Betty Eileen King is a public servant, philanthropist, and diplomat who has spent her career working to improve the lives of people around the world. Born in 1957 on the Caribbean island of St. Vincent, King attended Grenadine Girls High School in Kingstown, the island nation’s capital, before setting off to pursue her higher education in Canada and the United States.
King earned a bachelor’s degree from the University of Windsor, Canada, and a master’s from the State University of New York at Stony Brook. She received additional education at the University of Michigan and was a National Humanities Fellow at Harvard University and a Public Policy Fellow at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA).
By the early 1980s, King resided in Little Rock, Arkansas, during which time she held positions at the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff and the State of Arkansas Department of Aging. While in Little Rock, she met the Arkansas attorney general at that time, William Clinton, initiating a friendship and professional relationship that would resurface throughout her career. King moved to Washington, D.C., in the late 1980s where she served as the District of Columbia Deputy Commissioner for Mental Health Services and concurrently Child and Youth Services Administrator (1988–1990).
After working seven years in the private sector, now President Clinton, chose King in 1997 to lead U.S. interests at the United Nations Economic and Social Council (UN/ECOSOC), appointing her as an Alternate U.S. Representative to the 52nd UN General Assembly, and as U.S. Representative to ECOSOC, with rank of ambassador. She continued in this capacity briefly under President George W. Bush until 2001.
At UN/ECOSOC, Ambassador King led U.S. efforts to promote global human rights and economic development. She also addressed issues involving children, aging, and population. Among her most significant contributions was her service as principal U.S. negotiator on the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), a set of measurable