David Eisner (chief executive) explained

David Eisner
Office3:CEO of the Corporation for National and Community Service
Term Start3:December 1, 2003
Term End3:December 1, 2008
Predecessor3:Leslie Lenkowsky
Successor3:Patrick Corvington
Office2:Chairman and CEO of the
National Constitution Center
Term Start2:November 18, 2009
Term End2:October 31, 2012
Predecessor2:Joe Torsella
Successor2:Vince Stango
Office:President and CEO of
Repair the World
Term Start:January 16, 2013
Term End:March 2019
Predecessor:Jon Rosenberg
Successor:Cindy Greenberg
Alma Mater:Stanford University
Georgetown University Law Center
Spouse:Lori
Children:Four
Nationality:American
Footnotes:a. Linda Johnson served as interim Chairman from the date of Torsella's resignation until Eisner's formal election to the post.[1]
b. Nicola Goren served as Acting CEO from December 2008 through October 2009, after Maria Eitel withdrew her name from consideration to be Eisner's permanent successor.[2]

David Eisner is an American business and political official. As of 2013, he is serving as president and CEO of Repair the World, a non-profit organization that fosters and mobilizes Jewish-American volunteerism efforts.[3] Eisner was chief executive officer (CEO) of the Corporation for National and Community Service under George W. Bush until December 2008.

From 1997 until 2003, Eisner was a vice-president at AOL Time Warner. He was in charge of the company's charitable foundation. Other previous posts include acting as a senior vice president of Fleishman-Hillard International Communications and managing public relations at the Legal Services Corporation. He also served as press secretary for three Members of Congress. Eisner has also served on the boards of several national nonprofit organizations.

Eisner recently served as president and CEO of the National Constitution Center, a post he held from November 2009 to October 31, 2012. Eisner was the third CEO of the center since its opening in 2003.

Eisner became President & CEO of Convergence Center for Policy Resolution in April 2020 where he leads the organization's efforts to convene individuals and organizations with divergent views to build trust, identify solutions, and form alliances for action on critical national issues.[4]

Eisner graduated from Stanford University and received his law degree from Georgetown University Law Center. He lives with his family in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Sources

Notes and References

  1. News: Van Allen. Peter. National Constitution Center makes David Eisner next CEO. September 30, 2012. The Philadelphia Business Journal. November 18, 2009.
  2. Web site: On Patrick Corvington's Appointment. Articles. NonProfit Quarterly. October 21, 2012.
  3. Web site: Soclof . Adam . Repair the World names David Eisner president and CEO | Jewish Telegraphic Agency . Jta.org . 2013-01-16 . 2017-04-30.
  4. Web site: Our Team . 2012-02-10. Convergence Center for Policy Resolution. 2020-05-28.