Advisory Group

Expertise Supporting Our Mission

A group of experienced leaders and experts providing independent strategic guidance to support ISSA’s mission and strengthen equitable early childhood systems worldwide.

Tatiana Drauschke-Muradyan

Tatiana Drauschke-Muradyan is Global Advocacy Officer at Dubai Cares, where she leads the organization’s work on Early Childhood Development and oversees its Digital Transformation and Connectivity portfolio.

With a background in Economics and Multilateral Governance, she brings a systems-thinking approach to philanthropy, policy, and program design. Her interdisciplinary expertise spans behavioural science, AI for education and philanthropy, grant management, research, and Monitoring, Evaluation, Accountability, and Learning (MEAL). Tatiana’s work bridges program design and advocacy, focusing on driving systems-level solutions aligned with the Sustainable Development Goals. She is passionate about positioning ECD as a strategic, cross-sector investment to tackle global challenges, from inequality and poor health to climate resilience. She is also a proud mother of three.

Nafisa Shekhova

Nafisa Shekhova is the Global Lead, Education & Early Childhood Development at the Aga Khan Foundation (AKF). She provides strategic direction and technical guidance to country teams to ensure programme quality and alignment with the AKF’s global strategic framework.

She also offers technical assistance in programme design, innovations and learning to strengthen knowledge. Nafisa has been with the Aga Khan Development Network for over 20 years, holding key leadership roles in education and early childhood development programmes across Afghanistan, East Africa, and Switzerland. Before joining the global programme team, she served for five years as Regional Education Programme Manager for East Africa. Prior to that, she spent over five years with AKF in Afghanistan, where she successfully led the expansion of the Foundation’s education portfolio, including the launch of flagship girls’ education and early childhood development programmes. Nafisa is currently a member of the Geneva Global Education in Emergency Hub, the Moving Minds Alliance and the Educating for Pluralism Innovation Lab at the Global Centre for Pluralism.

Nirmala Rao

Nirmala Rao, Ph D is Serena H C Yang Professor in Early Childhood Development and Education, Chair Professor of Child Development and Education, and Director of the Consortium for Research on Early Childhood Development and Education (CORE), Faculty of Education, The University of Hong Kong.

Her work stands at the intersection of early childhood education and developmental psychology and has focused on early childhood development and education, and preschool quality across Asia. She has received awards for both research and teaching and has considerable senior management experience. She is firmly committed to knowledge exchange and has served on many non-profit and professional boards throughout her career. Internationally, she has provided expertise and consultancy services to UNICEF, UNESCO, the World Bank, the OECD, and the WHO.

Michel Vandenbroeck

Professor Michel Vandenbroeck, PhD is Professor Emeritus at Ghent University in Belgium. He has been working in the field of Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC) since 1986. During the first 20 odd years he was involved in continuous professional development of ECEC professionals and pedagogical innovation projects.

During the next 20 odd years, he worked as professor in family pedagogy at Ghent University. His practice and his research interests include quality and accessibility in ECEC with a special focus on equity and diversity. He authored my international publications on these issues and is coordinating editor of the groundbreaking book series “Contesting early childhood” (Routledge), together with Liselott Olsson. He now works as a policy advisor for the Flemish Minister of Welfare.

Mathias Urban

Professor Mathias Urban, PhD is Desmond Chair of Early Childhood Education, and Director of the Early Childhood Research Centre (ECRC) at Dublin City University, Ireland (DCU). He works on integrated early childhood systems, governance, professionalism, diversity and equality and social justice in working with young children, families and communities in diverse socio-cultural contexts.

Mathias has 25 years of experience in designing and leading international collaborative research projects and has a well-established track record of publications. In 2018, Mathias was awarded the ‘Marianne Bloch Distinguished Career Award’ by the international Reconceptualising Early Childhood Education network. In 2020, he was awarded the ‘President’s Award for Research Impact’ by Dublin City University. From 2009 to 2011 he coordinated the CoRe project (Competence Requirements in Early Childhood Education and Care), funded by the European Commission, Directorate General for Education and Culture. The project developed the concept of Competent Systems in Early Childhood Education and Care, which has been adopted widely in ECEC global policy. Mathias is a member of the European Commission Expert Working Group on Early Childhood Education and Care, a member of the Global Advocacy Group with the global Right to Education initiative, and a member of the Board of TASC – Think Tank for Action on Social Change. He is the lead author of the Early Childhood Development, Education and Care policy briefs for the T20/G20 presidencies 2018 (Argentina), 2019 (Japan), 2020 (Saudi Arabia), 2021 (Italy), 2022 (Indonesia), 2024 (Brazil), and 2025 (South Africa).

Muna Abbas

Muna Abbas has more than 25 years of experience in the humanitarian and development sectors. Prior to joining The Asfari Foundation as Chief Executive Officer, Muna was the Country Director for Plan International in Jordan.

