Thirty Million Dollars, a Little Bit of Carbon, and a Lot of Hot Air
Carbon for Water is engaged in a loopy funding scheme and offers a lousy public health solution.
Innovations in health care policies and programs (more)
Carbon for Water is engaged in a loopy funding scheme and offers a lousy public health solution.
Executives from 10 major corporations discuss the innovative ways that they are putting societal issues at the core of their companies’ strategy and operations.
A unique sales strategy puts more environmentally friendly cookstoves into the hands of more cooks.
New and valuable mHealth apps are coming out all the time. What sort of open architecture can support this wave of innovation?
Maternova is getting hundreds of life saving innovations to the front lines in developing countries using a new online platform.
Why local ownership and commitment are the exception in most development efforts—and what development professionals can do about this problem.
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation created a forecast for the health future of America’s most vulnerable populations over the next two decades.
Several social enterprises are attempting to provide eyeglasses to the 500 million to 1 billion poor people who need them. Why haven’t any of the organizations succeeded on a large scale?
There should be greater concern over who is protecting nonprofits that find themselves in situations like that of NPR, which recently lost its federal funding.
Venkatesh Mannar, 2010 Tech Award winner in Health, discusses the large-scale social impact double fortified salt has brought to improving health and nutrition.