Blogs

TED Prize Winners: Six Ideas That Are Changing the World

[Editor's Note: This piece by Allison Ford was originally featured in Divine Caroline]

If you work in the fields of design, technology, publishing, art, entertainment, public health, science, non-profit, or government, you’ve probably heard of TED. But even if you’ve never heard of it, you’ve likely heard of some of its endeavors.

Started in 1984, TED has grown into a series of global conferences that bring people together to talk about ideas―big, transformative ideas. TED solicits presenters and speakers from all walks of life to discuss world-changing innovations, and to try to solve intractable global problems. Every year, more than one thousand people attend the main conference in Long Beach, California, to hear industry leaders and information pioneers talk about their plans to effect change through the dissemination of these groundbreaking ideas.

Each year, TED gives out $100,000 in prizes to people with big ideas to help them bring their ideas to fruition and make their dreams come true. These winners make a wish, and with the help of other TEDsters and professionals, they attempt to do nothing less than change the world.

Announcing the 2011 Globalizer Fellows!


We are very excited to share with you the seventeen entrepreneurs who have been selected to participate in the Ashoka Globalizer Fellowship this year!

The program aims to leverage Ashoka's global reach, selection process and network of social and business entrepreneurs to link initiatives ready for global scale to the strategic, intellectual and financial support they require to go global. After a very intensive process, involving great conversations and critical inputs from local staff around the globe, strong nominations from every region, a round of detailed conversations with Fellows and deliberation among the Globalizer team, we now have a fabulous new cohort of Fellows dedicated to scaling the impact of their ideas globally.

Now, without further ado, here are your 2011 Ashoka Globalizers:

Soccer: Helping Children Reach Their Goals One Game at a Time

[Editor's Note: This piece, by Changemakers' Kristie Wang, was originally featured in Divine Caroline]

Dr. Elizabeth Odera began working with children from Kibera, Africa’s largest slum, nearly two decades ago. “We were inundated with many young men and women from Southern Sudan who had run away from wars in East Africa,” Odera explained. “They had nothing to do. They would just roam around.”

Odera knew firsthand about the power of sport and achievement to build self-esteem. A former international competitive tennis player, she had gone on to become one of the first women to earn a PhD in immunology in Kenya. She decided to start a basketball league that would also engage the children in service related activities like tree planting and fund raising for improving their communities.

But even basketball had its risks in Kibera. For Odera’s children, playing on the dirt courts meant braving threats from the gangs that laid territorial claim to nearly every inch of the slum. “In Kibera, there is no place to call your own. We got chased from one point to another,” Odera said. “A number of times we were attacked. The men in the area ran away, but of course, I couldn’t leave the kids. I was left with hundreds of children cowering and wondering what to do.”

Google the good guy: Goliath gives $140 million to make world less evil

For years, Google, Inc. has held a notorious reputation for being the biggest cyber-bully on the block. As a result, it has been the target of virtual vitriol for its "insidious and potentially pernicious" business practices. Essentially, Google has been alleged as one of the kings of online malpractice, charged with smothering search neutrality and manipulating search results to hoarding queries and invading our privacy. (Ironically, Facebook passed Google as most-viewed site in US earlier this year. So now, it seems that Facebook -- another space invader -- has a stranglehold on our collective attention, time, and keystrokes.)

The game of building a shared future

Something happens to me whenever I play a game, and this happens to all of us when we play. A sport practice, the one taking place in neighborhood fields, moves us, touches us. The reason is simple: it is inevitable to learn about myself and about my relationship with others, and be able to make something possible by starting from a "we”. Shall we go to the field? Let's go!

Announcing the Sustainable Urban Housing Early-Entry Prize Winners

It's that time of the year again. The holiday season is a time for giving and for change. In the spirit of both, Changemakers is proud to announce the early-entry prize winners in our Sustainable Urban Housing Competition: Green Development Zone in the USA, Housing Finance for urban financially excluded families in India, and Franquicia Social para el desarrollo de vivienda sustentable in Mexico! Each of these entrants have been awarded a prize of US$500.

These entries were evaluated per the Changemakers criteria -- innovation, social impact, and operational sustainability -- as the best competition entries submitted at or before the December 12 early-entry deadline.

Visionary doctor kept his eye on the prize, changed ocular healthcare in India forever


In 1976, Dr. Govindappa Venkataswamy -- perhaps better known as Dr. V -- founded the Aravind Eye Hospital in Madurai, India. Dr. V had once been head of the Department of Ophthalmology at the Government Madurai Medical College, as well as the head eye surgeon at the Government Erskine Hospital in Tamil Nadu. After his mandatory institutional retirement at age 50, Dr. V decided to change the game.

Hans Rosling's 200 countries, 200 years, 4 minutes


When statistics go stale, Hans Rosling finds a way to make them sing.

So, I'm certain Rosling couldn't resist participating in the operatic ode to the "glorious nerdiness of statistics": 'The Joy of Stats.'

