| When
Jennifer Devine learned she had received a 2004 Marshall Scholarship,
she knew her parents—who had encouraged her to excel—would
be thrilled for her. Unfortunately neither parent lived to celebrate
her achievement. That Devine succeeded despite these and other personal
hardships says much about her perseverance.
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Jennifer
Devine. Photo by Karen Orders. |
Devine is the first person
in her immediate family to graduate from college. She was raised
in a single parent household with extremely limited resources. But
she was able to put her situation in perspective after spending
a summer in Mexico and Costa Rica on a cultural exchange after graduating
from high school.
“The poverty that
is part of the lives of a significant percentage of Latin American
peoples horrified me,” Devine wrote in her Marshall Scholarship
application. “. . . I was able to understand the superficiality
of my own ‘disadvantaged’ upbringing in Yakima.”
When Devine arrived
at the UW—after graduating from Yakima Valley Community College—she
chose to major in geography,
focusing on the causes of poverty, its effect on women and families,
and possible solutions. She currently serves as a research assistant
for two geography faculty investigating poverty, inequality, and
economic restructuring in rural poor communities in the Pacific
Northwest.
Reflecting her interest
in Latin America, Devine was able to travel to Cuba as part of a
Women’s Mission organized by the UW’s Center
for Women & Democracy, along with Maria Cantwell and other
local leaders. She was the first student representative to participate
in a Center mission. “Meeting the wonderful women on this
trip really inspired me,” says Devine. “They have accomplished
so much yet make the time to give back to the community and find
opportunities for other women.”
Devine also participated
in the Center’s National Education for Women’s (NEW)
Leadership Institute—designed to educate and empower the next
generation of women leaders—and served as an intern for the
Center in 2002. She is co-founder of the NEW Leadership Alumnae
Association.
“I love the Center
for Women & Democracy,” says Devine. “A good part
of my success here at the University is because of that organization
and the opportunities
it has provided.”
Devine is also president
of the UW Tolo chapter of Mortar Board National Honor Society. With
all these responsibilities, you’d think she would welcome
a break.
Not a chance. Devine is looking forward to beginning graduate school
at the London School of Economics next fall—on her Marshall
Scholarship.
[Winter/Spring 2004 - Table of Contents]
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