Development Challenges, South-South Solutions is the monthly e-newsletter for the United Nations Development Programme’s South-South Cooperation Unit (www.southerninnovator.org). It has been published every month since 2006.
Stories by David South
Design and Layout: UNDP South-South Cooperation Unit
Follow @SouthSouth1
Development Challenges, South-South Solutions is the monthly e-newsletter for the United Nations Development Programme’s South-South Cooperation Unit (www.southerninnovator.org). It has been published every month since 2006.
Stories by David South
Design and Layout: UNDP South-South Cooperation Unit
Development Challenges, South-South Solutions: February 2007 IssueDavid South Consulting
Development Challenges, South-South Solutions is the monthly e-newsletter for the United Nations Development Programme’s South-South Cooperation Unit (www.southerninnovator.org). It has been published every month since 2006.
Stories by David South
Design and Layout: UNDP South-South Cooperation Unit
Follow @SouthSouth1
Development Challenges, South-South Solutions is the monthly e-newsletter for the United Nations Development Programme’s South-South Cooperation Unit (www.southerninnovator.org). It has been published every month since 2006.
Stories by David South
Design and Layout: UNDP South-South Cooperation Unit
Follow @SouthSouth1
Development Challenges, South-South Solutions: December 2009 IssueDavid South Consulting
Development Challenges, South-South Solutions is the monthly e-newsletter for the United Nations Development Programme’s South-South Cooperation Unit (www.southerninnovator.org). It has been published every month since 2006.
ISSN 2227-3905
Stories by David South
Design and Layout: UNDP South-South Cooperation Unit
Follow @SouthSouth1
Development Challenges, South-South Solutions: February 2009 IssueDavid South Consulting
Development Challenges, South-South Solutions is the monthly e-newsletter for the United Nations Development Programme’s South-South Cooperation Unit (www.southerninnovator.org). It has been published every month since 2006.
ISSN 2227-3905
Stories by David South
Design and Layout: UNDP South-South Cooperation Unit
Follow @SouthSouth1
1) The document discusses innovation in Africa and argues for developing systems of innovation that are sensitive to Africa's developmental needs. It advocates applying indigenous knowledge to African innovation systems rather than transferring Western models or waiting for external solutions.
2) A key theme is that with proper policy and planning, Africa can develop innovative solutions to drive its own development, rather than relying on foreign aid. Africa has untapped potential if it learns to utilize local resources.
3) The book is critical of problems that have hindered Africa's development but also points to opportunities if Africa establishes innovation systems tailored to its unique context and needs.
Ecosystem-Driven Innovation Transforming the Creative Economy of Africa_Kunle...EkoInnovationCentre
The document discusses the creative economy and how digital technology can boost creativity in Lagos, Nigeria. It notes that Africa is experiencing a creative revolution led by the thriving film industry in Nigeria. Combining the creative economy with a digital Lagos allows African creativity to reach global audiences. While there are challenges like infrastructure issues and IP laws, opportunities exist through cross-border collaboration and investment. Leveraging technology through digital platforms can help creative entrepreneurs connect and succeed. The speaker discusses his journey growing his film production company and expanding into related creative industries through adaptation and innovation.
Development Challenges, South-South Solutions is the monthly e-newsletter of the United Nations Office for South-South Cooperation in UNDP (www.southerninnovator.org). It has been published every month since 2006. Its sister publication, Southern Innovator magazine, has been published since 2011.
ISSN 2227-3905
Stories by David South
UN Office for South-South Cooperation
Contact the Office to receive a copy of the new global magazine Southern Innovator. Issues 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 are out now and are about innovators in mobile phones and information technology, youth and entrepreneurship, agribusiness and food security, cities and urbanization and waste and recycling. Why not consider sponsoring or advertising in an issue of Southern Innovator? Or work with us on an insert or supplement of interest to our readers?
Follow @SouthSouth1.
In this issue:
Women Empowered by Fair Trade
Manufacturer
Global South Trade Boosted with
Increasing China-Africa Trade in 2013
India 2.0: Can the Country Make the
Move to the Next Level?
"Pocket-Friendly" Solution to Help
Farmers Go Organic
Cheap Farming Kit Hopes to Help
More Become Farmers
Development Challenges, South-South Solutions is the monthly e-newsletter for the United Nations Development Programme’s South-South Cooperation Unit (www.southerninnovator.org). It has been published every month since 2006.
Stories by David South
Design and Layout: UNDP South-South Cooperation Unit
Development Challenges, South-South Solutions: February 2007 IssueDavid South Consulting
Development Challenges, South-South Solutions is the monthly e-newsletter for the United Nations Development Programme’s South-South Cooperation Unit (www.southerninnovator.org). It has been published every month since 2006.
Stories by David South
Design and Layout: UNDP South-South Cooperation Unit
Follow @SouthSouth1
Development Challenges, South-South Solutions is the monthly e-newsletter for the United Nations Development Programme’s South-South Cooperation Unit (www.southerninnovator.org). It has been published every month since 2006.
Stories by David South
Design and Layout: UNDP South-South Cooperation Unit
Follow @SouthSouth1
Development Challenges, South-South Solutions: December 2009 IssueDavid South Consulting
Development Challenges, South-South Solutions is the monthly e-newsletter for the United Nations Development Programme’s South-South Cooperation Unit (www.southerninnovator.org). It has been published every month since 2006.
