To be the world's first open catalogue of 1000 Social Businesses - socialbusiness.tv

download : launch invitation to social business modellers written by Dr Muhammad Yunus, 25 Dec 2007

 

Cp1 Micro SB Cp2 Foundation Cp3microsummit Cp4 Place leader Cp5 World Stage Cp6 TN$ Audit Cp7 Collaborative Nations Cp8 Corporates

Cp9 Univerities Cp10 SB Funds and competitions CP11 Youth owned employment agency & mobile-webs change jobs C12 Converting NGO/Hubs

 
  10-win exponential modelSustainability Collaboration Partnering is the new Innovation

SB Name

Nearest Gameboard

EmpcustownGloLocCp1Cp2Cp3Cp4Cp5Cp6Cp7Cp8Cp9Cp10Cp11Cp12

Aravind

Nurses Job Creation

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Aravind’s purpose is ending unnecessary blindness. Its SB model is 10 times more economical for poorest. It has streamlined the way that the laser surgeon and paranurses work so that about 5 times more surgeries are done per surgeon than by any other cataract surgery. The paranurses are trained from girls in the village being a wages win-win for the girls and Aravind. It asks that patients pay what they can afford up to a a maximum which is still two thirds less than cheapest eye surgery. Through this means, up to thirds of patients get their operation for free. Restoring eyesight multiplies both social and economic value. Conceptualisation in India, Aravind “borrowed” world leading advice from Larry Brilliant who was working for neigbouring NGOs. Its franchise has now been open sourced beyond India with Muhammad Yunus making several replications, the first of which were funded by the socially responsible Pop Group The Green Children whose songs brought additional joy to the Nobel Prize ceremony.

Grameen – National

The bank that wasn’t a bank

Sustainability Olympics SB Summit

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Grameen’s purpose is ending poverty –  a broken system which up to a third of the world’s children are born into.  Bangladesh was itself born as world’s poorest nation in 1971 after a bloody war of independence with Pakistan which had until 1946 been part of the colonisation of India.  Nowhere have entrepreneurs had such impact in building a nation as Bangladesh. At the epicentre of this is Grameen : the greatest job creation system ever designed. After 7 years of trial, Dr Yunus and his 4 co-founders formalised the first social business , constituted by a Bangladeshi law of 1983,   the Grameen Bank owned by the poorest

 

The bank that isn't a bank also offers a free market space and a knowledge hub for every 60 villagers – today there are over 125000 of these Village Centres serving the 7+ million members of Grameen. Grameen’s 10-win model needed 7 years of testing to discover such values as : its poor women owners primarily wanted future investment and Grameen’s innovative leadership to be focused on their children’s development. Thus the bank was designed both to be income generating for its female members and to bring health and education to their children who would otherwise have perpetuated illiteracy.  With customers and owners united in investing exponential rising purpose, working for Grameen, as 25000 people now do, is a joy. As Grameen local branch staff come to every Village Centre once a week, they experience first hand the micro ecologies of banking, marketing and knowledge networking interfaced with each other to maximise sustainable use of local and human resources. And this experience generates micro up entrepreneurial dynamics that compound 10 times more economic performance locally than any macroeconomist could begin to plan. For example, consider Grameen’s development of clean energy – since 1996  energy systems have been meticulously interconnected in a natural way that now makes Grameen Shakti a world benchmark installing more solar units than the whole of the USA. Another application showing how micro up and collaboration system design make light of networking age is the 1996 investment that Grameen made in mobile telephone ladies. What the villagers led, the whole of Bangladesh followed – there are now over 40 million mobile networkers with www.grameensolutions.com a world epicentre in digital infrastructure and smart media’s job creation for the poor

 

After a third of a century, Grameen has established the largest case bank of examples where microeconomics is ten time more economic than global top-down can be. It has played a core role in microcreditsummit since its launch in what has become the benchmark for summits that set heroic goals (reach 100 million of the poorest with microcredit in under a decade. Grameen has received prizes from various royalty and Dr Yunus is celebrated as a worldwide hero with the 2006 Nobel Peace prize. More remarkably, Grameen offers a paradigm for freeing the global market of banking to be sustainable.  

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Young people see the social business model as the job creation way ahead. Worldwide citizens can now  hub around microentrepreneurial centres and help NGO’s and others change over to the recyclable social business dollar co-creating the most purposeful organisations ever designed and sustained.

 

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Dear Lamiya - urgent support requested

I need a simple 2-minute survey now that social business fans including 1000 book club readers, youth ambaasadors, CEO co-branders in creating sustainability, business school heads ...  could be asking each other

please tell me if you have improvements to these 5 short questions

5 deepest questions social business practitioners ask each other

What makes this the most exciting entrepreneurial challenge?

Eg aim for 10 times more economical model

How is this mathematical optimal design for resolving any sustainability crisis

Which stories make this essential to youth and job creation

Why is this the world’s greatest invention?

