Anubha Mukherjee stands at the powerful intersection of law, policy, governance, and purpose. With over two decades of influence across mining, environment, compliance, pharmaceuticals, and public affairs, she has shaped regulatory conversations at the highest levels—while remaining deeply rooted in lived experience and social impact. Currently leading Public Affairs at a global healthcare major, her journey reflects a rare blend of strategic foresight and human conviction.
In this episode of The Koffee Conversation, Anubha unpacks what it truly means to be a “Policy Architect.” From decoding invisible regulatory currents to influencing statutory reform, she reveals how public affairs is not about backroom secrecy—but about ethical engagement, collaboration, and foresight. This is leadership with clarity, courage, and conscience.

Her journey began with a childhood shaped by resilience. A transfusion-dependent thalassemia major patient for over four decades, Anubha transformed personal adversity into public advocacy. Encouraged by her family to channel discomfort into oratory and scholarship, she became a national debate champion—discovering early that her voice could shift rooms, narratives, and eventually, policy frameworks.
Professionally, her early years in public affairs consulting laid the foundation for navigating multi-ministry policy ecosystems. From contributing to reforms in the mining sector and witnessing the evolution of the MMDR framework, to leading board-level compliance conversations around sanctions, environmental governance, and the DPDP Act, she has consistently translated legal complexity into strategic business clarity. Alongside, she founded the Thalassemia Patients Advocacy Group—driving nationwide dialogue on safe blood, nucleic acid testing, and disability rights.

Key Highlights of the Koffee Conversation with Anubha Mukherjee
- Public affairs is ethical navigation—not hidden influence
- Law is not a subject; it is a way of thinking
- Policy decoding begins with deep business proximity
- Mining reforms revealed how regulation evolves in real time
- Sanctions policy marked a major corporate mindset shift
- Data privacy and the DPDP Act transformed boardroom discourse
- Compliance must be explained in human and financial terms
- Investor litigation demands discretion and long-term foresight
- Evidence-based advocacy can reverse blanket regulatory bans
- India’s regulatory style balances global ambition with local realities
- Collaboration between judiciary, executive, and civil society is rising
- Lived experience strengthens leadership credibility
- Hard work has no substitute—even in the AI era
- Advocacy for safe blood and thalassemia rights remains her core mission
- “Be useful” is her guiding philosophy for impact
▶️ Watch the full episode on YouTube to witness how law, lived experience, and leadership converge to shape policy that truly serves society.

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