ISSN 2227-3905
Stories by David South
Design and Layout: UNDP South-South Cooperation Unit
Follow @SouthSouth1
Development Challenges, South-South Solutions: February 2009 IssueDavid South Consulting
Development Challenges, South-South Solutions is the monthly e-newsletter for the United Nations Development Programme’s South-South Cooperation Unit (www.southerninnovator.org). It has been published every month since 2006.
ISSN 2227-3905
Stories by David South
Design and Layout: UNDP South-South Cooperation Unit
Follow @SouthSouth1
1) The document discusses innovation in Africa and argues for developing systems of innovation that are sensitive to Africa's developmental needs. It advocates applying indigenous knowledge to African innovation systems rather than transferring Western models or waiting for external solutions.
2) A key theme is that with proper policy and planning, Africa can develop innovative solutions to drive its own development, rather than relying on foreign aid. Africa has untapped potential if it learns to utilize local resources.
3) The book is critical of problems that have hindered Africa's development but also points to opportunities if Africa establishes innovation systems tailored to its unique context and needs.
Ecosystem-Driven Innovation Transforming the Creative Economy of Africa_Kunle...EkoInnovationCentre
The document discusses the creative economy and how digital technology can boost creativity in Lagos, Nigeria. It notes that Africa is experiencing a creative revolution led by the thriving film industry in Nigeria. Combining the creative economy with a digital Lagos allows African creativity to reach global audiences. While there are challenges like infrastructure issues and IP laws, opportunities exist through cross-border collaboration and investment. Leveraging technology through digital platforms can help creative entrepreneurs connect and succeed. The speaker discusses his journey growing his film production company and expanding into related creative industries through adaptation and innovation.
Development Challenges, South-South Solutions is the monthly e-newsletter of the United Nations Office for South-South Cooperation in UNDP (www.southerninnovator.org). It has been published every month since 2006. Its sister publication, Southern Innovator magazine, has been published since 2011.
ISSN 2227-3905
Stories by David South
UN Office for South-South Cooperation
Contact the Office to receive a copy of the new global magazine Southern Innovator. Issues 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 are out now and are about innovators in mobile phones and information technology, youth and entrepreneurship, agribusiness and food security, cities and urbanization and waste and recycling. Why not consider sponsoring or advertising in an issue of Southern Innovator? Or work with us on an insert or supplement of interest to our readers?
Follow @SouthSouth1.
In this issue:
Women Empowered by Fair Trade
Manufacturer
Global South Trade Boosted with
Increasing China-Africa Trade in 2013
India 2.0: Can the Country Make the
Move to the Next Level?
"Pocket-Friendly" Solution to Help
Farmers Go Organic
Cheap Farming Kit Hopes to Help
More Become Farmers
Culture Hack Scotland is an event that challenges designers and technologists to create digital projects related to culture in just 24 hours. It will take place on April 27-28, 2012 in Glasgow. Participants will have access to data from various cultural organizations in Scotland to inspire new projects focusing on data, sound, and visual media. Successful projects from previous events include a mobile app for the Edinburgh International Book Festival and an interactive visualization of Edinburgh Festival events. This year's event will also launch Scotland's first Geeks-in-Residence program pairing creative technologists with cultural organizations.
Young Influencers are working on a project to bring the Bank of Invention to Belfast.
A collaborative working space in the heart of the city.
www.younginfluencers.org
MortimerHarvey - New African Narratives Trend ReportRynoMH
New initiatives across Africa are highlighting the creativity and entrepreneurship emerging from the continent. Three examples include: 1) The 'La Sape' movement in Congo celebrates stylish dress as a display of self-worth rather than wealth. 2) The Save & Buy platform in Nigeria allows users to save online for purchases to enable debt-free shopping. 3) The Wecyclers social enterprise in Nigeria incentivizes residents to recycle waste by exchanging points for rewards.
Makerhood is a project designed in a Mesa&Cadeira (mesa.do) in South Auckland (New Zealand) in January 2016 for the Auckland Council with the contributions of: Baruk Jacob, Barbara Soalheiro, Elizabeth Cretney, Gabriela Agustini, Gael Surgenot, Jaco van der Merwe, Joel Umali, John Belford-Lelaulu, John Kotoisuva, Joran Kikke, Livia Araujo, Lucas Tauil de Freitas, Rui Peng, Russell O’Brien, Sandra Chemin, Waikare Komene. Pictures and Video by: Simon Wilson.
This document describes experience-oriented services and discovery centres that could provide new laundry services. Research included observing how people do laundry currently, trends that could impact laundry habits, and generating future scenarios. One scenario involved laundry service bars and centres located in urban and travel areas. The document also summarizes two case studies, one involving reviving a market in Brixton through community events and new businesses, and another describing a mobile learning program between a university and mobile organization.
Development Challenges, South-South Solutions is the monthly e-newsletter for the United Nations Development Programme’s South-South Cooperation Unit (www.southerninnovator.org). It has been published every month since 2006.
Stories by David South
Design and Layout: UNDP South-South Cooperation Unit
Contact the Unit to receive a copy of the new global magazine Southern Innovator. Issue 1 is out now and about innovators in mobile phone and information technologies.
Follow @SouthSouth1
Maker Movement & Creative Climate in Japan @AAAS 2016Airline Design
The document discusses the maker movement in Japan. It notes that experiences used to be disconnected but are now entangled connections adding human touch to the design process. Making has become more human-centered and personalized by adding customization and storytelling. The maker movement encourages turning ideas into reality and sharing more tangibly. This creates transparency, trust, curiosity and attachment between makers and users.