What’s the question 5th  we could be networking around

The way to sustain the world according to Journalists for Humanity, Sustainability Investment banking's epicentre in Dhaka, and you? -RSVP info@ worldcitizen.tv

.Since microeconomists coined the term Entrepreneurial Revolution in the 1976 Economist, Dr Yunus has been top of ER's premier league. For the first 30 of these years by deveoping the world's greatest inventions in micro franchises for pe sourcing the www race to end poverty . Since winning the Nobel prize in 2006 he has invited the world's most resourced organsiations to play social business partnerships with grassroots networks of microentrepreneurs serving life critical needs SO AS TO free global markets to value the most sustainable innovations each global sector can compound. Try playing the global social busienss partnership ABC game -tell us ideas you have of whose customers and societies of a global brand could most celebrate sustainability innovations next.gabc1.jpg.

 

To Mostofa Grameen YunusForum - In launching Youth Amabassador 5000 for undergraguates 09/10, please could you see if Dr YUnus would like me to sponsor this competition. I supply the $500 - mostofa selects shortlist; Dr Yunus chooses winner from registered youth ambassadors

$500 prize for best announcement in under 100 words of why world loves social business entrepreneurs -deadline berlin's 20th fall of wall

Example Entry (97 words) The 20th century’s biggest lesson about productive places to live - communism’s over-government of markets doesn’t work This leaves many choices between entrepreneurial system designers –eg which of these organisational designs do you prefer?

  • Ever higher prices <> low prices
  • Ever less responsibility <> high responsibility
  •  Ever less transparency <> high transparency
  • Ever more profit for speculators <> Reinvestment in purpose, ownership by communities ending poverty
  • “Wall Street 21st Century model” <>

“Bangladesh social business model” Bangladesh models have sustained investment for 37 years. They are now world leaders in sectors such as banking, solar energy, mobile design and open source knowhow models

 Muhammad Yunus: One thing that is very clear to me- that with the Social Business taking off, the world of free market capitalism will never be the same again, and it then will really be able to put the deathblow on global poverty. I am sure many business wizards and successful business personalities will apply their abilities to the SB challenge of creating a poverty-free world within a short time,

Diary of best news I have ever heard in 33 years of worldwide marketing

April 09: Grameen Veolia has opened. It is offering drinking water at 80 times lower cost than any business has ever sold water at

09 I hear that BASF has become the first German Future Capitalism partner - both building on the nutrional supplement sector that became the world's first FC breakthrough and helping Bangladeshi's manufacture nets that prevent malaria. I wish this sort of innovation would get all the global headlines it deserves - rumors are that German leaders are racing to celebrate FC, Volksvagen and Adidas are going to come up with future capitalism ventures on the highest visibility stages of all -eg the World Cup  

Congratulations to New York's 19-25 and East Coast Students on committing to try to link the first Catalogue of 1000 replicable social busineses designed to end poverty -MY

Yes We Can Sustain MICRO -tabulation indexed by 7 vital services of communities rising ; wherever possible unique case views are footnoted -please email info@worldcitizen.tv if you have a suggested correction or a nomination
Replication origin bankinglearning & job creatinghealth & safety

clean energy, food, water

media and channels

demotix.com -the SB of photjournalism?

governance transparencyProfessionals with Hippo Oaths
.Africa & South

.1 Jamii Bora MicroCredit & Mobilising Micro-Everything

41 FINCA

42 Grameen Credit Agricole

43 Microloanfoundation (malawi mc), world benchmark student club in Boston, London HQ

44 Fantsuam Foundation (Nigeria)

81 Grameen Carlos Slim (Mexico)

82 Pro Mujer Bolivia

83 FundacionCarvajal A colombian not-for profit fundacion which appears to use social bus

89 vivatrust.com

230 Fonkoze has been described as a BRAC-style replicate for Haiti. also its own desription as Haiti’s Alternative Bank for the Organized Poor. We are the largest micro-finance institution offering a full range of financial services to the rural-based poor in Haiti. Fonkoze is committed to the economic and social improvement of the people and communities of Haiti and to the reduction of poverty in the country.
Learn more >>

232 Fonkoze debit card for remiittances to Haiti

70 Community Development Foundation, Mozambique

.2 Jamii Bora Business School

6 Jamii Bora Hope (social interventions mentoring network)

51 CIDA Free University (Johannesburg)

71 Injaz jordan

612 Senna Institute

601 Helps Guatemala

231 Fonkoze literacy program in Haiti includes life-skils and rights

010 livestrong.org -is this the most efficient health campaign of the year -please main info@worldcitizen.tv other nominations

3 Jamii Bora Health Insurance

4 Jamii Bora Housing Estate

5 Jamii Bora Disaster Insurance

7 Jamii Bora alcoholics anonymous

66 villagereach - mozambique

67 waterpartners

71 riders.org - (motorbike) transportation for medics in africa

8 Jamii Bora Solar

9 Jamii Bora Estate Utilities

63 La Laiterie du Berger- Senegal - combating nutrition chlalenge that 90% of milk is imported

64 1001 fontaines - purifying village water - camdodia, madagascar

69 solar cells kibera

70 Project Gaia, Ethiopia, Ashden energy award winner

hot is : 20 -The Age of Stupid

21 mftransparency.com 


 451 Fundacion Alas - using celebrity to end poverty - rsvp who does most good with their fame -eg Shakira

450 Frogtek.org appears to be a social business mobile replication agent with a focus on S.America -founder also associated with Microlumbia

.460 Athletes for Africa

461 traderightinternational -shea nuts and other ghana markets

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.Bangla & India & East

.100 Grameen Bank

121 Destitute and ‘struggling’ members: There are special services for very poor villagers under a ‘destitute members’ scheme. In this scheme, kendra members take responsibility for coaching a very poor woman who may take small loans with very flexible terms and schedules, without being a formal group or kendra member. A special category of the destitute are beggars – called ‘Struggling Members’ by the bank – and there are exclusive programmes for them.

