Editor’s Note
The Responsible Jewellery Council has appointed Purvi Shah, formerly De Beers’ head of ethical and sustainable value chains, as its new executive director. She will assume the role in February 2025.

Purvi Shah tells Rapaport News her plans for the role, which she will assume on February 7.
November 19, 2025
Rachael Taylor
The Responsible Jewellery Council (RJC) has tapped Purvi Shah for the role of executive director, which has been open since Melanie Grant stepped down in January.

Shah will join the organization on February 7 from De Beers, where she is head of ethical and sustainable value chains.
Based in London, Shah has a long association with the RJC as cochair of its Standards Committee since 2018 and has been a board member since 2023. She also played a pivotal role in the development of the RJC’s industry standards: the Code of Practices COP 2024, the Chain of Custody COC 2024, and the Laboratory-Grown Materials Standard LGMS 2025.
Shah will bring with her more than 15 years of experience working in ethics and standards within the jewelry industry, and a deep understanding of the complexities of the environmental, society and governance (ESG) landscape within the trade. At De Beers, Shah was responsible for the evolution of the miner’s Best Practice Principles and Pipeline Integrity programs, and under her leadership, sustainability was integrated into De Beers’ value chain, advancing its ESG credentials to meet evolving stakeholder expectations. She has also headed the World Jewellery Confederation (CIBJO) Nomenclature Committee.
Her first months in the role will be spent listening to RJC members, the incoming executive director said.

Asked how she viewed the role of the RJC today, Shah replied that it should act as a “driver of value creation” to enhance consumer trust, foster innovation through collaboration, and support long-term business resilience for members.
One of the biggest challenges that will shape Shah’s work at the RJC is likely to relate to increasing legislation.

While Shah admitted that at present “my lens is, of course, pretty focused on diamonds,” she pointed out the importance of shoring up traceability efforts across all sectors of the industry, particularly colored stones, where she felt the RJC could play a role to “help unlock some of the challenges there across complex and fragmented supply chains.”