David Evans (administrator)
David John Evans | |
---|---|
Personal details | |
Born |
February 16, 1960 Scranton, PA, United States of America |
Spouse(s) | Susan Cleary Evans (1990 - Present) |
Children |
Kathryn Joy (Born 1993) Bronwyn Dorothy (Born 1997) |
Residence | Washington, D.C. |
Alma mater |
Indiana University of Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State University |
Profession |
Non-profit leadership international development leadership |
Religion | Christianity |
Website | Food for the Hungry homepage |
David Evans (born 1960) served with the international relief and development organization, Food for the Hungry (FH), from 1991 until 2013, most recently as the U.S. President of Food for the Hungry (FH) and a member of the four-person Global Executive Office that shares the leadership of FH's work internationally.[1]
[2] Previously, Evans oversaw the FH portfolio of USAID, USDA, and U.S. State Department funded programs in 10 countries in the areas of food and agriculture, health and nutrition, HIV and AIDS,[3] water and sanitation, climate change,[4] education,[5] microenterprise, and emergency relief.[6] He also has served as a country directory for FH, in both Chad and Bolivia.
Evans has served as Chairman of the Association of Evangelical Relief and Development Organization's HIV/AIDS Alliance and the Alliance for Global Food Security. He has served on the Board of the Millennium Water Alliance (Executive Committee), Integral Alliance, Adonai Partners and the U.S. Congressional Hunger Center's Leland Policy Advisory. He also has served as distance education professor in food and agriculture at Hope International University.
In addition to the United States, Evans has lived and worked in Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali and Bolivia".[3] He is the senior editor of the book Biblical Holism and Agriculture: Cultivating Our Roots[8] as well as a contributing author to the book Truth and Community Transformation (copyrights by Food for the Hungry International, 2003 and 2004).
Early life
Evans is the second of three children and was born in Scranton, Pennsylvania on February 16, 1960. His father, Ned Llewellyn Evans was born in the predominantly Welsh town of Taylor, Pa. He got a degree in Electrical Engineering, which led him into plastics manufacturing and being the co-owner and chief engineer of a plastics company based in Scranton. Evans' father sold his share of the business and retired from active employment in 1993. Evans’ mother is Marlene Harris Evans, born in Scranton, Pa. Marlene worked as an administrative assistant at Bell Telephone Company. After marriage and the birth of their first child, she became a full-time homemaker. Fifteen years later, she began working again as a bank teller and administrative assistant.
Career
Early work
Evans began working with Haitian migrant farmers in the northern Pennsylvania in 1981. He was mainly responsible for assisting Haitians with social services and English language classes. Evans often says that this job led to his desire to work in the developing world. He also spent several years in Burkina Faso and Chad, where he worked with farmers and villagers in the areas of agricultural development and water resource development.[2] This influenced him to further pursue relief and development program management as a career.
Food for the Hungry
Evans was first connected to Food for the Hungry in the late 1970s, shortly after he became interested in hunger issues. He came across an FH direct mail letter and started to contribute funds to FH every few months. At the age of 19, he became a financial donor to FH.
In the mid 1980s, he connected to FH while working in Chad, when the organization began operating there in response to the catastrophic drought and famine that was impacting the country. In 1991, while finishing his graduate degree, he contacted FH to inquire about open positions. His first job in FH was country director of FH Chad. He later moved to Bolivia, where he worked as country director from 1994 to 1996. He served until he left the organization in 2013 to pursue his lifelong calling of field work in Africa.[1]
Achievements and Recognitions
In May 2003, Evans organized and sponsored an international conference on Biblical Holism and Agriculture held at Dordt College in Sious Center, Iowa. The conference was framed around the topics of the Agriculturalist and God, Humanity, Creation, Knowledge, Purpose (including Vocation and Work) and Ethics.[5] A book was published from the conference presentations.
In 2003, Evans was senior editor of the book called Biblical Holism and Agriculture: Cultivating Our Roots, which was published by William Carey Library and addresses major issues concerning missions and agriculture, bringing relevance to the relationship of God, creation, and humanity in the context of ethics, agricultural science, economy, and globalization.[1]
In 2007, Evans testified before the US House of Representatives and the US Senate on the importance of the international food aid in the 2008 Farm Bill legislation.
