Sue Eckert
Expert, Al-Qaida/ISIL/Taliban Monitoring TeamUnited Nations
Sue Eckert is an expert on the United Nations Analytical Support and Sanctions Monitoring Team addressing Al-Qaida/ISIL/Taliban (1267/1988) sanctions. Previously she was affiliated with Washington, DC and New York-based think tanks, most recently as senior associate with the Humanitarian Agenda at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) where she focused on issues related to financial access and the impact of sanctions and counterterrorism measures on humanitarian action. Previously, Ms. Eckert served as assistant secretary of commerce for export administration responsible for dual-use export control and sanctions policies; she also was a former staff member of the House of Representative's Committee on Foreign Affairs, where she oversaw national security, nonproliferation, international trade, and technology transfer issues.
From 1998 to 2016, Ms. Eckert was senior fellow at Brown University’s Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs, where she codirected research projects on UN sanctions (coauthoring the Interlaken Manual Targeted Financial Sanctions: A Manual for Design and Implementation, the book Targeted Sanctions: The Impacts and Effectiveness of United Nations Action, and a series of three “Watson Reports”) and the financing of terrorism (coediting the book Countering the Financing of Terrorism). In 2017, she undertook the first quantitative study, Financial Access for U.S. Nonprofits, of the challenges that U.S. non-organizations face in transferring funds abroad to support humanitarian programs. She served as a consultant to the World Bank on de-risking and unintended consequences of anti-money laundering (AML), countering the financing of terrorism (CFT), and sanctions policies; and as senior adviser to the NY-based International Peace Institute on counterterrorism, sanctions, and humanitarian action.