Alda Facio | |
Birth Name: | Alda Facio Montejo |
Birth Date: | 1948 1, df=y |
Birth Place: | New York City, United States |
Nationality: | Costa Rican |
Alma Mater: | New York University University of Costa Rica |
Occupation: | Lawyer and writer |
Predecessor: | Patricia Olamendi Torres |
Successor: | Dorothy Estrada-Tanck as UN expert |
Parents: | Gonzalo Facio Segreda María Lilia Montejo Ortuño |
Relatives: | Giannina Facio Franco (half-sister) |
Alda Facio Montejo (born 26 January 1948) is a Costa Rican feminist jurist, writer, teacher and international expert in gender and human rights in Latin America. She is one of the founding members of the Women's Caucus for Gender Justice at the International Criminal Court.[1] Since 1991, she has been the Director of Women, Justice and Gender, a program within the United Nations Latin American Institute for the Prevention of Crime and the Treatment of Offenders (ILANUD) and vice president of the Justice and Gender Foundation. She was also one of the founding members of Ventana in the 1970s, one of the first feminist organizations in her native Costa Rica.[2] In 2014, she was chosen to be one of the five United Nations special rapporteurs for the Working Group against Discrimination against Women and Girls.[3] [4] Her term came to and end in 2020 and she was succeeded by Dorothy Estrada-Tanck.[5]
Alda Facio was born in New York City in the United States of America on 26 January 1948 to lawyer, politician and diplomat Gonzalo Facio Segreda (1918-2018) and his first wife María Lilia Montejo Ortuño.[6] She has a sister, Sandra and a brother, Rómulo. She also has three younger half-sisters through her father's second marriage: Giannina, Ana Catalina and Carla (their mother is Ana Franco Calzia). During the 1960s, when she was 17 or 18, Facio discovered feminism and would later tell the Carnegie Council that her reason for becoming a feminist was that "feminists and feminism gives you strength knowing that you're part of a global movement is something that gives you a lot of energy to move forward."[7]