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Uncharted Ground With SSIR

Jonathan Levine and Stanford Social Innovation Review
Uncharted Ground With SSIR
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  • Powering Needs, Empowering Lives
    Some 800 million people globally – as many as a quarter of them in India – have no access to electricity. Far more suffer routine brownouts and power cuts. The result puts the rural poor, who are most impacted, at a severe disadvantage in every way: Health-care services are crippled, education is compromised, and entire communities are cut off from modern industrial and digital livelihoods. In short, a key determinant of social equity goes missing.   Harish Hande, an energy engineer, started SELCO in 1995 to pioneer the delivery of decentralized solar power to India’s rural poor. He built an entire ecosystem around their needs: system designs tailored to their unique demands, affordable financing fit to their cash flow, culturally attuned service providers, and a network of partners dedicated to solving their hyper-specific problems. While other companies shunned the poor as unprofitable, Hande built a profitable business by catering to them. Through the non-profit SELCO Foundation, he’s now scaling up by nurturing other companies and nonprofits to replicate his model–across India and in other developing countries in Asia and Africa. This episode tells Hande’s story. For the full transcript go to www.ssir.org/podcasts
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  • Healing From Trauma
    The Northern Triangle countries of Latin America are some of the most violent in the world. El Salvador and Honduras have ranked among the highest murder rates for years. It’s not only the gang violence we hear most about, but also domestic abuse and gender-based violence. And the trauma it leaves behind has a devastating effect on entire communities, from the hospital staff who treat victims to police officers patrolling the streets—and especially on children and their ability to learn. Celina de Sola spent a career in humanitarian aid work before returning to her hometown of San Salvador in 2007 to look for a way to protect children from violence. With her husband, Ken Baker, and brother Diego, she started with a single volunteer-led after-school club for kids in one of the city’s most dangerous neighborhoods. Today, Glasswing International equips schools, hospitals, and police forces with the knowledge and training to overcome the debilitating effects of violence-induced trauma. To date, Glasswing has reached more than 2 million children and adults in nine countries across Latin America—as well as in New York City. And it’s partnering with national governments to further scale up a “trauma-informed ecosystem” that not only improves students’ academic performance and resilience, but also creates a restorative antidote to help break the cycle of violence. This episode tells Glasswing’s story, including: the terrifying day-to-day life in gang-controlled neighborhoods how Celina’s childhood and humanitarian work led to Glasswing how school clubs provide a safe, caring environment to help children heal… …and the positive results on their academic performance and behavior the neuroscience of trauma—and how its impacts can be reversed healing the mental health wounds of hospital staff and police forces how Glasswing is helping public institutions reshape the services they provide For the full transcript go to: https://ssir.org/podcasts/entry/healing_from_trauma
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  • From Plow to Prosperity
    Smallholder farming in Africa is a precarious existence. Low economies of scale, commodity price swings, out-of-date agronomic practices, and the effects of climate change conspire to trap farm families in a never-ending cycle of poverty. At the same time, Africa’s booming youth population is entering a saturated workforce without enough jobs to absorb them. In Nigeria, the continent’s most populous nation, that has led to a surge of gang violence and a  wave of insurgencies over the last two decades. Kola and Lola Masha, a Nigerian-born and US-educated couple, set out in 2012 to help mitigate the spread of both economic and physical insecurity. Their social enterprise, Babban Gona (“Great Farm” in the Hausa language), offers a rare model that not only makes farming lucrative and an attractive opportunity for Nigeria’s youth. It also has become a profitable and bankable business for commercial lenders. For the first time, they are committing capital to support smallholder agriculture at large scale—and in the process, potentially creating a pathway out of poverty for millions. Highlights of this episode include:   why smallholder farming is central to the poverty problem in Africa (3:42) the wave of violence in Nigeria fueled largely by unemployed youth (7:21) the Mashas’ rigorous process to identify agriculture as a job-creation engine (9:44) Trust Groups, or mini-cooperatives, and other core elements of the Babban Gona model (14:22) the impact on the lives of farm families (25:39) how Babban Gona is raising capital to super-scale the model (32:36) and how it mitigates climate change and other risks (39:39). For the full transcript go to: https://ssir.org/podcasts/entry/from_plow_to_prosperity
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  • A Fair Deal for Coffee Growers
    For decades, smallholder farmers who produce the world’s supply of quality coffee in developing countries have barely earned enough to stay in business. Many have gone under. Millions of those still producing live in poverty and go hungry. Now climate change is threatening their livelihoods as well. The main problem is a supply chain stuffed with so many middlemen, each taking their cut, that only a fraction of the proceeds from pricey specialty-grade beans gets to the grower. That was the picture in Nicaragua until Rob Terenzi, Noushin Ketabi, and Will DeLuca started Vega Coffee in 2013. On the face of it, their solution seemed simple: Enable the growers to process and ship roasted coffee directly to consumers in the US—thereby cutting out up to a dozen middlemen and retaining the earnings for themselves. It’s not that others hadn’t understood the problem before, but no one else had figured out how to solve it at scale. This episode follows Vega’s story, covering: Rob’s initial discovery of the coffee growers’ dilemma (0:36); the structural inequities of the global coffee trading system (4:37); why Fair Trade and other “certified” designations fail to pull growers out of poverty (6:46); Vega’s early challenges with roasting ovens (11:31) and transporting fresh beans to the US (13:08); tapping Nicaraguan growers’ skills (16:13) and prioritizing women to promote gender equity (18:22); growing the US customer base (22:05); expansion to Colombia through a partnership with Mercy Corps (26:35); and the promise of Vega’s model to rectify other broken supply chains of commodities around the world (28:52). For the full transcript go to: https://ssir.org/podcasts/entry/a_fair_deal_for_coffee_growers
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    33:20
  • The Business of Water
    Nothing is more essential to life than clean drinking water. Where it’s in short supply—as in much of Africa and other developing regions—there’s opportunity for promoting good health, improving livelihoods, and making money. Jibu seeks to achieve all three through its franchises that treat, package, and distribute affordable water in the major cities of East Africa. For Jibu, selling water is ultimately a means to the end of spreading economic opportunity for the continent’s aspiring entrepreneurs. A father-and-son team, Randy and Galen Welsch, started Jibu in 2012. The social enterprise is now a leading purveyor of bottled water in four countries and growing rapidly in three more. This episode traces the venture from: their early brainstorming sessions (03:59) to the failure of their pilot project in all three initial countries (05:54), the design of compact equipment tailored for developing markets (11:29), their priorities on recruiting women franchisees and employees to promote gender equity (17:24), structuring payment terms to make the franchise opportunity affordable to African entrepreneurs (25:52), and empowering local owners to make decisions that are key to growth and sustainability (29:36). Additional Resources: Source articles for this episode include: Progress on Household Drinking Water, Sanitation and Hygiene, the WHO’s latest data on water access around the world. Africa’s Cities: Opening Doors to the World, a World Bank report on the challenges faced by the continent’s urban centers. Africa’s Urbanization Dynamics 2020, an analysis by the OECD of policy options for the development of African cities within their local contexts.  The full transcript of the episode can be found at https://ssir.org/podcasts/entry/the_business_of_water.
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About Uncharted Ground With SSIR

Uncharted Ground tells the stories of nonprofit and social entrepreneurs at the forefront of global development. Host Jonathan Levine takes you on their journeys to solve some of the most daunting social issues on the planet.
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