122 Struggling members program

131 future capitalism : Grameen Credit Agricole

132 Principality of Monaco Social Business Fund

200 BRAC BRAC is the largest collaboration network of social businesses in the world. It is reaching 110 million poor people annually. Its grassroots service networks are active in 70,000 villages in all of the 64 districts of Bangladesh, reaching an estimated 75 percent of the entire population. Its health programs serve more than 92 million people, its microfinance programs assist more than 7 million borrowers, and its education programs reach more than 1.5 million children. Today, the organization generates 80 percent of its $485 million budget from its wholly owned social businesses. Case  In recent times it has also been replcating to selected Muslim countries internationally.

BRAC has computerized its entire microfinance program so that it could more closely monitor all of its loans and curtail ineffective practices. At the heart of its banking businesses is one of Bangaldesh’s 3 mainstream rural microcredit programs. It has also IPO'd a city bank that increases BRAC's own funding ( in a similar way that Grameen mobile in cities became a major source of funds)

207 BRAC’s New Program for the Ultra- Poor, which currently serves 132,000 women. The focus group revealed that some of the poorest families in Bangladesh could not participate in BRAC’s microfinance program because they did not have the wherewithal to borrow and repay.“They needed grants rather than loans,” says Abed. And so BRAC designed a program that would “hold the hands” of Bangladesh’s poorest 10 percent by giving them grants and stipends for the first two years of their participation, he says. Then, most of the clients “graduate,” becoming full-fledged microfinance borrowers.

208 another innovative BRAC microcerdit program connect teenage girls now serving 300,000+.  -see eg 1

250 ASA

251 safesave

252 Kashf microcredit Pakistan

microcredit & mobile

253 grameen koota (india) & partner mChek

300 Lucknow City Montesorri world's largest school

126 Grameen Shikkha High-school scholarships: typically 2/3 go to girls

108 Grameen Intel

201 Brac's informal primary school systems. In 2007, Informal schooling system comprises: 20000 pre-primary, 32000 primary, 2000 secondary schools

204 BRAC.net - in recent years BRAC wanted to improve teacher training and curricula in its network of more than 50,000 one-room rural schools.  High-speed Internet access was the best way to get information to teachers. BRAC partnered with San Francisco- based gNet to create bracNet, which is building Bangladesh’s high-speed network from scratch.

213 There is also BRAC University. And BRAC research webs http://www.bracresearch.org/   

471 Barefoot College

61 goodwill india

310 Room to Read

311 MITACS

312 prayasam -children as healthcare teachers -Amlan Ganguly

.112 Grameen Kalyan health Insurance for $2 per year

101 Grameen Danone 1 2 kids

fortified yogurt

 gdanone.jpg

102 Grameen GreenChildren Eye Hospital (Aravind Replication)

111 Grameen housing loan program - started to provide monsoon-proof roof over head  & pit latrine hygience - over .25 million; won Aga Khan architecture award

130 future capitalism -no shoeless person -adidas may announce $1 shoe at next world cup

61 Tomsshoes.com -unverified as a social business- 1 for 1 shoes given to shoeless kids is an important health service

70 scojo reading glasses India -now known as vision spring - supplies vision entrepreneurs with a saleskit in a bag

80 Vision Spring eyecare 

202 Brac's healthcare services originated round Oral Rehydration village nursing.Today’s nursing programs  focus to such areas as: MNCH  Maternal, Neonatal and Child Health; WASH Water and Sanitation Health

301 Aravind Eyecare India

302 limbs -jaipur foot - http://sic.conversationsnetwork.org/shows/detail3483.html artificial limbs http://www.jaipurfoot.org/

330 lifeline foundation - india - Das partnerships with yunus

511 emergency constructions -chile & S.America

422 Friends-International

53 Janani affordable family planning

81 peace rehabilitation nepal

103 Grameen Shakti Solar

104 Grameen Shakti Biogas

105 Grameen Veolia water

106 Grameen Seeds (eg for planting carrots to end children's night blindness due to vitamin a deficiency)

107 Grameen Fisheries

133 future capitalism - grameen volksvagen joint venture

160 REDP China - solar etc

590 Sustainable South Bronx

201 selco india - one of neville williams founding initiatives in solar energy -recently an Ashden winner

202 mightylight

203 climate-leaders.org

BRAC Integrated dairy Businesses

209 in 1990, BRAC DAIRY.  began making microloans to poor women who wanted to raise milk cattle. But when Abed met with one of the program’s borrowers, she revealed that she was having a hard time getting the milk to market, and that even when she could, she received only one-third of the price that milk sellers received in Dhaka, Bangladesh’s capital. So in 1998 BRAC established the BRAC Dairy, which primarily purchases and markets the milk that its microlendees produce. To collect and process the milk for the dairy, BRAC has set up 80 milk chilling centers across Bangladesh. The BRAC Dairy and milk collection centers employ more than 500 people. In 2007, the project generated $1.15 million in surplus cash, which was enough not only to support the workers and dairy farmers, but also to expand operations. The BRAC Dairy is also becoming increasingly competitive with other Bangladeshi dairies: Its market share increased from 20 percent in 2006 to 35 percent in 2007.

