Rebecca Hilsenrath

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Person.png Rebecca Hilsenrath LinkedIn TwitterRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(lawyer)
Rebecca Hilsenrath.jpg
Alma materUniversity of Cambridge
ReligionJewish

Employment.png CEO link=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chief executive officer

In office
October 2015 - Present
EmployerEHRC

Employment.png Chief Legal Officer

In office
March 2014 - Present
EmployerEHRC

Employment.png CEO link=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chief executive officer

In office
September 2008 - March 2014
EmployerLawWorks

Employment.png Legal Advisor

In office
April 2001 - August 2008
EmployerTreasury Solicitor's Department

Rebecca Hilsenrath is CEO and Chief Legal Officer of the Equality and Human Rights Commission.[1]

Career

Rebecca Hilsenrath has written for The Telegraph.[2]

2013 interview

Interviewed on 6 November 2013, and asked who had been the biggest single influence or inspiration in her career and why, Rebecca Hilsenrath replied:

"A line-manager I had in the Government Legal Service who was prepared to admit to clients in front of me that a mistake they had identified in my work was his not mine. It taught me that you can be a bigger person and command more respect by admitting to error."[3]

Strong Jewish presence

On 12 May 2016, the Jewish Chronicle reported:

"There is a strong Jewish presence at the top of Britain's equality watchdog. David Isaac, new chairman of the Equality and Human Rights Commission, took up office this week, joining Rebecca Hilsenrath, who was made CEO of the body last autumn."[4]

 

Related Documents

TitleTypePublication dateAuthor(s)Description
Document:Fears over conflicts of interest at top of watchdog probing Labour anti-semitismArticle16 July 2019Phil MillerSo why would the EHRC decide to investigate Labour for anti-semitism, when the polls showed it had actually dropped, and not probe the Conservatives or UKIP, whose members displayed Islamophobia?
Document:Racist and Cruel - The Nasty World of the Equality and Human Rights CommissionArticle30 May 2016David HenckeI think the EHRC is becoming part of the new nasty Britain. It will issue fine words but do nothing practical about the plight of people because it won't have the staff to do it. It is all part of turning the country into a place where the wealthy feel comfortable and the rest have to scavenge to survive. The only added twist is that the well paid people at the top of this pyramid at the ECHR are being paid out of ordinary people's taxes.
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References