Review: A New Green Order?
The World Bank's Global Environment Facility may be undermined by bureaucracy.
Social innovations that improve the living standards of the poor (more)
The World Bank's Global Environment Facility may be undermined by bureaucracy.
International development aid should be dissolved, argues Dichter.
A Guide to Reclaiming the Commons.
Microfinance is bringing the world's poor the kind of service that used to be reserved for bank customers in developed countries. Drawing on the work and philosophy of the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus, Alex Counts talks in this audio lecture about microfinance's social and financial impact to an audience of Stanford MBA students.
How Lutherans are transforming their love of coffee into global good.
A Chilean firewood certification program spares both the air and indigenous business.
How Fair Trade coffee moved out of its niche and into the most mainstream market of all.
Aid organizations help build small businesses build capacity without asking whether people want the businesses’ products. As these stories show, successful programs start with real buyers.
Why the West’s Efforts to Aid the Rest Have Done So Much Ill and So Little Good
Recipient of the 9th Annual Heinz Award for the Human Condition, Paul Farmer is a medical doctor and a professor of anthropology at Harvard's medical school. He shuttles between Harvard and Haiti, where he maintains a practice at Clinique Bon Saveur, a charity hospital he founded. Farmer talks in this audio interview with Globeshakers host Tim Zak about the challenges and rewards of providing healthcare to the poorest of the poor, and the evolving, innovative models for getting drugs to those who need them most.