This document discusses building an innovation culture and learning how to innovate through living labs. It recommends a pan-European initiative called "You Can Learn To Innovate" to teach innovation skills, especially to small businesses and youth. Next steps proposed are a summer school in Barcelona to share best practices of innovation cells, learning by developing models, fabrication labs, and digital orchards. The summer school will also generate new approaches like ethnographic trips for small businesses and a "Laborlab" for project-based learning about new jobs. The overall message is that innovation is a learnable skill that can be taught through hands-on learning in living labs.
Aarong is a social enterprise founded in 1978 by BRAC to provide market linkages and livelihood opportunities for rural artisans in Bangladesh, especially women. It sources handicraft products from over 60,000 artisans through its production centers and the Ayesha Abed Foundation. Aarong has grown to become the nation's leading lifestyle brand with over 100 product categories sold through multiple retail outlets. Profits from Aarong are reinvested into BRAC's development programs in health, education, microcredit and legal services, aiming to alleviate poverty and empower rural communities. Looking ahead, Aarong aims to expand its retail presence, launch e-commerce, and export handicrafts to more international markets.
This document summarizes Made By Many's visit to Fab Lab Egypt in Cairo. It discusses:
- Fab Lab Egypt is a makerspace that provides tools and resources for digital fabrication projects like 3D printing and CNC machines.
- The community manager, Omar El-Safty, describes how Fab Lab aims to support entrepreneurs and prove that "geeks" can build sustainable startups in Egypt.
- Fab Lab targets youth aged 16-25, though people of all ages use it. Their goal is to grow the "maker" community in Egypt and empower people to solve problems through hands-on creation rather than consumption.
Australian businesses take on world stage_ArtsHub AustraliaCaroline Tung
Social enterprises in the creative industries are employing people in need, such as HIV-positive women in Tanzania by SEW Tanzania, to produce fashion accessories and textiles. These social enterprises aim to be financially sustainable while also providing social benefits. Other examples mentioned are an Australian business that promotes positive social change through fashion and homewares, and an upcycler in Brisbane who teaches workshops on transforming old clothes into new sustainable pieces to reduce textile waste. The article discusses how social enterprises integrate social goals into their business practices.
This document discusses a design project that brings together design students and refugees to co-create useful products. It involves running collaborative workshops where students and refugees jointly design and build simple, practical items for refugee camps. The goals are to provide opportunities for refugees, address their needs, and challenge perceptions of refugees as needy rather than resourceful. The expected outcomes include guidelines for improving camp services, future visions, and maps of stakeholders, as well as producing prototype products and communicating the project.
Laduma ngxokolo is a South African knitwear designer whose colorful collections are inspired by traditional Xhosa beadwork, winning an international design competition.
This document provides summaries of various topics including:
1. William Kamkwamba who taught himself to build a windmill to generate electricity for his village in Africa.
2. Barefoot Solar Engineers which trains rural women in India to install and repair solar power systems.
3. The Yellow Arrow Project where participants place stickers in locations and connect stories to the locations via text messages.
Development Challenges, South-South Solutions: December 2007 IssueDavid South Consulting
The document discusses how animation production has expanded in developing countries in Asia and become a lucrative industry, helping provide jobs and economic opportunities. It outlines some of the leading animation producers in Asia and trends driving demand, such as outsourcing for major studios and using local animation to make mobile applications more attractive. Several countries are highlighted for their growing animation industries, including India, China, and some African nations like South Africa that are developing their own animation sectors. The role of government support and training is also noted.
Few countries can boast having a third of its GDP stored as mobile money in the hands of a telecom group. There is no miracle in the rise of MPesa, but a deep understanding by Safaricom of the social fabric of East Africa’s tech and economic hub, as well as a lots of test and try. The lure of mobile money have lots of startups competing into this space, to connect remittances, shopping and payments to the MPesa infrastructure. Other than that, Kenya is also experiencing a double motion in its innovation ecosystem: if it’s definitely a community-driven startup hub, its government is also playing a key role through laws and pharaonic projects.
Project Keexs aims to launch a footwear brand that manufactures in Nigeria to create jobs and economic opportunity while also contributing 10% of sales to social causes. The founder will crowd fund $3 million over 60 days to launch the brand, outsource initial production, and acquire expertise to build a factory in Nigeria. By December 2016, the goal is to assemble and export the "smartest shoe made in Africa" worldwide to address unemployment, poverty, and other social issues in Nigeria and beyond.
Cultural and creative industries - PratschOECD CFE
Presentation by Heike Pratsch, Germany at the 6th Summer Academy on Cultural and Creative Industries and Local Development "Disrupting tradition: How digital technology is changing the cultural and creative processes", 18-20 Sept. 2023 ONLINE and 27-29 Sept. 2023 ONSITE (Trento, Italy).
More info: https://oe.cd/sacci
Visit our website: www.oecd.org/cfe
Follow us on Twitter: @OECD_local
The document discusses the Maker Movement, which involves independent inventors, designers, and tinkerers who design and create their own products using new technologies like 3D printers. Key aspects include Maker Faires, which showcase inventions, as well as educational makerspaces where students can explore ideas using tools that support hands-on, collaborative learning. The Maker Movement promotes critical thinking and problem solving skills through learning by doing and encourages students to develop curiosity and interest in STEM fields.