210 BRAC created an artificial insemination (AI) program in 1998. BRAC operates one bull station and a network of 70 storage facilities across the country, training more than 1,000 AI workers. These workers not only deliver high-quality semen and inseminate cows, but also provide wrap-around services such as vaccination, pregnancy diagnosis, and calf delivery. BRAC pays the workers a fixed fee per insemination, which means that the more work the AI worker completes, the greater is his income. BRAC’s AI program generated $60,000 in profits in 2007. At the same time, it not only granted job skills and income to people across Bangladesh, but also supported the microentrepreneurs, dairy and chilling-center employees, and consumers—many of whom are also poor—further down the value chain.

211 BRAC Integrate Broiler Processing,In Bangladesh, approximately 70% of landless rural women are directly or indirectly involved in poultry rearing activities. The poultry and livestock sector accounts for approximately 3% of the country's GDP . BRAC's poultry programme is composed of several components:  poultry farms and hatcheries, feed mills, feed analysis and poultry disease diagnosis laboratories .The programme was started in the early eighties to protect poultry and livestock from disease by developing skilled village-level poultry and livestock extension workers (para veterinarians).We produce and distribute good quality day old chicks as well as poultry, cattle and fish feed. To date, 2.1 million people have been involved in this programme.

212 BRAC Solar Social Business : 37000 units installed to date.

454 Gramvikas - water and sanitation

109 Grameen Mobile Phone

110 Bankabillion.org

203 Back in 1974, BRAC’s first social business began in media. It emerged from a printing press that supplied books and other printed materials to the organization’s schools and education programs. Owning a press was a way to cut printing costs and to reclaim the profits that the profit-extracting sector would have taken. It also enables BRAC to open up the future relevance of  schools curricula and cultural evolution. Currnet annual profits from this business wholly reinvested back in BRAC are over $300,000 annually.

, 205 Wherever BRAC achieves market leadership its channels act like cooperatives typically deploying business models that British author Alan Mitchell terms right-side up. BRAC launched  the social business of Aarong Craft Shops. Aarong helps 65,000 rural artisans market and sell their handicrafts and has become the most popular handicraft marketing operation in Bangladesh. Its brand is as fashionable as any a for-profit corporation can offer.

206

Integrated Silk Production;

BRAC’s Sericulture programme  in 2007 has built up to more than 7,500 silkworm rearers and 5,800 spinners. They  have been engaged in producing a total of 212 metric tonnes of silk worm cocoons and 21 metric tonnes of raw silk.

470 Tarsian - Afghan womens craft trade

471 wokai - a chinese kiva

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410 Shorebank

411 Grameen Bank USA branch 1 Queens New York; branch 2 Omaha Nebraska

420 WholePlanetFoundation

421 Microcredit Enterprises Arizona supports scaling or health connecting of about 15 MFis

435 thecarrotproject

430 *Paris municipal microcredit bank

431 *California University State Microcredit Bank

441 Grameen Glasgow

In the uk it is presumably the case that the 432 royal mail and its newly energing 433 peoples bank are social business entrepreneurial revolutions waiting to happen - is there anything similar in usa? I think paris has started something similar with its social business bank - any other leadership quest sightings?

434 DSL Business Finance (Glasgow)

442 cdfa - uk association of small microcredit-types

471 MyC4- denmark to africa

501 Youth Microcredit International

502 La Ceiba (Honduras)

510 Freedom from Hunger - ffh partners

511 FFH reports Ghana now has a sort of avon lady but microfinanced to sell healthcare products door t door

512 Enterprise mentors - see also utah's warner woodworth

600 mondragon - a sort of coop invetsment bank from spain

.500 curriki open sourcing school texts

501 Gems schools and curricula

440 UK's Sure Start Child-Centres intended as social business program

 

611 Fifteen

612 DC Kitchen

620 manchesterbidwell - community job creation usa

621 YouthBuild - job creation usa

622 verite better worlplaces www

50 embrace incubators -cost $25 where other baby incubators can cost up to $20000 

51 http://www.narayanahospitals.com/ heart bypass operations for about $2700 compared with $100000+

 

60 path

69 HODR

. 331 Lions Sight First claims to give back $6 - it may not be exactly a social business but it seems to network to similar effect

332 adaptive-eyecare another player worth noting even if its not quite an SB

333 KansasCity Free Eye

434 Britian's NHS is still the grand-aunt of social business of healthcare but like many grand aunts she's lost her gait or is it gatesway -irredeemably so probably not, meanwhile which country's health system is the best social business