She built programs to support both Jordanian and refugee communities across the country. Muna established a wide network of International Organizations, including Civil Society Organizations and Government Institutions with strong links to regional and global efforts playing a strong role in advocating for gender equality, girls’ and women’s rights, and youth empowerment. She also worked with Save the Children and UNRWA to design and lead programs responding to humanitarian needs of refugees and affected crises populations in the Middle East.

Larry Cooley

Larry Cooley is President Emeritus of Management Systems International (MSI) and a Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution. A specialist in the fields of organizational development and large-system change, he has served as advisor to cabinet and sub-cabinet officials in 7 US Federal Agencies and more than a dozen foreign countries.

In 2014, he co-founded and continues to co-lead a 5000-member global community of practice focused on scaling up development and climate outcomes with members from 127 countries. Larry is an elected Fellow of the National Academy of Public Administration and serves as a board member for a wide range of non-profit organizations including the Society for International Development (board chair), World Learning (past chair), Elma Philanthropies, and the Carter School of Peace and Conflict Resolution.

Joan Lombardi

Joan Lombardi, Ph.D. is an Adjunct Professor and Principal Advisor, Stanford Center on Early Childhood, Stanford University. She is also a Senior Advisor and cofounder of Georgetown Collaborative on Global Children’s Issues, Georgetown University.

Over the past 50 years Joan has made significant contributions in the areas of child and family policy as an innovative leader and policy advisor to national and international organizations and foundations and as a public servant. Joan served as the first Deputy Assistant Secretary for Early Childhood during the Obama Administration and the first Director of the Child Care Bureau during the Clinton Administration. Joan has served as an advisor to a range of organizations including UNICEF, WHO, UNESCO, and The World Bank Group, among others. She serves on the Executive Leadership Council of the Early Childhood Development Action Network and as a research advisor to the Moving Minds Alliance. She was a founder of Global Leaders for Young Children, hosted by the World Forum Foundation and the author of numerous publications from research to policy, from service delivery to system reform.

Juan Larranaga

Juan Larranaga is Director of Place Based Community Empowerment at Minderoo Foundation, Australia. With over 20 years of experience driving social systems innovation, he specializes in leading groundbreaking, multi-sector partnerships that shape national and global agendas.

His work bridges research, policy, and practice—generating new evidence that influences systemic change and delivers tangible outcomes for communities. Over the past two decades, he has successfully designed and implemented initiatives across public health, primary healthcare, and humanitarian programming, particularly in remote and disadvantaged communities. With strong leadership experience, he brings a deep understanding of place-based approaches, co-design, and cross-sector collaboration to tackle complex social challenges. Prior to Minderoo Foundation, he worked with Save the Children Australia.

James Cairns

James Cairns is Senior Director for Strategic Engagements and Organizational Learning at the Center on the Developing Child at Harvard University.

He joined the Center in 2008 to lead the development of its international work. In his current role, James leads Center-wide efforts focused on understanding the early childhood ecosystem and the Center’s role in it, including developing strategic collaborations and partnerships, and leading efforts to understand and measure the impact of the Center’s work.  He also continues to provide strategic guidance to the Center’s international portfolio and partnerships. He is constantly inspired by how many people in places all over the world find the Center’s materials useful in their efforts to improve the lives of children and families. Prior to joining the Center, James served as the Director of Programs at the World Conference of Religions for Peace, and as Director of the Advocacy and Action for Children Program, fostering cooperation among the world’s main religious communities to address critical needs of children. He holds master’s degrees in international relations and theology from Yale University and a bachelor’s degree in government from Harvard University

Ivanka Shalapatova

Ivanka Shalapatova, PhD has served as Bulgaria’s Minister of Labour and Social Policy between 2023 and 2024, when she led one of the most ambitious waves of social reform in recent history, including a National Action Plan for Early Childhood Development.

Before that she was the Executive Director of For Our Children Foundation and in that role she co-led Bulgaria’s deinstitutionalisation movement, established innovative, community-based services for early childhood and child protection, and built cross-sector partnerships that set new standards for NGO leadership. On the global stage, she has served as Vice President and Board Member of leading international NGO networks and provided senior consultancy to UNICEF, the European Commission, and global think tanks. She has supported governments and partners across Bulgaria, Kosovo, Indonesia, Montenegro, and beyond, on various issues, including cross-sectoral ECD strategies and financing models. With over 25 years of experience in public administration, civil society, and international consultancy, she is  currently working as an independent consultant and senior advisor, assisting governments, NGOs, international organisations, and socially responsible businesses design and implement transformational social systems that promote wellbeing, sustainable development and justice.


Juan Larranaga

Dr. Ivelina Borisova from Bulgaria is UNICEF’s Early Childhood Development Advisor (ECD) for the ECA Region. She leads the regional strategy and program priorities on early childhood development and early care and education across the region.

