Title: www'ashoka'org
1www.ashoka.org www.changemakers.net
2Ensuring Childhood in Cities the Ashoka Approach
3Ashokas Mission
To develop the profession of social
entrepreneurship.
4Criteria for Election
Criteria for Election
- Defining Characteristics
- A New Idea
- Creativity
- Entrepreneurial Quality
- Social Impact
- Ethical Fiber
5Selecting Leading Social Entrepreneurs
Selecting Leading Social Entrepreneurs
Selection Process 1. Nomination 2. Initial
Interview and Site Visit 3. Second Opinion
Review 4. Selection Panel 5. Board Approval
Vera Cordeiro - Brazil, 1993
6David Fortune, South Africa
David Fortune, South Africa
Reintegrating street kids back into their
families and communities.
David Fortune - South Africa, 1995
7- Reintegrate children and youth into families and
community - Effectively address the cause or circumstances
that lead to children being in the streets - STREETS operates drop in centers with food
clothes, legal aid, job trainings.. - Plays are performed and workshops are held for
community to better understand why children
leave. - Has broken the traditional acceptance that
children have only three options NGO run
hostels, court operated reformatories and prison.
8- STREETS researches and finds alternatives and
options to problems in the family - Play performance is followed by discussion on the
role for the family and community - STREETS volunteer beats locate children as early
as possible - Monitoring progress in homes where children have
returned - 66 percent success and growing recognition by
city and ministries. Greater trainer role for
replication.
9Jeroo Billimoria, India
- Free telephone hotline for street children,
staffed by street children. - Service in 45 cities and spreading
- Over 645,000 calls serviced
Jeroo Billimoria - India, 1998
10- Launched childline in 1993
- Goal to ensure street children quick access to
support/assistance - Simple dial a toll free number 24 hours a day
- Managed by street children, for street children
- Potential to serve 48 million street children in
India - Government owned telecom provided toll free
number - Trained volunteers to take the calls
11- City zoned into management areas
- First two years served 3,750 children
- Government of India has taken up replication in
158 cities - On going documentation of case studies
- Upgrading of information management system
- Increased database of support organizations
- Training of police force
- Working currently on Thailand replication
12Rodrigo Baggio, Brazil
- Closing the digital divide through slum
community-created, funded, and managed schools. - 219 schools
- 10 countries
Rodrigo Baggio - Brazil, 1996
13- Goal to equip young people in low income
communities with computer skills and thus expand
job opportunities and access to modern societies - Started with two schools in 1995. Became 15 by
end of year by 1997, 5000 graduates - Staffed by residents. 200 per month Salary
- Student fee 10 per month
- Classrooms free of cost in churches, communities
and schools after hours. - Business firms donated computers and training
manuals - Nine core group of volunteers keep expanding
programs
14- Graduates got new well paying jobs and promotions
and hence willingness to pay - Less drop outs and joining of criminal gangs
- Schools went from one shift to three shifts.
- Schools charged fees for various computer related
services - Strong media coverage.
- Central and Local Government subsidies for
expansion - Donations from business on the rise
- Closing the digital divide and creating strong
democratic society
15Maturing ProfessionTHE SOCIAL ENTREPRENEUR
PASSES FROM DEMONSTRATION TO MARKETING TO FAST
GROWTH IN 5 TO 15 YEARS
5 year growth
Rodrigo Baggio, Brazil
- Closing the digital divide through slum
community-created, funded, and managed schools - 336 schools on 2 continents