedicated to the economic empowerment of women. Professor Van der Heyden was among those honoured at a gala dinner on March 27, where he was distinguished as a "champion of women`s economic empowerment." The event was part of the TIAW Global Forum held March 26-28 in Washington, D.C. Established in 2008, the award recognises the achievements of women and men whose work promotes a more equitable world by supporting the advancement women in the economy.

In his work, Van der Heyden has been a vocal proponent for women as they seek greater Board representation. As Academic Director of INSEAD`s Corporate Governance Initiative-which provides leading-edge teaching and research to strengthen better practises for Board directors-Van der Heyden has spurred gender diversity, including a recent survey of Board members and governance experts to ascertain the attitudes of directors about women in governance roles.

Citing statistics that indicate only about 16% of Fortune 500 Board directors are female, Van der Heyden has said of the disparity: "This is foremost a democratic and societal issue about redressing what is a bias against women as they move closer to the top of the corporate ladder. Most people by now agree that this bias is unacceptable and that it ought to move away. And the best place to make that happen is really at the top, namely at the board. Doing so will trigger greater diversity in senior ranks." Yet, he says, too many male directors still tend to favour a "natural evolution" toward more diversity, rather than a concerted effort to increase women in governance positions. "This `natural way` seems not to have improved matters for many hundreds of years," explains the INSEAD professor. "So it is understandable and great that the issue finally gets tackled-this time hopefully decisively."

Van der Heyden said that he was honoured to be nominated for the TIAW award and emphasized that the award was to be shared with all those who participated in this INSEAD effort: First, the expert panel, including INSEAD Professors Annet Aris and Herminia Ibarra; INSEAD Board member, founder and MD of Independent Capital Management Mirjam Staub-Bisang; INSEAD Certified Directors of the International Directors Programme (IDP), Non-Executive-Directors Alexandra Schaapveld and Rosa Villalobos. Second, with all INSEAD alumni and International Directors Programme participants (IDP: http://executive-education.insead.edu/international_directors)
for their insights on the question from different European perspectives. The award is an acknowledgement that INSEAD thought leadership continues to bridge the gap between business theory and practice in important ways so as to contribute to greater value creation, opportunities and diversity.