Prior to this, Ms. Borisova was UNICEF’s global lead in the area of early childhood education and care (ECEC), responsible for global strategy development and its implementation across regions in the area of ECEC, aimed at achieving equitable access to quality pre-primary education by 2030. Prior to joining UNICEF, Ms Borisova served as the Director of Impact and Innovations for Early Years at Save the Children. She is a national of Bulgaria and she holds a Doctorate in Human Development and Education from the Harvard University.

Hirokazu Yoshikawa

Hirokazu Yoshikawa, PhD is the Courtney Sale Ross Professor of Globalization and Education at NYU Steinhardt and a University Professor at NYU. From 2014 to 2024 he was a founding co-director of the Global TIES for Children center at NYU.

He is a community and developmental psychologist who conducts research-policy and research-practice partnerships related to immigration, early childhood, youth development, and poverty reduction across the lifespan. He conducts research in the United States and in Latin America, South Asia and the Middle East. His recent projects include a project on experiences of Florida's K12 education policies; leading the research and evaluation for Ahlan Simsim, the first MacArthur Foundation 100&Change award (with Sesame Workshop and the International Rescue Committee), implementing and evaluating early childhood programming for Syrian refugee families in the Middle East, as well as Play to Learn, providing and evaluating early childhood programs for Rohingya in Bangladesh as well as in humanitarian contexts in the Middle East and Colombia. He serves on the Board of Trustees of the William T. Grant Foundation; the Global Education Evidence Advisory Panel (GEEAP); and the LEVANTE advisory board of the Jacobs Foundation. He served on the National Board on Education Sciences during the Obama and Biden administrations. In 2025, he was awarded the Klaus Jacobs Research Prize of the Jacobs Foundation.  He is the author of numerous publications.

Hasina Banu Ebrahim

Professor Hasina Banu Ebrahim, UNESCO Co-Chair in Early Childhood Education at UNISA, is an NRF C1-rated researcher who is prolific in research on policy, practice and workforce development for birth to 5 years.  

She is a newly elected member of the Academy of Science of South Africa.  As a founding member and past president of the South African Research Association for Early Childhood Education, she led pioneering work with multiple stakeholders that created action for early childhood as a public service. This has earned her national awards for transformative research.  Professor Ebrahim continues to lead cross-cultural projects, contribute to continental strategies and build the capacity of multiple stakeholders for epistemic and social justice in the early years.

Emily Vargas Barón

Emily Vargas Barón, PhD, directs the RISE Institute, a non-governmental organisation and global authority in early childhood development (ECD) and family-centred early childhood intervention (ECI) for children with developmental challenges.

With her highly experienced teams of Senior Fellows, she focuses on national policy planning, financing, training, research, and monitoring, evaluation and reporting. They advise countries in all world regions, always using participatory and culturally appropriate methods. Previously, she was a USAID Deputy Assistant Administrator for Education, founded and directed a large ECD and ECI organisation in Austin, Texas, Any Baby Can, conducted educational planning and research for the Ford Foundation and UNESCO, and was a university professor. She has a PhD in anthropology and educational planning from Stanford University and has published many books and articles in peer-reviewed journals.

Dominic Richardson

Dominic Richardson, PhD is the Managing Director of the Learning for Wellbeing Institute and the Learning for Wellbeing Foundation. He has extensive experience in researching family policies and child well-being.

For almost a decade, Dominic led two of UNICEF’s global research teams, education and social policy and economic analysis at the Office of Research – Innocenti, where he oversaw work on family cash transfers and cash plus programmes (including gender responsive social protection), social expenditure and ECD policies, the Innocenti Report Card Series, teachers and teaching, development of social and emotional skills, and global research on family policies, child development and well-being. Dominic previously worked with OECD Social Policy Division on a broad range of studies covering child well-being, evaluating family policies, integrating human services, and social impact investment. Dominic has led or co-authored multiple reports on comparative child well-being in high-, middle- and low-income countries. Dominic was awarded the 2018 Jan Trost Award (lifetime achievement) for Outstanding Contributions in International Family Studies by the National Council for Family Relations in the United States.

Ariel Fiszbein

Ariel Fiszbein is a leading economist and policy expert specializing in human development, education, and social policy in Latin America. He is currently a Resident Fellow at the Georgetown Americas Institute and an Associated Researcher at the Centro de Implementación de Políticas Públicas para la Equidad y el Crecimiento (CIPPEC) in Buenos Aires.

He also serves on the Advisory Council of the Organización de Estados Iberoamericanos para la Educación, la Ciencia y la Cultura (OEI). From 2014 to 2024, he was Education Program Director at the Inter-American Dialogue, where he led influential work on early childhood development, education systems reform, education technology, skills development, and inclusion. Previously, Dr. Fiszbein served as Chief Economist of the Human Development Network at the World Bank, overseeing global work on education, health, social protection, labor markets, governance, service delivery, and impact evaluation. In addition to his policy leadership, he has taught at institutions including Johns Hopkins SAIS and Universidad de San Andrés, and has published extensively on education quality, early childhood development, social protection, inequality, and evaluation methods. He holds a Ph.D. in Economics from the University of California, Berkeley.