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Program Staff: Rule of Law Program

Leanne Webster
Director, Rule of Law Program

After receiving her law degree and practicing litigation for several years, Leanne Webster joined the international development community in 2010 as a democracy and governance officer with the United States Agency for International Development. Her first overseas assignment with USAID was in El Salvador. She was subsequently posted in Afghanistan and Paraguay. Since then, Webster has worked on U.S. government-funded projects globally with implementing partners, supporting efforts to consolidate the rule of law, strengthen civil society organizations, broaden opportunity for marginalized youth, and fortify respect for human rights. Her roles have included senior leadership responsibilities in both overseas and U.S. positions.

Webster received her Juris Doctor from the S.J. Quinney College of Law at the University of Utah and her Master of Public Administration from the Wagner Graduate School of Public Service at New York University.

Hillary Forden, J.D.
Senior Associate Director

Hillary Forden is a lawyer and development practitioner with more than 15 years of experience in rule of law development, post-conflict justice, and criminal law, including over 10 years of experience managing multimillion-dollar programs for the U.S. government, public international organizations, and nongovernmental organizations.

Prior to joining The Carter Center, Forden consulted on Department of State and USAID-funded anti-corruption and legal education projects, including for the Friends of the Public Private Partnership for Justice Reform in Afghanistan. As a senior technical advisor for the American Bar Association Rule of Law Initiative’s (ABA ROLI) Asia and the Pacific Division from 2018 to 2021, Forden managed projects to counter money laundering and terrorism financing; prevent and respond to child sexual abuse; and advance business and human rights in South Asia. Between 2014 and 2018, Forden worked for the Department of State, Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs (INL) Section at the U.S. Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan, and the INL Office of Afghanistan and Pakistan in Washington, D.C., where she managed and advised on projects to increase access to justice for survivors and those at risk of experiencing gender-based violence and trafficking in persons in Afghanistan. She has previously managed rule of law development projects for the International Development Law Organization in South Sudan and the United Nations Development Program in Sudan. Before focusing on rule of law development, Forden held legal positions with international and domestic courts and tribunals.

Forden holds a Juris Doctorate from Yale Law School and a Bachelor of Arts from the University of California, Berkeley. She is a member of the State Bar of California.

Randolph Kent, M.S.
Associate Director

Randolph Kent joined The Carter Center in February 2023. As an associate director, he manages the Rule of Law Program’s U.S. elections program and supports the Bangladesh team’s business development efforts. Prior to joining the Center, Kent worked at the International Republican Institute in its Europe Division, establishing and managing the Albania and Montenegro portfolios and strengthening political party and local government capacity. He also served as a Peace Corps volunteer in Albania, working as an English language teacher. Kent holds a Master of Science in foreign service from Georgetown University and a Bachelor of Arts in political science from the University at Buffalo, SUNY.

Kari Mackey, M.A.
Associate Director

Kari Mackey is associate director of the Rule of Law Program. She helps manage the program's various projects that aim to advance transparency, accountability, and access to information, particularly in Liberia. During her tenure at the Center, Mackey has assisted with the coordination of four large international conferences on the right of access to information. She also curated and organized "Exhibition in the Archives: A Walk through Liberia’s Documented History from Pre-Colonization to Present Day;" a public exhibition at Liberia’s National Archives in Monrovia that highlights the value of freedom of information. Mackey received her master's degree in political science with a concentration in international relations and comparative politics at Georgia State University, where she also graduated summa cum laude with a Bachelor of Arts in political science. Her research has focused on the use of information communication technologies for the advancement of women. Previously, Mackey served on the board of directors for Sagal Radio, a community-based nonprofit organization that broadcasts weekly radio programs in the native languages of Atlanta’s largest refugee and immigrant populations, and worked for four years as an assistant project manager in the private sector.

Erica Phillips
Senior Program Associate

Erica Phillips has supported a wide variety of the Rule of Law Program’s projects, including those in West Africa, Costa Rica, and the United States. She is now primarily focused on West Africa and Asia access to justice programming. She joined The Carter Center in May 2022 as a program assistant. She is currently studying at Emory University in the Master of Development Practice program. Prior to joining the Center, Phillips was a United States Peace Corps volunteer in Cameroon and worked with USAID-funded research in Southeast Asia. She received her bachelor’s degree in political science and international studies from Iowa State University in 2019.

Nick Rodgers, M.A.
Senior Program Associate

Nick Rodgers supports the program’s various international projects, with a primary focus on those in Bangladesh and Liberia. He first joined The Carter Center in 2017 as an intern in the Conflict Resolution Program and became a program assistant with the Rule of Law Program in 2018, before being promoted to program associate in 2021 and senior program associate in 2022. Prior to joining the Center full time, Rodgers was involved with various nonprofits, interning with the Wild Dolphin Foundation and volunteering with the International Rescue Committee as an adult ESL teacher. Rodgers holds a master’s in development practice from Emory University and Bachelor of Arts in international affairs from the University of Georgia.

Denice Wade, M.P.H.
Senior Program Associate

Denice Wade works in the Rule of Law Program's Policing Alternatives Initiative. She brings to this work her lived experience of homelessness, long-term recovery from substance use disorder, and witnessing the marginalization of minorities, people living in poverty, and people living with disabilities.

Before joining The Carter Center, Wade was a project manager for homeless outreach for the city of Atlanta, where she planned, organized and executed the compassionate closing of over 20 homeless encampments with various partners and advocated for the needs of the unhoused population. She also lived in Kampala, Uganda, and Nairobi, Kenya, where she helped in the development of substance use recovery initiatives.

Wade is working on her Doctor of Public Health degree at Georgia State University. She received her Master of Public Health from Walden University and a Bachelor of Arts in sociology with an emphasis in diversity, stratification, and race relations from the University of Idaho.

Anna Bertazzoli, M.A.
Program Associate

Anna Bertazzoli joined The Carter Center in September 2024, supporting the Bangladesh project and Access to Justice programming in Asia. She brings more than five years of experience in international development and humanitarian assistance across West Africa and Eastern Europe. Before joining The Carter Center, Bertazzoli worked with several international NGOs in Ghana, Mali, Burkina Faso, and Ukraine. Her work focused on rural development, migration, child protection, and health. Bertazzoli holds a master's degree in global studies with a concentration in international development from the University of Vienna and a bachelor's degree in foreign languages from the University of Verona in Italy. 

Hannah LeMoyne
Program Associate

Hannah LeMoyne supports the Rule of Law Program’s various international projects, with a focus on those in Latin America. She joined the Carter Center in September 2023. Prior to joining The Carter Center, she lived in San Salvador, El Salvador, and Lima, Peru, working on different projects. During her graduate studies, LeMoyne worked with the Organization of American States, the National Democratic Institute, the National Endowment for Democracy, and the Embassy of Peru in Washington, D.C. She studied at American University’s School of International Service, where she received her master’s degree in international relations, with a concentration in governmental transitions and narcotrafficking, in 2016. She received a bachelor’s degree in international relations from Old Dominion University in 2012.

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