435 New Zealand NHS? or you tell us info@worldcitizen.tv

436 GAIN nutrition -awards oompetition

437 B corporation -catalogues corporations with transparency

438 genv.net (connected to ashoka)

439 cfed DC

406 One Condoms Uk The company licenced to distribute american manufacturer one condoms claims to be social business

580 harvard shelter-housing loans MFI program

581 TheBridgeFund (NY)

590 solesunited -recycles crocs shoes

.402 Microenergycredits.com

405 onewater.org.uk

470 FullBellyProject - universal nut shredder

406 offsetters

.0 the www remains the number 1 social business thanks to its MIT guardians ringled by Tim B-L; is there any way its competence focus on weaving technology protocols could find a partner on internet for the poor?

420 climate champions -media ops for social business that change the world is often mistakenly assumed to be the sole preserve of large finance - actually designing a competition that becomes a worldwide cup and so instant stage for top 10 league table. This is less to do with money and more to do with window of opportunity to fill in an urgent storytelling gap inspiring human interest. Next to zero cost worldwide scaling of brands is an entrepreneurial practice known as brand seeding first studied in world class brands literature emerging in late 1980s. 

421 freethechildren.com

422 greatergood.org operates fair trade webs out of seattle with net profits gong to charities or social bus

430 appropedia rsvp info@worldcitizen.tv with your favourite wiki social business

400 publicly owned : the BBC is the grandaunt of mass media social business however its got its knickers in a twist in 2 particularly dismal ways - being accountable to big government not the people, and believing that spectator sports deserve more share of voice than sustainability social action networks- come back grandaunt before london olympics 2012. lease put more program content inviting youth to leadership quest sustainabilty-activating yes we can projects and micro-up goodwill all over the world; why not a worldwide end poverty apprenticeship reality tv program with MYBangla 1 2 3

412 microcreditsummit.org (blog)

401 TheGreenChildren (responsibility pop group)

403 Yunus The Movie comng soon as an event linked into cataloguing social Business

413 Paul Newman foods

404 Kiva - though with reservations

440 needmag

441 People Tree (foundation)

442 secod

443 catalyst

444 grameencl - creative lab germany

.410 results.org

youthful consultancies

500 Cornell Social Business Consultancy

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.special collections -health from world congress 2009

 

