Mirai Chatterjee Explained

Mirai Chatterjee
Birth Date: 17 August 1959
Birth Place:India
Education:BA in History and Science; Masters in Health Sciences
Alma Mater:The Cathedral & John Connon School, Harvard University, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Occupation:Director, SEWA Social Security
Organization:Self-Employed Women's Association (SEWA)

Mirai Chatterjee is a leader of the Self-Employed Women's Association, SEWA (India). She joined SEWA in 1984 and was its General Secretary after its Founder, Ela Bhatt.

Mirai Chatterjee is currently the Director of the Social Security Team at SEWA. She is responsible for SEWA's Health Care, Child Care and Insurance programmes. She was Chairperson of the National Insurance VimoSEWA Cooperative Ltd and the Lok Swasthya Health Cooperative, both of which she is a founder. Both cooperatives are promoted by SEWA. In addition, she is Chairperson of the Gujarat State Women's SEWA Cooperative Federation of 106 primary cooperatives with 300,000 members.

She was also appointed a member of National Advisory Council by the Prime Minister of India in June, 2010.[1] [2]

Ms. Chatterjee serves and has served on the Boards of several organizations in India, including the Friends of Women's World Banking (FWWB), and the Public Health Foundation of India (PHFI). She was advisor to the National Commission for Enterprises in the Unorganized Sector and is in the Advisory Group of the National Health Mission. She was also a Commissioner in the World Health Organization’s Commission on the Social Determinants of Health.[3]

Chatterjee has a B.A. from Harvard University in History and Science and a Masters from Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

Personal life

Mirai Chatterjee is married to Binoy Acharya, Director UNNATI, an organisation committed to capacity building of grassroots communities. They have three daughters - Kaveri, Ilina and Tara.

Work experience

Other experience

Academic honours

Other honours and appointments

Publications

Books and book chapters

  1. Mental health and its social determinants: Some experiences of the Self-Employed Women's Association (SEWA) in India, chapter in Oxford Textbook of Public Mental Health, published by Oxford University Press (2018)
  2. Social protection in the changing world of work: experiences of informal women workers in India, chapter in Rethinking Informalisation: Poverty, Precarious Jobs and Social Protection, published by Cornell University (2005)

Selected journal articles and reports

  1. Report of the Committee on Standalone Microinsurance Company, Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (August 2020)
  2. Universal Health Care: A view from informal women workers in India, Global Social Policy, SAGE Publications (2020)
  3. Human resources for health in India, The Lancet (12-18 February 2011)
  4. Making health insurance work for the poor: Learning from the Self-Employed Women's Association's (SEWA) community-based health insurance scheme in India
  5. Equitable utilisation of Indian community based health insurance scheme among its rural membership: cluster randomised controlled trial (21 June 2007)
  6. Decentralised Childcare Services: The SEWA Experience, Economic and Political Weekly (2006)
  7. Barriers to accessing benefits in a community-based insurance scheme: lessons learnt from SEWA Insurance, Gujarat (22 December 2005)

Media articles

  1. A lesson in Swaraj from Informal Women Workers, Hindustan Times, October 1, 2020 (https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/a-lesson-in-swaraj-from-informal-women-workers/story-9FPfjQex0Nr0fX10ldSScM.html)
  2. Lack of social security for women in the informal economy needs to be addressed, May 21, 2020, The Indian Express, https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/social-security-women-informal-economy-india-mirai-chatterjee-6419938/
  3. How Can We Ensure Social Security for Domestic Workers?, 16 April 2019, The Wire, https://thewire.in/labour/domestic-women-workers-informal-sector
  4. Informal Workers Are Bearing the Cost of Inadequate Healthcare Investment, February 21, 2019, The Wire, https://thewire.in/health/informal-workers-are-bearing-the-cost-of-inadequate-healthcare-investment
  5. As India rethinks labour rules, one item not on the agenda: Childcare facilities for women workers, 31 December 2018, Scroll.In, https://scroll.in/article/905727/as-india-rethinks-labour-rules-one-item-not-on-the-agenda-childcare-facilities-for-women-workers

Notes and References

  1. News: New hands aboard, National Advisory Council ready for biz. The Economic Times. Jain. Bharti.
  2. News: Opinion | Do-Gooders with Spreadsheets. The New York Times. 30 January 2007. Kristof. Nicholas.
  3. https://web.archive.org/web/20090807192853/http://www.who.int/social_determinants/thecommission/chatterjee/en/index.html Mirai Chatterjee: Commissioner from India