Editor-in-Chief: David South
In 1994 a huge schism had grown in Canada between youth and the wider media. Young people were not reflected anywhere and their views were ignored. That is, until Watch Magazine exploded onto the streets of Toronto and into the halls of the city’s high schools. I was hired by Youth Culture to be the Editor-in-Chief for this unique business: a magazine staffed by high school students but covering the wider worlds of pop music, culture, fashion, politics and the arts.
You can read more about my current and past work here: www.davidsouthconsulting.com
More Related Content
Similar to Development Challenges, South-South Solutions: October 2007 Issue
Culture Hack Scotland is an event that challenges designers and technologists to create digital projects related to culture in just 24 hours. It will take place on April 27-28, 2012 in Glasgow. Participants will have access to data from various cultural organizations in Scotland to inspire new projects focusing on data, sound, and visual media. Successful projects from previous events include a mobile app for the Edinburgh International Book Festival and an interactive visualization of Edinburgh Festival events. This year's event will also launch Scotland's first Geeks-in-Residence program pairing creative technologists with cultural organizations.
Young Influencers are working on a project to bring the Bank of Invention to Belfast.
A collaborative working space in the heart of the city.
www.younginfluencers.org
MortimerHarvey - New African Narratives Trend ReportRynoMH
New initiatives across Africa are highlighting the creativity and entrepreneurship emerging from the continent. Three examples include: 1) The 'La Sape' movement in Congo celebrates stylish dress as a display of self-worth rather than wealth. 2) The Save & Buy platform in Nigeria allows users to save online for purchases to enable debt-free shopping. 3) The Wecyclers social enterprise in Nigeria incentivizes residents to recycle waste by exchanging points for rewards.
Makerhood is a project designed in a Mesa&Cadeira (mesa.do) in South Auckland (New Zealand) in January 2016 for the Auckland Council with the contributions of: Baruk Jacob, Barbara Soalheiro, Elizabeth Cretney, Gabriela Agustini, Gael Surgenot, Jaco van der Merwe, Joel Umali, John Belford-Lelaulu, John Kotoisuva, Joran Kikke, Livia Araujo, Lucas Tauil de Freitas, Rui Peng, Russell O’Brien, Sandra Chemin, Waikare Komene. Pictures and Video by: Simon Wilson.
This document describes experience-oriented services and discovery centres that could provide new laundry services. Research included observing how people do laundry currently, trends that could impact laundry habits, and generating future scenarios. One scenario involved laundry service bars and centres located in urban and travel areas. The document also summarizes two case studies, one involving reviving a market in Brixton through community events and new businesses, and another describing a mobile learning program between a university and mobile organization.
Development Challenges, South-South Solutions is the monthly e-newsletter for the United Nations Development Programme’s South-South Cooperation Unit (www.southerninnovator.org). It has been published every month since 2006.
Stories by David South
Design and Layout: UNDP South-South Cooperation Unit
Contact the Unit to receive a copy of the new global magazine Southern Innovator. Issue 1 is out now and about innovators in mobile phone and information technologies.
Follow @SouthSouth1
Maker Movement & Creative Climate in Japan @AAAS 2016Airline Design
The document discusses the maker movement in Japan. It notes that experiences used to be disconnected but are now entangled connections adding human touch to the design process. Making has become more human-centered and personalized by adding customization and storytelling. The maker movement encourages turning ideas into reality and sharing more tangibly. This creates transparency, trust, curiosity and attachment between makers and users.
This document discusses building an innovation culture and learning how to innovate through living labs. It recommends a pan-European initiative called "You Can Learn To Innovate" to teach innovation skills, especially to small businesses and youth. Next steps proposed are a summer school in Barcelona to share best practices of innovation cells, learning by developing models, fabrication labs, and digital orchards. The summer school will also generate new approaches like ethnographic trips for small businesses and a "Laborlab" for project-based learning about new jobs. The overall message is that innovation is a learnable skill that can be taught through hands-on learning in living labs.
Aarong is a social enterprise founded in 1978 by BRAC to provide market linkages and livelihood opportunities for rural artisans in Bangladesh, especially women. It sources handicraft products from over 60,000 artisans through its production centers and the Ayesha Abed Foundation. Aarong has grown to become the nation's leading lifestyle brand with over 100 product categories sold through multiple retail outlets. Profits from Aarong are reinvested into BRAC's development programs in health, education, microcredit and legal services, aiming to alleviate poverty and empower rural communities. Looking ahead, Aarong aims to expand its retail presence, launch e-commerce, and export handicrafts to more international markets.
This document summarizes Made By Many's visit to Fab Lab Egypt in Cairo. It discusses:
- Fab Lab Egypt is a makerspace that provides tools and resources for digital fabrication projects like 3D printing and CNC machines.
- The community manager, Omar El-Safty, describes how Fab Lab aims to support entrepreneurs and prove that "geeks" can build sustainable startups in Egypt.
- Fab Lab targets youth aged 16-25, though people of all ages use it. Their goal is to grow the "maker" community in Egypt and empower people to solve problems through hands-on creation rather than consumption.