"I kid you not, statistics is now the sexiest subject on the planet."

The Robin Hood Tax: The world's greatest bank job

Changemakers, I would like to introduce you to an incendiary idea: The Robin Hood Tax.

Inspired by the actions of England’s most popular outlaw, The Robin Hood Tax’s mission is to “take from the richest in society and give to those who need it.” Rest assured, the plan is more detailed than that. The tax is imposed on banks and would give billions to tackle social issues in England and beyond.

365 Donations, 365 Blog Posts, and a Year Reaping the Joy of Giving

For each and every day this year, Betty Londergan has strived to “let love loose in the world.”  By the end of December 2010, Londergan will have identified 365 worthy charitable organizations, written about them on her blog, What Gives 365, and sent each of those organizations a personal check for US $100.

Barefoot Power wins big at the Cool Company Awards

Australia’s leading entrepreneurs and business rock stars met at 24 Moons Bar on AC/DC Lane in Melbourne last week for Anthill Magazine’s 2010 Cool Company Awards.

The Cool Company Awards is an initiative launched to celebrate Australian organizations making real change through innovative means – rule-makers, rule-breakers, and trend-setters in attitude and action

Google's Gift

by Keith Hammonds, director of Ashoka’s News & Knowledge

In this season of holiday cheer, we’re very cheered to report that Google Inc. has given Ashoka $1 million to support our News & Knowledge Entrepreneurs program.

Catch the debut of Be the Change: Save a Life

Have plans for Friday night?

Whether you answered 'yes' or 'no', consider joining ABC News tomorrow, December 17, 2010 at 10PM EST for the launch of Be the Change: Save a Life.

Who needs women, really?

Who needs women? Humanity does. Desperately.

Sustain-A-Raisers: Applying a Barn Raising Approach to Community Sustainability Projects

by Kristie Wang, Ashoka Changemakers

When Joshua Arnold was preparing to lead his community group, Global Awareness Local Action (G.A.L.A.), in restoring a grange hall to create a community space for Wolfeboro, New Hampshire, he learned about barn raising, an event in which an entire community gathers to help build one household’s barn. “I had heard about it before—it’s always been in my cultural memory—but as I read more, I really became fascinated by how barn raising built a way of life centered on reciprocity,” Arnold said.

I Jumo. Should you?

by Evagelia Tavoulareas, Media Mobilizer at Ashoka Changemakers

In keeping with yesterday’s discussion around "wired for good" technologies, I wanted to take a look at the new kid on the block: Jumo.
 

Mark Zuckerberg: The New Face of The Giving Pledge

by Evagelia Tavoulareas, Media Mobilizer at Ashoka Changemakers

This past summer, Warren Buffett announced the launch of a long-term charitable project: The Giving Pledge.

John Marshall Roberts: The Global Urgency of Everyday Empathy

In this TEDxChCh talk, John Marshall Roberts (CEO of Worldview Learning) draws on his knowledge of systems theory and developmental psychology to discuss how the glut of "global non-empathy" impacts how our world works.

Reasonable Entrepreneurs Need Not Apply

The Unreasonable Institute, an international accelerator for high-impact ventures, has opened applications for its second annual institute – a search for 25 of the world’s most promising entrepreneurs committed to launching globally significant social ventures that can reach at least one million people.

The Secret to Finding Jobs in a Harsh Economy

by Kristie Wang, Ashoka Changemakers

[After completing the Making Connections Louisville program, Shavelle Gordon (left) found a job in housekeeping at Norton Healthcare and support from Norton manager Michelle Williams (right). Gordon has since become a nursing assistant and is studying to be a nurse.]

A community movement that serves four of Louisville, Kentucky's most distressed inner-city neighborhoods has been extraordinarily successful in linking its members to lasting employment despite the harsh economic downturn. How does The Making Connections Network—known as the Network—do it?

The Fun Theory: Why fun should be used to change behavior for the better

The Fun Theory is a site dedicated to the thought that something as simple as fun is the easiest way to change people's behavior for the better.

Everybody Deserves a Roof, Don't You Think?

by Lisa Germinsky, Tonic.com

This week Tonic is working with innovative nonprofit EDAR to help get a roof over at least 10 homeless Los Angeleans. Sound like a worthy cause? It's easy to help.

An eye-opening approach to preventable blindness

by Betty Londergan, What Gives 365?

Ashoka is the granddaddy of all associations of social entrepreneurs, working since 1981 to support men and women around the world who have developed system-changing solutions for the world’s most urgent social  problems. Instead of trying to explain all Ashoka does, over the next few weeks I’m going to feature Ashoka Fellows, Changemakers, Young Champions and Youth Venture folks who demonstrate the breadth & depth of Ashoka’s vision. Today, it’s Youth Venture activist Sheel Tyle.

The blessing lies close to the wound

"The blessing lies close to the wound."