4 extremely affordable health innovations , world health congress 6; DC April15
we welcome youtube reporting of this to appear here http://www.youtube.com/socialbusiness
  1. Mobile Solutions for Nutrition Monitoring
    Presenter: Mr. Sean Blaschke, Grad Student, International Affairs, Columbia University
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  2. A Chlorhexidine Product for Umbilical Cord Care
    Presenter: Ms. Mutsumi Metzle, Commercialization Officer, PATH
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  3. LifeSpring Hospitals
    Presenter: Ms. Tricia Morente, Director, Marketing and Strategy, LifeSpring Hospitals
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  4. "Car Part" Incubator: An Innovative Solution
    Presenter: Ms. Aya Caldwell, , CIMIT Global Health Initiative
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  5. Cost-Effective Asphyxia Intervention in Aceh
    Presenter: Ms. Aya Caldwell, , CIMIT Global Health Initiative
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  6. MIDA (Medical In-Field Diagnostic Assistant)
    Presenter: Mr. Alexander Albertine, Program Manager, MIDA International
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  7. Women-Owned Franchises: Diagnostics in Rural India
    Presenter: Ms. Ann Rogan, Manager, Rural Health Services, Drishtee
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  8. Resdida: Affordable Bi-Directional Communications
    Presenter: Ms. Karen Vincent, COO, Resdida
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  9. Hot Diagnostic Technologies: Low cost, point of care
    Presenter: Mr. Paul LaBarre, Technical Officer, PATH
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  10. Ultra Rice: Expanding markets for fortified rice
    Presenter: Ms. Rae Galloway, Nutrition Specialist, PATH
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  11. InSTEDD's Global Early Warning and Response System
    Presenter: Dr. Taha Kass-Hout, Director, InSTEDD
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  12. Rapid Healthcare Diagnostics Network - D.Scope
    Presenter: Dr. Daniel Niclas, CSO, D-Rev
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  13. Social Marketing and Franchising for a Better Life
    Presenter: Ms. Preeti Anand, General Manager, Programs, Janani
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  14. Embrace: A $25 Infant Incubator
    Presenter: Ms. Jane Chen, CEO, Embrace
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  15. Affordable, Sustainable Mobile Health Delivery
    Presenter: Mr. Don Yansen, Director, ClickHealth
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  16. The CFWclinics Franchise Network
    Presenter: Mr. Greg Starbird, COO, HealthStore Foundation
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  17. Mobile Games for Healthcare
    Presenter: Dr. Hilmi Quraishi, Chief Learning Technologist, ZMQ Software Systems
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  18. Water-Based Health Care Delivery in Bangladesh
    Presenter: Ms. Rupa Patel, Volunteer, Friendship Health Care
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  19. Arsenic Water Filter
    Presenter: Jamil Husain, CEO, Telophase Corporation
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  20. Remote Health Monitoring Device
    Presenter: Jamil Husain, CEO, Telophase Corporation
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  21. Integration of Hygiene Kits into Health Service Delivery
    Presenter: Cecilia Kwak, Technical Advisor, Child Survival, Population Services International
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  22. Electrochemical Arsenic Remediation for Rural Asia
    Presenter: Susan Addy, Postdoctoral Scholar, University of California, Berkeley
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  23. WaterHealth International: Clean Water Solutions
    Presenter: Susan Addy, Postdoctoral Scholar, WaterHealth International
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  24. An integrated, fully automated system for CD4, CD4% and hematology analysis for on-site, on-time HIV/AIDS patient monitoring and management
    Presenter: Kim Beer, Marketing Director Worldwide, Pointcare Technologies
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  25. Low-cost Ventilator
    Presenter: Arsath Ahammed, Student Inventor, BITS Dubai
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  26. Low-cost SPRD
    Presenter: Greg Shane, Director Business Development , AktivPak
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  27. Low-cost Infusion Pump
    Presenter: Amir Genosar, CEO, Fluonic
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  28. Affordable Needle-Free Measles Immunization
    Presenter: Amir Genosar, CTO, Aespironics
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  29. Developing a large scale consumption of fonio
    Presenter: Sanoussi Diakite, Chercheur, DKP
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  30. BASF Grameen Ltd.
    Presenter: Egon Weinmueller, Director, Global Strategic Marketing , BASF SE
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  31. IMI: Providing Access to Mobility
    Presenter: Rudy Roy, Co-Founder, Intelligent Mobility International
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  32. Rural Micro-enterprise for Improved Nutrition
    Presenter: Hart Jansson, Vice-President, Malnutrition Matters
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  33. Safe Drinking Water: A Reality for All
    Presenter: Rohini Mukherjee, Head, Global Partnerships, Naandi Foundation
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  34. FrontlineSMS:Medic - Towards Healthcare in a Box
    Presenter: Lucky Gunasekara, Director, Clinical Programs, FrontlineSMS:Medic
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  35. Question Box - Village Health Hotline
    Presenter: Rose Shuman, Founder and CEO, Open Mind - Question Box
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  36. Health Children - Renascer
    Presenter: Laura Cordeiro, Executive Assistant , Renascer - Child Heath
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  37. Micro-health Insurance Scheme of Grameen Kalyan
    Presenter: Imamus Sultan, Managing Director, Grameen Kalyan
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  38. Low-Cost USB-based Ultrasound Probes
    Presenter: David Zar, Research Associate, Washington University
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  39. Envirofit Clean Cookstoves - Sustainability & Scale
    Presenter: Ron Bills, CEO and Chairman, Envirofit International
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  40. A social business for drinking water in Bangladesh
    Presenter: Erice Lesueur, Project Director, Veolia Water
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
  41. A Home-based Urine Test for Clinical Malaria
    Presenter: Mr. Eddy Agbo, CEO/CSO, Fyodor Biotechnologies, Inc.
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)

our web tracking emergence of malaria social business versus Obama's 2015 pledge is at http://www.malaria2015.com/ we welcome news of other deadline webs for market sector reponsibility/sustainability

  1. Aravind Eye Hospital (abstract coming soon)
    Presenter: TBD , , Aravind Eye Hospital
    View Abstract          View Poster (coming soon)
....
5 things Social Business is
  • IS The most exciting entrepreneurial designs and sustainability investments ever played
  • Capable of integrating every child's hope so that there is no impossible gap between I have a dream and if its goodwilled enough to fit my god-given entrepreneurial capability I can network its reality
  • Capable of sustaining an abundant human race through a yes we can transparency of economics and professional oaths that takes societies way beyond zero-sum constraints, shortages and bubbles- how can it be that this new technology has not yet made end poverty this generation's space race on earth?
  • Joyous, hi-trust connecting people's most enthusiastic energies at work in every way that communal pride and individual passion mustered by a purpose wholly worth serving can authorise
  • The best investment in rising exponentials that societies can gravitate round through time and so ensure a better inter-generational lot
  • ...sustainabilityg.jpg5 things Social Business is Not
  • NOT party to compounding any of the risks nor any of the sustainability investment errors that 20th century pre-networked systems compounded -be these charity or corporate, gov or Non-gov, world elite institute or extremist action cell
  • 0-9


    discuss averting worldwide slump at business as forceforgood ; facebook end slump videos .. league table of hi-trust ecoprofessors

    sb03.jpg

    Professions which made rules up before our knowledge age assumed separation in everything they counted. This is the greatest maths mistake ever made now we are in an age where connectivity is the number 1 innovation dynamic. The social busienss model is the only mathematically correct one that I have seen published. The good news and the bad news is that all sustainability crises begin and end with this mathematical and governance error. 

    how to avert worldwide slump by Europe's senior microeconomist

    Archive Newer | Older

    Friday, May 15, 2009

    One way to keep a look out for social business is to watch news from teh 2 greatest investors in social business BRAC & Grameen

    This search item reported by EnergyBangla.com  suggests various green social business:
    Infrastructure Development Company Limited (IDCOL), a non-bank financial institution on Bangladesh, is planning to produce solar panels locally in an effort to bring the country's rural areas under power supply network in a faster way.