Australian businesses take on world stage_ArtsHub AustraliaCaroline Tung
Social enterprises in the creative industries are employing people in need, such as HIV-positive women in Tanzania by SEW Tanzania, to produce fashion accessories and textiles. These social enterprises aim to be financially sustainable while also providing social benefits. Other examples mentioned are an Australian business that promotes positive social change through fashion and homewares, and an upcycler in Brisbane who teaches workshops on transforming old clothes into new sustainable pieces to reduce textile waste. The article discusses how social enterprises integrate social goals into their business practices.
This document discusses a design project that brings together design students and refugees to co-create useful products. It involves running collaborative workshops where students and refugees jointly design and build simple, practical items for refugee camps. The goals are to provide opportunities for refugees, address their needs, and challenge perceptions of refugees as needy rather than resourceful. The expected outcomes include guidelines for improving camp services, future visions, and maps of stakeholders, as well as producing prototype products and communicating the project.
Laduma ngxokolo is a South African knitwear designer whose colorful collections are inspired by traditional Xhosa beadwork, winning an international design competition.
This document provides summaries of various topics including:
1. William Kamkwamba who taught himself to build a windmill to generate electricity for his village in Africa.
2. Barefoot Solar Engineers which trains rural women in India to install and repair solar power systems.
3. The Yellow Arrow Project where participants place stickers in locations and connect stories to the locations via text messages.
Development Challenges, South-South Solutions: December 2007 IssueDavid South Consulting
The document discusses how animation production has expanded in developing countries in Asia and become a lucrative industry, helping provide jobs and economic opportunities. It outlines some of the leading animation producers in Asia and trends driving demand, such as outsourcing for major studios and using local animation to make mobile applications more attractive. Several countries are highlighted for their growing animation industries, including India, China, and some African nations like South Africa that are developing their own animation sectors. The role of government support and training is also noted.
Few countries can boast having a third of its GDP stored as mobile money in the hands of a telecom group. There is no miracle in the rise of MPesa, but a deep understanding by Safaricom of the social fabric of East Africa’s tech and economic hub, as well as a lots of test and try. The lure of mobile money have lots of startups competing into this space, to connect remittances, shopping and payments to the MPesa infrastructure. Other than that, Kenya is also experiencing a double motion in its innovation ecosystem: if it’s definitely a community-driven startup hub, its government is also playing a key role through laws and pharaonic projects.
Project Keexs aims to launch a footwear brand that manufactures in Nigeria to create jobs and economic opportunity while also contributing 10% of sales to social causes. The founder will crowd fund $3 million over 60 days to launch the brand, outsource initial production, and acquire expertise to build a factory in Nigeria. By December 2016, the goal is to assemble and export the "smartest shoe made in Africa" worldwide to address unemployment, poverty, and other social issues in Nigeria and beyond.
Cultural and creative industries - PratschOECD CFE
Presentation by Heike Pratsch, Germany at the 6th Summer Academy on Cultural and Creative Industries and Local Development "Disrupting tradition: How digital technology is changing the cultural and creative processes", 18-20 Sept. 2023 ONLINE and 27-29 Sept. 2023 ONSITE (Trento, Italy).
More info: https://oe.cd/sacci
Visit our website: www.oecd.org/cfe
Follow us on Twitter: @OECD_local
The document discusses the Maker Movement, which involves independent inventors, designers, and tinkerers who design and create their own products using new technologies like 3D printers. Key aspects include Maker Faires, which showcase inventions, as well as educational makerspaces where students can explore ideas using tools that support hands-on, collaborative learning. The Maker Movement promotes critical thinking and problem solving skills through learning by doing and encourages students to develop curiosity and interest in STEM fields.
Similar to Development Challenges, South-South Solutions: October 2007 Issue (20)
Editor-in-Chief: David South
In 1994 a huge schism had grown in Canada between youth and the wider media. Young people were not reflected anywhere and their views were ignored. That is, until Watch Magazine exploded onto the streets of Toronto and into the halls of the city’s high schools. I was hired by Youth Culture to be the Editor-in-Chief for this unique business: a magazine staffed by high school students but covering the wider worlds of pop music, culture, fashion, politics and the arts.
You can read more about my current and past work here: www.davidsouthconsulting.com
El documento describe cómo las mujeres aprenden las normas comerciales a través de la venta en mercados callejeros. Esto les brinda independencia económica y habilidades empresariales. Sin embargo, enfrentan desventajas como comprar en pequeñas cantidades y pagar precios más altos. El uso de teléfonos móviles en Nigeria y un sistema de pedidos en Sudáfrica han ayudado a las mujeres a superar estas desventajas y aumentar sus ingresos.
El documento describe cómo el turismo puede ayudar a los excombatientes después de un conflicto, brindando ejemplos de Aceh, Indonesia, donde antiguos guerrilleros ahora son guías turísticos, y de Rwanda, donde el turismo está ayudando a curar las heridas del genocidio al tiempo que genera ingresos. También menciona cómo el turismo se ha convertido en una importante atracción en lugares como los túneles Cu Chi en Vietnam que solían usarse por el Vietcong.
El documento describe cómo Cuba ha tenido éxito cultivando alimentos en áreas urbanas para abordar su crisis alimentaria. Cuba ahora produce la mayoría de las verduras que consume a través de huertas urbanas que usan métodos orgánicos. Esto ha creado empleos y mejorado la nutrición de los cubanos. Los cultivos urbanos han ayudado a Cuba a reducir su dependencia de importaciones de alimentos a un costo alto.
