HELP for Haiti
It’s a ripple effect: HELP fulfills Haitian students’ dreams of college, and then they take up the baton.
It’s a ripple effect: HELP fulfills Haitian students’ dreams of college, and then they take up the baton.
For more and more social change efforts, the key to success lies in clearly defining the desired results for beneficiaries.
Iterative design methods are essential to development work—even (or especially) in regions marked by war and violence.
Through an online crowdsourcing platform, one foundation is reaching new types of partners who offer new types of solutions.
Solving the problem of rural distribution in the developing world starts with following the time-honored model of local traders.
Disapproval of welfare recipients who use their benefits to buy “ethical” but costly items is widespread.
Corporations that suffer from reputational threats often form unlikely alliances with social activist groups.
Contrary to conventional economic wisdom, relying solely on carbon taxes will not create an optimal transition to clean energy.
In working with stigmatized groups, an organization must manage the risk that it may experience stigma as well.
We should care about who is able to control and distribute data, but information is more than just a commodity.