Elissa Jobson Chief of Advocacy Brussels Please submit all media inquiries to [email protected] or call +32 (0) 2 536 00 71 Crisis Group Role As Chief of Advocacy, Elissa Jobson provides strategic direction and oversight for Crisis Group’s advocacy and is responsible for developing strategies to maximise the organisation’s policy impact. Professional Background Elissa previously served as Director of Africa Regional Advocacy and was the organisation’s main liaison with the African Union. Prior to joining Crisis Group, she was a media relations specialist with UNICEF in New York, where she helped co-ordinate public advocacy around the Sustainable Development Goals. Between 2012 and 2014, she was a freelance journalist based in Addis Ababa working for The Guardian, Africa Confidential, The Africa Report and Business Day. Latest Updates Podcast / Europe & Central Asia 25 يونيو 2024 A Long War in Ukraine? Perspectives from Kyiv and Washington Podcast / Europe & Central Asia 28 مايو 2024 Could Far-Right Electoral Gains Upend EU Foreign Policy? Podcast / Europe & Central Asia 23 أبريل 2024 Moldova’s Restive Separatists, Russia Worries, and EU Aspirations Podcast / Europe & Central Asia 19 مارس 2024 Can Nuclear Arms Control Survive a Changing World Order? Podcast / Europe & Central Asia 23 فبراير 2024 Two Years Into Full-Scale War, What Ukraine Needs and What its Backers Can Give Podcast / Europe & Central Asia 06 فبراير 2024 Maritime Security in the Red Sea: What Role for the EU? Podcast / Europe & Central Asia 19 ديسمبر 2023 Is Moscow the Big Winner from War in the Middle East? Podcast / Europe & Central Asia 05 ديسمبر 2023 Europe’s Struggle to Respond to the Gaza War Podcast / Global 24 أكتوبر 2023 Why Women Fight: Gender Dynamics in Insurgencies and Armies Podcast / Europe & Central Asia 28 يوليو 2023 NATO’s Vilnius Summit and Baltic Security Podcast / Europe & Central Asia 12 يوليو 2023 Ukraine’s Male Travel Ban and the Protection of Civilians in Wartime Podcast / Europe & Central Asia 30 يونيو 2023 The War in Ukraine: Rallying Point for the Left or New Neocon Adventure? Load more