Este documento discute el potencial de la juventud urbana como fuente de crecimiento económico. Actualmente, la mayoría de los jóvenes que viven en ciudades de países en desarrollo trabajan en empleos informales y con bajos salarios para sobrevivir. Sin embargo, si se les brindan oportunidades para desarrollar trabajos de calidad, los jóvenes pueden impulsar un sustancial crecimiento económico. El documento también describe varios programas y concursos que buscan promover el emprendimiento entre los
Los tejedores tradicionales de la India están recurriendo a la medicina ayurveda para impregnar sus telas con hierbas y especias con propiedades medicinales, con el fin de aumentar sus ventas. Ensayos clínicos han demostrado los beneficios de estas telas llamadas "ayurvastra" para problemas de salud como reumatismo y diabetes. Ahora se exportan a varios países y generan ingresos para los tejedores, ayudando a preservar esta antigua industria textil.
Este documento describe el desarrollo de una máquina de cajero automático llamada Gramateller diseñada para servir a los pobres y analfabetos en la India rural. La máquina utiliza un escáner de huellas dactilares y puede aceptar billetes sucios. Se ha probado con éxito con dos bancos grandes. El objetivo es ampliar el acceso a los servicios bancarios para las 4.000 millones de personas que viven con menos de $2 dólares por día en todo el mundo.
El documento habla sobre aprovechar la energía cinética de los niños jugando en el patio de recreo para generar electricidad que pueda alumbrar las aulas de escuelas en África que carecen de electricidad. Un estudiante británico diseñó un columpio de tabla que, mediante el simple movimiento de subir y bajar, puede generar suficiente electricidad en 5-10 minutos para iluminar un aula por la noche. Actualmente se está realizando un ensayo piloto de este columpio en Uganda, y el estudiante espera establecer una
El documento describe dos iniciativas africanas para abordar problemas agrícolas y de salud utilizando enfoques basados en la biotecnología y la ciencia. La primera involucra el desarrollo de una variedad de maíz resistente al virus del maíz veteado por científicos sudafricanos para ayudar a los pequeños agricultores. La segunda involucra la cría de tilapias en estanques en Kenia para controlar la propagación de mosquitos portadores de malaria y proporcionar una fuente de alimentos. Ambas
El Children's Development Bank de la India transforma a los niños de la calle en empresarios al brindarles servicios bancarios seguros para ahorrar e invertir su dinero ganado trabajando, así como capacitación empresarial. El banco, administrado conjuntamente por niños y adultos, tiene actualmente 1,300 miembros en Delhi que ahorran un promedio de 30-40 rupias por día. Algunos niños miembros ya están estableciendo sus propios negocios con préstamos del banco.
El documento discute (1) el gran aumento en la población juvenil en los países en desarrollo y las oportunidades que esto presenta para el emprendimiento; (2) la necesidad de brindar a los jóvenes educación y capacitación en habilidades empresariales para aprovechar esta oportunidad; y (3) algunos programas e iniciativas existentes que brindan apoyo financiero y capacitación a los emprendedores juveniles.
Este documento describe el creciente movimiento de "filantropos empresariales" que usan modelos empresariales para abordar problemas sociales. Se centran más en los beneficios que las organizaciones sin fines de lucro tradicionales, y ven a las empresas como una herramienta para el bien. Algunos ejemplos notables son la Omidyar Network, que busca proporcionar microcréditos a todos los pobres del mundo, y el Acumen Fund, que usa principios de diseño empresarial para resolver problemas de pobreza.
1) Un equipo venezolano dirigido por Ermanno Pietrosemoli estableció un nuevo récord mundial al transmitir una señal Wi-Fi a 282 kilómetros de distancia entre dos montañas en los Andes venezolanos, utilizando equipo de bajo costo.
2) Esto demuestra que las señales inalámbricas de bajo costo pueden llegar a mayores distancias e incluso áreas rurales remotas con pequeñas inversiones, ayudando a reducir la brecha digital.
3) Pietrosemoli
El documento discute varias opciones de financiamiento para empresarios sociales en comunidades de bajos ingresos en África. Describe nuevos enfoques como inversiones de impacto social, empresas sociales y comercio justo que buscan un equilibrio entre personas, planeta y ganancias. También destaca varias organizaciones e iniciativas que brindan fondos, capacitación y mercados para este tipo de empresas, como competencias de planes de negocios, microfinanciamiento, buscadores en línea y redes de comercio justo.
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Development Challenges, South-South Solutions: October 2007 Issue
1. In this issue:
Featured links:
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October 2007 | subscribe | unsubscribe | contact us | version française | versión en español
Next Generation of Innovation for the
Grassroots
Taking inspiration from science fiction sagas like the TV show Star Trek,
the next generation of innovation is already taking shape in the South.
A group of innovative facilities called Fab Labs (short for Fabrication
Laboratory) in Ghana, India, Kenya, South Africa and Costa Rica are
applying cutting-edge technology to address the everyday needs of
people.
Like the futuristic “replicator” in Star Trek, Fab Labs allow people t
design and produce what they need there and then. The labs are
mushrooming throughout the South as people get the innovation bug.
Originally an idea from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’
Center for Bits and Atoms, which sponsors nine of the labs, Fab Labs
let people use digital technology to build physical objects, from
eyeglass frames to toys and computer parts. Fab Labs empower local
invention by turning education, problem-solving and job creation into
creative process.