    The IDCOL CEO said the programme is being implemented through 15 partner organisations (POs) -- Grameen Shakti, BRAC Foundation, Srizony Bangladesh, COAST Trust, TMSS, IDF, CMES, Upokulio Bidyuatayon O Mohila Unnayan Shamity (UBOMUS), Shubashati, BRIDGE, Padakshep Manabik Unnayan Kendra (PMUK), Palli Daridra Bimochan Foundation (PDBF), Hilful Fuzul Samaj Kalyan Sangstha, Mukti Cox's Bazar, and Rural Services Foundation (RSF).

    a related reference

    REIN members

    Any institution is working on renewable energy or interested on renewable energy, can be members of Renewable Energy Information Network (REIN).
    8:50 pm edt 

    Wednesday, May 6, 2009

    open wiser
    I am not sure if this host newtork is up to it but the idea sound one with a future

    Dear Group Administrators,

    We have some exciting news we’d like to share with you:

    Imagine if anyone could access and repurpose the largest directory of environmental and social justice organizations in the world. Recently, members of WiserEarth launched a fundraising campaign to make the rich information on WiserEarth accessible to an even wider audience. Community leaders Leif Utne and Jon Warnow appealed to a broad group of organizations and people to collectively fund the development of WiserEarth’s “API”, which will allow organizations around the world to access and display WiserEarth’s organizations, resources, events, and jobs through their own websites. The “OpenWiser” project hit the ground running, convening an all-star group of organizations and raising over $2,000 in just under a week.

    Yesterday, the organization Civic Actions announced that they will match any donation up to a total of $500 in the next 24 hours towards OpenWiser.org's goal of raising $10,000 to fund the completion of the Wiser Earth API.  We invite you to join the first fundraising effort led entirely by the WiserEarth community. 

    In their outreach efforts, the organizers invite us to “imagine being able to have the greatest database of social change organizations ever assembled pumping through your group’s site, opening up new opportunities for collaboration. Imagine being able to show your users what organizations and individuals are already active in their area, just waiting to be mobilized.”

    Visit the fundraising campaign page and join the effort to open WiserEarth’s “digital doors”
     
    Thanks,
     
    The WiserEarth Team
    6:50 am edt 

    mit entrepreneur winners class 08/09

    Approximately 250 people gathered in MIT's Stata Center last night to celebrate the student innovations developed through the 2009 MIT IDEAS Competition.  A pre-awards poster session allowed the 35 student teams to present their projects, which ranged from new cell phone technologies to medical devices to technologies and businesses focused on energy storage.  The awards ceremony was kicked off with an inspiring presentation by keynote speaker Ryan Allis.  Ryan is the Founder and CEO of the e-mail marketing company iContact, author of the best selling book Zero to One Million, sits on the executive board of Nourish International, and is executive director of The Humanity Campaign.  The passion, business success, and social innovation that make up Ryan are similar to the qualities that are found in the MIT IDEAS Competition participants.

    Awards were presented to the 8 teams whose projects were found to be extraordinary by the judges.  Congratulations are in order to ALL the 2009 IDEAS participants for another year of innovation and service!

    Aquaport was awarded the $2,500 IDEAS award sponsored by Carrie Galehouse Frey. The award was presented by Chancellor Phillip Clay.

    Vision Group “Seeing Machine” was awarded the $2,500 IDEAS award sponsored by Aleksander and Anna Anita Leyfell. The award was presented by Professor Thomas Byrne, MD.

    Global Citizen Water Initiative was awarded the $5,000 IDEAS award sponsored by the Baruch family.  The award was presented by Senior Associate Dean Barbara Baker.

    BLISS – Business and Life Skills School was awarded the $5,000 IDEAS award sponsored by The COOP. The award was presented by Allan Powell, COOP General Manager.

    EggTech was awarded a combination $5,000 Yunus Challenge award and Graduate Students Award.  The award was presented by Vice Chancellor and Dean for Graduate Education Steven Lerman.

    Lebone was awarded the $7,500 Yunus Challenge award, which was presented by Laura Sampath, Manager of the MIT International Development Initiative.

    Braille Labeler was awarded the $7,500 IDEAS award sponsored by Aleksander and Anna Anita Leyfell.  The award was presented by Professor Thomas Byrne, MD.

    HeatSource Textiles was awarded $7,500 IDEAS Award sponsored by Lemelson – MIT.  The award was presented by the Director of the Lemelson – MIT Program, Professor Michael Cima.

    The awards given will help the winning teams turn their projects from ideas into reality over the course of the next year.  To learn more about the projects and the awards, visit the IDEAS website at http://web.mit.edu/ideas/www/pastprojects.htm.

