Tuck MBAs and second-year fellows with Tuck’s Center for Business, Government & Society at the B20 Summit, part of the Global Business Summit for the G20, pose with Hannah Payson during the event in São Paulo. They are Zac Seeber, Leen Ajlouni, and Saad Shaukat. Courtesy photo
Growing up in Jordan, Leen Ajlouni says education changed the trajectory of her life. She was lucky enough to earn scholarships from a young age, helping her earn an engineering degree at Smith College in Massachusetts and, now, helping her fund an MBA from Dartmouth’s Tuck School of Business.
She eventually hopes to work on complex global problems – like fundamental access to quality education for all – while lifting up disadvantaged and low income communities.
Ajlouni took a big step this fall. She was one of three Tuck MBAs to attend and participate in the B20 Summit in São Paulo, Brazil. The summit is the official forum for the global business community within the G20, bringing together business leaders and policymakers to collaborate on pressing economic issues across the globe.
Ajlouni and her MBA classmates – all second-year fellows with Tuck’s Center for Business, Government & Society – served on B20 Brazil’s Trade and Investment Task Force. Tuck was the only business school, and likely the only educational institution, represented at the summit.
“I’m leaving the summit with a commitment to lead with purpose, ensuring that the companies and initiatives I’m part of don’t just seek profit but also contribute meaningfully to society. The summit helped me internalize that the right question shouldn’t be ‘should we do this?’ but rather ‘how do we justify not doing this?’” Ajlouni tells Poets&Quants.
“I was reminded to stay grounded in my values, to take humanity to business, and to hold myself personally accountable.”
Tuck’s three Center for Business, Government & Society fellows pose with Tuck alum and B20 Brazil chairman Dan Ioschpe at the summit this October in São Paulo, Brazil. Courtesy photo
Tuck’s Center for Business, Government & Society (CBGS) trains business leaders at the intersections of public, private, and nonprofit sectors. Through it, MBAs and other Tuck students engage with issues like corporate social responsibility, sustainable business practices, public-private partnerships, and the role of government in economic development through special programming, workshops and forums, fellowships, and guest speakers. It emphasizes both experiential learning and real-world impact.