Started by Professor Neil Gershenfeld, Fab Labs use US $20,000 worth
of computers, open source design software, laser cutters, milling
machines and soldering irons, letting people harness their creativity to
build things they need, including tools, replacement parts and
essential products unavailable in the local market.
With minimal training, children and adults are designing and making
their own toys, jewellery and even computer circuit boards with the
machines. It turns people from consumers into inventors.
“Instead of bringing information technology to the masses, the Fab
Labs bring information technology development to the masses,” sai
Gershenfeld.
In Ghana, the Takoradi Technical Institute in the southwest of the
country hosts a Fab Lab, allowing a wide variety of people to use the
“replicator” – from local street children to tribal chiefs – to make a wide
range of products. The Ghana lab has several projects on the go,
including antennae and radios for wireless internet networks and
solar-powered machinery for cooking, cooling and cutting. The labs
have found that the younger the users, the faster the skills are picked
up.
John Silvester Boafo, principal at the Takoradi Technical Institute, is
proud of what he calls a fu-fu pounder. “In a Ghanaian home, the main
dish is fu-fu,” he told the BBC. “Fu-fu is made of plaintain and cassava,
which are cooked. After they are cooked, they are put into a mortar
and pounded by hand. People go through hard labour just to get a
meal to eat. So, we thought we could fabricate this machine to
alleviate the hard labour they use in pounding.”
They are also working on portable hand-held chargeable solar panel
for televisions and refrigerators.
In Pabal, in the western part of Maharashtra, India, a Fab Lab was
established at the Vigyan Ashram in 2002 and is now working on
developing agricultural instruments. They are also testing milk for
quality and safety, and tuning diesel engines to run more efficiently,
especially with bio fuels. Another lab in Bithoor in the state of Uttar
Pradesh (operated with the Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur) is
working on 3-D scanning and printing for rural artisans, such as
n Next Generation of
Innovation for the
Grassroots
n African Culture as Big
Business
n Ecotourism to Heal the
Scars of the Past
n Popular Characters Re-
invent Traditional Carving
n Babajob.com
n Equator Initiative
n Kiva.org
n SSC Website
n Window on the World
n Job Opportunities
n Past Issues
2. producing wooden blocks used in Chikan embroidery.
In South Africa, officials are in the process of setting up four labs. The
first is in the capital Pretoria, home to Africa’s first “science park”. Th
second is in the township of Shoshanguve, a very poor community with
high unemployment.
“We have these very high-tech small start-up companies that are
excited by the proximity of the lab,” said Sushil Borde, head of th
government agency charged with rolling out the four labs. “Th
companies say, ‘We have these brilliant ideas, we have these busines
models, but we don’t know how to get these ideas into tangibl
products.”
Borde hopes the network of Fab Labs will enable South African
entrepreneurs and engineers to test their ideas and “fast track th
process of growth and development.”
Seventeen-year-old Kenneth Chauke has been able to build a robot in
the Fab Lab in Pretoria, he told the Christian Science Monitor.
IT supervisor Nthabiseng Nkadimeng at the Fab Lab in Shoshanguve,
has been encouraging South African youth to dream expansively about
new technology. “We want to encourage innovation,” she told th
Christian Science Monitor. “A lot of the kids, right now, they’re makin
toys. That’s okay, it’s a start. But eventually we want them to d
things that haven’t been done before.”
“It’s the idea that if you’re somewhere in rural South Africa, and yo
want something for solar energy, you can go to a Fab Lab and make
your own,” said Naas Zaayman, who works for the government o
coordinating the Fab Lab strategy.
LINKS:
n id21 Insights: A series of articles by the UK ’s Institute of
Development Studies on how to make technology and science
relevant to the needs of the poor:
n Biography: Professor Neil Gershenfeld
n eMachineShop: This remarkable service allows budding inventors
to download free design software, design their invention, and then
have it made in any quantity they wish and shipped to them:
Amazing!
3. African Culture as Big Business
In the last decade the world’s creative industries (including crafts, fashion and design) have gained greater
respect for being the spark that drives economic development and entrepreneurship. They are seen as fast
growers and good job creators, and importantly, the lynch pin in cultural identity and cultural diversity.
UNESCO, through its Global Alliance for Cultural Diversity, has been in the forefront of helping African
countries re-shape their policies to take this into consideration. The promotion of cultural industries also
has been incorporated into the New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD).
The global clothing industry is estimated to be worth US $900 billion a year. Culture and creativity are big
businesses: according to UNESCO, in 2002 the UK exported US $8.5 billion in cultural goods, the United
States US $7.6 billion, and China US $5.2 billion. The UK’s Burberry fashion label alone made £157 million in
2006.
This is good news for Africa’s growing fashion industry, which is finally getting the attention and respect it
deserves. Entrepreneurs are tapping into this awareness as a great way to make money. Well-known
Nigerian fashion designer Alphadi says the continent’s fashion industry is “giving Africa a chance to show its
true self, its solidarity, its huge generosity and its greatness.”
Africa’s fashion entrepreneurs are showing more and more confidence and striding with pride across
catwalks around the world. And despite the problems faced by black models - as highlighted by supermodel
Naomi Campbell in her recent press conference in Kenya - some African models have a growing
international profile: these include Alek Wek from southern Sudan, and Waris Dirie from Somalia. Campbell
has said she plans to set up a modelling agency in Kenya to increase opportunities.
