Shireen Rexina Lateef was a Fijian women's rights activist, known for her work on gender equality at the Asian Development Bank.
Shireen Lateef was born in Fiji [1] and was of Indo-Fijian descent. [2] [3] After studying at St. Joseph's Secondary School in Fiji, she traveled to Australia to pursue higher education. [4] She attended Monash University, graduating with a Ph.D. in social anthropology and education, which included significant fieldwork among Indo-Fijian women in the Fijian capital, Suva. [2] [4] She then spent nine years as a lecturer at the University of Melbourne. [4]
Lateef was a longtime gender equality activist, considered an inspiration behind the feminist movement in Fiji. [1] [5] [6] In 1990, while at Melbourne, she published "Rule by the Danda: Domestic Violence Among Indo-Fijians," which is considered one of the earliest studies of domestic violence in Fiji and a seminal work of feminist research in the country. [5] [7]
In 1992, she began working as a junior gender specialist at the Asian Development Bank in Manila. [4] [5] [6] [8] Among her work at the ADB, she is best known as the architect of the bank's Policy on Gender and Development, which guided its efforts to support equality for women. [6] [9] Over 23 years at the bank, she pushed for the organization to recognize how development projects can impact women in often overlooked ways. [4]
Lateef retired from the ADB in 2015, having reached the title of senior adviser on gender. [4] [6] She died the following year on February 11 in Brisbane, Australia, after a long illness. [1] [5] [6]