    Congratulations to all the IDEAS 09 Participants!
    6:16 am edt 


    Archive Newer | Older

    My father Norman Macrae, Order of The Rising Sun .... http://erworld.tv  would be delighted if you have time to read this invitation
    London & Transatlantic Leaders Quest to Dhaka, June 2009
    This year instead of an RAC Lunch in Saint James, we plan a day trip to Grameen HQ in the Mirpur Slum in Dhaka to dialogue with Dr Yunus. When with Mostofa kindness I first met Dr Yunus in the new year week of 2008, I gave him my father's 1984 book on the future of yes we can learning networks so it is most likely our dialogue will be anchored around what 19-25 year olds can be helped by elders to change exponentially rising.
    Although if you will resource a social business project you will openly publish with those who go to the dialogue and what collaboration approval to take to the next stage, I am sure there's time to review that the more audacious its micro up replication is. As Sir Tom Hunter said in Glasgow last November- the least we can do Dr Yunus after you have come all this way is to plant some interactions that make you happy. You can bank on Glasgow being a capital city that will be joyous to produce just that. (Historians may know that Glasgow has 308 years of practicising anti-empire economics- dad and I always read the late 1700s Scottish literature on free markets and entrpreneurs with that micro lens first, as indeed were all readers of The Economist intended to do by its 1843 Scottish founder).
    The day before yesterday I was at a world bank meeting listening to how Kenya's Jamii Bora was now the most exciting bank to visit and a guy from USAID muttered smething about replication being the number 1 buzzword in transitioning America's economy and leadership. We invite you to join us in publishing a new genre "innovating collaboration"  -the quest for replication beyond excellence.
    For example ending malaria deaths would be cool to design a community replication franchise around- or even just recall how florida once did that. Notably so as its Obama's most specific 2015 pledge to see what networked people can do - and health partnerships are the type that Dr Yunus most knows Bangladesh cannot invent on its own.
    Banking Bangladesh can invent and share www.  Social Buiness and Sustainability investment in communities Bangladesh can invent and share www.  Learning internet http://bankabillion.org  we can Invent. Solar energy we can invent. As you can see at http://yunus10000.com and help distribute through free dvds intended for 10000 youth particularly to Q&A round.
    NETWORKING TRANSPARENCY
    If you are in UK you are lucky, you can just talk to mostofa and see if you have something relevant to bring to dhaka around June 23. If you are in USA and want to talk, you are unlucky in that I guess I am the one most trying to collate how ideas for action map together. All we are trying to do is help those either with the greatest resources to partner dhaka or the most lifetime exponentials to network YES while sustainability still can be learnt and done. 
    sincerely
    chris macrae  usa 301 881 1655
    http://socialbusiness.tv where young new yorkers and east coast business school students aim to be the first to openly catalogue 1000 sustainable social businesses any bank with a future would be proud to share in
    http://yunusuni.com so what courses are 3rd graders better at questioning than wall street was at answering during the first 8 years of this most extraordinary century 
    To: "Christopher Macrae" <chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk>
    Date: Thursday, 29 January, 2009, 11:49 AM

    Hi Chris:
    Regarding Muhammad Yunus Yes We Can :  may be able to take a day of the last week of June for the dialogue. I will keep in touch with lamiya to fix up the date. Which day of the last week do you prefer? 

    Best Regards,
    --------------------------
    Mostofa Zaman
    info@worldcitizen.tv can put you in touch with Mostofa for detailed queries on structure of Grameen Social Businessdes beyond those general listings such as p78,79 of Dr Yunus First edition of Creating a World Without Poverty- social business, future of capitalism -and such exemplary links as 1  

    please help us edit this list of dev-eco blogs - its origins in student academia are here

    ACDC – Annual Conference on Development and Change
    www.policyinnovations.org/calendar/ACDC

    APORDE – African Programme on Rethinking Development Economics
    www.aporde.org.za

    CSID at Wits University, South Africa
    http://uamp.wits.ac.za/sebs/csid

    Development Studies Committee, University of Cambridge
    www.devstudies.cam.ac.uk

    Ending World Poverty
    http://povertyblog.wordpress.com

    Fairer Globalisation
    http://fairerglobalization.blogspot.com

    From Poverty to Power
    www.oxfamblogs.org/fp2p

    G24 - Intergovernmental Group of Twenty-Four on International Monetary Affairs and Development
    www.g24.org/index.htm

    GEM - IWG - The International Working Group on Gender, Macroeconomics and International Economics
    www.econ.utah.edu/genmac

    ILO Policy Coherence Group
    www.ilo.org/integration/resources/papers/lang--en/index.htm?nextRow=1

    Institute of Social Studies, The Hague
    www.iss.nl

    IIPPE - International Initiative for Promoting Political Economy

    Nimrod Zalk's blog
    www.thoughtleader.co.za/nimrodzalk

    The Other Canon
    www.othercanon.org

    PERI - Political Economy Research Institute, University of Massachusetts Amherst
    www.peri.umass.edu

    Post-Autistic Economics Network
    www.paecon.net

    School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London
    www.soas.ac.uk

    School of Development Studies, University of KwaZulu-Natal
    http://sds.ukzn.ac.za

    UN DESA Working Paper series
    www.un.org/esa/desa/papers

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