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  • Gamechangers: Change the Game for Women in Sport

  • Afghan Girls Soccer: Changing the Perception of a Woman's Place in Society

    Under the Taliban rule in the mid 1990s, most Afghan children had no opportunity to play sports. So in the summer of 2004, after the fall of the Taliban, Awista Ayub, who had grown up in Afghanistan, brought eight Afghan girls to the United States for a soccer clinic.

    In her newly published book, Kabul Girls Soccer Club, Ayub tells her own story and how these eight girls found the strength in each other, in teamwork, and in themselves, to take risks to obtain the kinds of freedoms that many of us take for granted. Fifteen teams now compete in the Afghanistan Football Federation, with hundreds of girls participating.

  • Jessica Lin is a Changemaker

    Jessica Lin and three other female Harvard University students—Jessica Matthews, Julia Silverman, and Hemali Thakkar—created sOccket to produce a soccer ball that generates cheap, clean, off-grid electricity when rolled. The sOccket ball captures the energy from impact that is normally lost to the  environment when the soccer ball is kicked, dribbled, or thrown and stores this energy for later use.

  • Girls and Football South Africa: Building Self-Esteem and Empowering Young Women Through Sports

    A woman is raped every 17 seconds in South Africa, according to estimates by Interpol, the international police organization. Through her program Girls and Football South Africa (SA), Jos Dirkx believes that teaching girls to have strength over their own bodies will decrease rates of pregnancy and HIV, give them knowledge about prevention and how to get help if they need it, and help them avoid trouble plus give them confidence not to blame themselves if they do become victims of sexual assault.

    Stigma and disbelief prevent many of the victims from reporting rapes. Jos Dirkx, the founder of Girls and Football South Africa (SA), believes that South African girls will continue to be plagued by sexual assault, HIV/AIDS, and unwanted pregnancy as long as they lack support, accurate information, and confidence.  

  • Ana Moser: Shaking Up Sports In Brazil Before the 2016 Summer Olympics

    Ana Beatriz Moser is argueably the most famous and talented Brazilian volleyball player of all time. After two decades as a professional athlete who won many Olympic and World Championship medals, she could have entered into quiet retirement. Instead, Moser is making a lot of noise, trying to reform the way Brazil views sport and physical education by making sports accessible to children of all socioeconomic groups.

  • Geotourism Challenge 2009: Power of Place - Sustaining the Future of Destinations

  • The Best Videos from the 2009 Geotourism Challenge

    The 2009 Geotourism Challenge attracted hundreds of outstanding businesses, ideas, and projects. As the competition nears its close, we wanted to spotlight the best geotourism video submissions. From photography excursions in Oregon, to river rafting in India, the following solutions did a fantastic job documenting their smart ideas with expert footage.

  • Globetrotting for Good: The Condé Nast Traveler Challenge

  • A Sanctuary at the Bottom of the World

    Lucas Chiappe, eco-activist, farmer and photographer from Argentina's spectacular Patagonia region, is leading an international coalition with a bold vision: creating a sanctuary that encircles the bottom of the planet to preserve the earth's southern-most forests. The Gondwana Forest Sanctuary is the first plan to conserve millions of acres of forests in four countries.

  • The Future of Footwear: Nike is Searching for the Next Great Designer

    D'Wayne Edwards sketched his first pair of sneakers when he was just 11-years old. If you've got what he's got, you just might have a shot at becoming one of Nike's next big shoe designers.

    As a middle school student in Inglewood, CA, Edwards had a knack for illustrating his life using a No. 2 pencil and a clean sheet of paper, but when his imagination shifted to his shoes, he knew he'd found his calling.

  • Healthy Mothers, Strong World: The Next Generation of Ideas for Maternal Health

  • WE CARE Solar: A Suitcase-Size Solution to Reducing Maternal Mortality

    Rather than dying of rare diseases, “pregnant women In hospitals around the world are dying of things we already know how to treat," said obstetrician Dr. Laura Stachel.

    “I can’t go on with my life and not work on this. I had no idea how bad it was, and many others didn’t know either. I feel it is my job to become the voice for these women, because this kind of situation shouldn’t be allowed.”

     
    I realized that all my years of clinical experience were useless in a situation where there was no light to perform a delivery or surgery, and no phone system to call a skilled doctor.
  • Jacaranda Health; An Ambitious Plan to Transform Maternal Health Care in East Africa

    For a year now, Nick Pearson has been preparing the launch of his first model, mobile maternal health clinic in the slums of Nairobi, Kenya, where 100,000 women give birth each year. Most deliver at home with an unskilled birth attendant or go to a public facility where conditions are often appalling.

    “Our ambition is to change the way maternity care is provided for the more than one million poor women giving birth each year in urban East Africa,” said Pearson, the founder of Jacaranda Health. “We aim to become the largest provider of affordable maternity care in the region, and more importantly raise the standard of care among other private and public providers.”

  • How to Build a Citizen Base that Supports an Organization

  • The Foundation Center: The "Mother of All" Databases for Funding

    Bradford K. Smith's Foundation Center supports citizen sector organizations of all sizes by maintaining the most comprehensive database on U.S. grantmakers and their grants around the world. As the president of the the United States' leading authority on organized philanthropy, Smith knows the challenges that non-profit organizations face to find resources to maintain their programs, expand their reach, and prove their value to potential donors.