Graduate School of Business
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Kweku Fleming
Business Transformation Advisor, Stanford Institute for Innovation in Developing Economies (SEED)
BioKweku Fleming is the Senior Facilitator with Stanford Seed, and a part of Seed’s Founding team in West Africa. In his most recent role, he managed Stanford Seed’s corps of Transformation Facilitators. Fleming contributed to establishing and refining the structure, curriculum and content of Stanford’s accelerator for small & medium enterprises operating in Africa and South Asia. He has been an executive Coach supporting dozens of scaling enterprises, and has facilitated over 120 capacity-building workshops in multiple industries and regions.
Fleming earned a B.S. in electrical engineering and a M.S. in & Product Design from Stanford University. He earned a M.A. in architecture from the Illinois Institute of Technology. He was a MBA Fellow in MIT’s Leaders for Global Operations.
In his former career, he was a Design Consultant who collaborated with companies to develop new products and innovations to existing products.
Fleming has worked with companies like Walt Disney Imagineering, Embarq, Jet Blue, Alcoa, and the United States Patent & Trademark Office, having served as a Registered Patent Agent since 2000.
Fleming lives in Accra, Ghana. -
Brady Fuller
Assistant Director, Program Delivery, Stanford Institute for Innovation in Developing Economies (SEED)
Current Role at StanfordAssistant Director, Program Delivery, Stanford Seed
Graduate School of Business -
Rwaida Gharib
Ph.D. Student in Environment and Resources, admitted Autumn 2023
Stanford Student Employee, Graduate School of Business - Center for Entrepreneurial Studies
Research Analyst, Precourt Institute for EnergyBioRwaida is a PhD student in Environment and Resources at Stanford’s School of Sustainability. Her research focuses on the international policy frameworks shaping climate adaptation and mobility, with an emphasis on environmental justice for displaced communities, rural populations, and women and girls. She examines how global institutions respond to climate vulnerability—and how they can be transformed to better support frontline communities.
Rwaida’s current work explores climate displacement and adaptation efforts across the Global South, with field research in Kenya and Central America. She is particularly focused on the lived experiences of refugees and migrants navigating environmental instability and structural inequities.
She brings over 15 years of experience in international development and humanitarian policy, including advisory roles with the World Bank Group and UNDP, and service in the Obama Administration, where she helped design the White House Power Africa Initiative. Currently, she supports adaptation finance research at Stanford's Sustainable Finance Institute as well as the Graduate School of Business's Ecopreneurship Program.