In 2008, Evans presented a workshop to the United States Department of Agriculture outlining the feeding challenges that the world was and would continue to face.[7]
In February 2011, Evans made a presentation called "Responding to Climate Change: Helping the Developing World Poor Adapt" at a conference on climate change sponsored by the National Religious Partnership for the Environment and the Nicholas Institute for Environmental Policy Solutions at Duke University. In his presentation, Evans said that the impact of climate change on the poor included hunger (40 to 170 million additional impoverished people could be at risk of hunger and malnutrition in the 21st century), thirst (1 to 2 billion already stressed people could see a further reduction in water availability), flooding (impacting an additional 100 million people in coastal regions) and disease.[4]
In May 2012, Evans spoke at the U.S. government's "International Food Aid and Development Conference," describing how food and development programs have transformed poor Bolivian farmers into successful business owners and improved the nutrition of thousands of children.[8]
In July 2012, Evans co-hosted, with Pastor Rick Warren of Saddleback Church, a satellite event during the International AIDS Conference. The event brought together faith-based organizations to discuss the role of the faith community in the fight against HIV and AIDS.[3]
Personal life
Evans received his bachelor of arts degree in international studies from Indiana University of Pennsylvania. (IUP)[2] During his freshman year at IUP, he sensed a very strong call to spend his life working on behalf of the poor and hungry. While in college, Evans spent a semester in Haiti where he saw the incredible needs in the developing world. After his experience in Haiti, he decided to pursue a degree in international studies.
After graduation from IUP, he served for three years with the Mennonite Central Committee (MCC) in Burkina Faso and Chad, both of which are in French-speaking Africa. Following a few short-term assignments with a French NGO and the Peace Corps in Africa in the late 1980s, he entered Penn State University as a research assistant in the graduate school of agricultural economics. He received a master of science degree in agricultural economics from Penn State in 1991. He moved shortly after that to Chad, with his wife Susan, where he began to work with Food for the Hungry.
Evans met his wife Susan at Maranatha Christian Church in State College, Pa., in May 1989. They married in May 1990. Susan is a homemaker and currently works as a park naturalist. She has served in the past as a biology and science teacher at several private schools. They have two children, Kathryn Joy Evans, a university freshman and Bronwyn Dorothy Evans, a high school sophomore.
Publications
- Biblical Holism and Agriculture: Cultivating Our Roots (joint editor) published by William Carey Library, 2003, ISBN 978-0878083558
- This book addresses major issues concerning missions and agriculture, bringing relevance to the relationship of God, creation, and humanity in the context of ethics, agricultural science, economy, and globalization.[9]
- Truth and Community Transformation: Foundational Principles for Distinctively Biblical Community Development[10] (contributing author) published by Food for the Hungry International, 2003 and 2004
- This book provides foundational principles rooted in the Bible as well as practical recommendations for their use in the areas of agriculture, health, business, leadership, and family.
- The Least of These: Addressing a Changing Environment[11] (reviewer) published by the National Association of Evangelicals, 2011
- This book addresses climate change and global warming and makes a clarion call for Christians to become more active in caring for creation and speaking out for change.
References
- 1 2 3 New President at Mission Network; by Greg Yoder; published October 4 2013; retrieved December 2013
- 1 2 3 'Food for the Hungry (FH)' at Food for the Hungry
- 1 2 3 'The CSIS Global Health Policy Center' at CSIS; by Global Health Policy Center; published 2012; retrieved 2013
- 1 2 'Nicholas Institute' at Duke University; by Josh Schneck; published 2011; retrieved 2013
- 1 2 'IAPCHE' at Contact Newsletter; by IAPCHE; published 2001; retrieved 2013
- ↑ 'Welcome David Evans' at Mission Network News; by David Ranish; published July 2010; retrieved 2013
- ↑ 'Outreach' at USDA; by Steve Carlson; published 2009; retrieved 2013
- ↑ 'Food for the Hungry’s President Documents Food Aid Successes' at U.S. Food Aid and Security; by U.S. Food Aid; published July 2012; retrieved 2013
- ↑ Biblical Holism and Agriculture: Cultivating Our Roots/ 'Biblical Holism and Agriculture' at Google Books; by David Evans; published 2003; retrieved 2013
- ↑ 'Truth and Community' at Food for the Hungry; by Food for the Hungry International; published 2003' retrieved 2013
- ↑ 'Loving the Least' at National Association of Evangelicals; by Dorthy Boorse; published 2011; retrieved 20113
- Evans, D. J., Vos, R. J., Wright, K. P. (2003). Biblical holism and agriculture: Cultivating our roots. Pasadena, CA: William Carey Library.
- "Global Executive Office". Food for the Hungry. Retrieved 2 October 2012.