Just as African music has fans around the world, the continent’s growing fashion scene is gaining fans and
more attention. From Hollywood stars to European catwalks, African fashion designers and apparel makers
are feeding the industry’s hunger for novelty and new ideas.
African entrepreneurs, from village craftsmen to ambitious and creative urbanites, are finding ways to cash
in on this rising awareness.
The rising stars of South Africa were on full display at this August’s Cape Town Fashion Week. David Tlale,
who produces glamorous haute couture creations, places community empowerment in his hometown of
Johannesburg at the centre of his business. Tlale was joined by rising stars Thabani Mavundla, Thula Sindi,
and Craig Jacobs.
Creator and founder of the Fundudzi label of Johannesburg, Jacobs presented a couture collection at Paris
Fashion Week in July. A former TV presenter-turned-fashion designer, Jacobs sees a renewed pride in
African creativity and a new dialogue about Africa’s place in the world. His motto is: “Africa reworked…Africa
re-inspired… Africa renewed”.
Established in 2004, his clothing company for women strives to be socially and environmentally responsible:
“Fundudzi is also an eco-conscious label, utilizing materials such as organic cottons, soy and bamboo as
well as cashmere produced in Africa which is not harmful to the environment,” he said. “The message which
we want to resonate with the rest of the world is that Africa has always been organic."
“Our label has grown out of the desire to help change the perception of our home, Africa, by presenting
clothing designed and created here which can compete on the world stage.”
Jacob benefited from support from various organizations in South Africa to get his business plans sorted
out. The country’s tourism body has focused on fashion with its C’est Couture campaign. But he has also
struggled with the complexities of exporting his designs and navigating global customs regulations.
“There has been a lot of interest internationally in our collection, but I am not sure what the rules and
regulations are … We need an over-riding body to help assist us young entrepreneurs. My experience in
Paris, in July, has been that we do have something new and fresh to say in fashion, and we can produce at
the same standard as the rest of the world. There was validation of that. But we as Africans need to follow
our own signature, look internally to come up with inspiration, and show that to the rest of the world.
“The global village environment, and the access that technologies such as the Internet have provided,
means that we can tune into the same stimuli in terms of trends and fashion directions to ensure that we
are on par with the rest of the planet. I do believe that the world, bored with the same trends they have
been exposed to for so long, are looking for a new guard of inspiration – and we need to empower
ourselves with the right tools to answer that call.
“Our positioning is quite simple – our label is dedicated to creating jobs in Africa, thereby reducing our
dependency on aid in securing our future …I wanted to create a label which is rooted in Africa, which tells
African stories, but which is not tradition or museum curio – rather, intelligent pieces which can fit
seamlessly into the global firmament of fashion. The label is focused on redressing the prejudices about the
“dark continent” – each collection is designed as a travelogue, informing the world about the rich tapestry
of life in Africa.”
4. Another hub of dynamism in the African fashion scene is Nairobi, Kenya. Kikoromeo connects its catwalk
fashion designs with the principle of community development. The label uses mostly Kenyan materials –
cotton, silk and wool – and works with local artisans, including women’s groups. Its bags are woven with
Kenyan Sisal by Machakos women’s groups, and the beadwork is done by Maasai women’s groups.
Anna Trezbinski of Nairobi, who is popular in Hollywood and has contracts to provide items to top designers
like Paul Smith, employs 800 people - mostly Masai women in her workshop in the Great Rift Valley.
This new wave of African fashion designers is proving that anyone with talent, a website and a fan base
can puncture the bubble of the European and New York catwalks and make a splash.
“Africa is a haven of inspiration,” says the Tanzanian-born, Nairobi-based designer and collector Lisa
Christofferson, who has clothed Ralph Fiennes, Rachel Weiss and Jane Seymour. “Africa for many years
now has been the flavour of fashion,” she says. “It has really opened the door for us.”
She believes the internet has expanded her business and her brand. It gives clients and boutiques around
the world the ability to import her hand-painted, African-inspired cashmere sweaters, bedspreads and
throws. Many are ceremonial cloths of the Kuba Kingdom in Congo.
Another designer based in Kenya, Annabelle Thom, believes changes in the last seven years are
responsible: access to TV and film, music channels and a burgeoning middle class with money. “People care
more about fashion and if you look around in Nairobi, the average person is beautifully dressed – people
are spending money on themselves,” she said.
Ethiopia has also been identified as a bubbling fashion hot spot for its indigenous raw cotton and potential
to produce other natural fibres. Ethiopian designer Guenet Fresenbet launched Ethiopia’s first fashion
magazine, Gigi, to help take the lead.
LINKS:
n Afromix: Great links to African fashion designers and fashion events and media.
n Kikoromeo: Based in Nairobi, Kenya Kikoromeo’s founder and principal apparel designer trained in Rome
and Milan and has been in production in Kenya since 1997.
n South Africa’s leading fashion weeks: Johannesburg Fashion Week or Capetown Fashion Week
n Uzuri: Premier International African Inspired Fashion Magazine: A quarterly magazine founded in 2005
and based in Texas, it is dedicated to highlighting high fashion in Africa.
n Dobizo: An excellent website with all the resources necessary for a budding entrepreneur to get
started in the fashion business, from step-by-step guides to common mistakes and how to choose a
logo.
n Fashion Nigeria: Newly launched Nigerian fashion magazine.
5. Ecotourism to Heal the Scars of the Past
The legacy of underdevelopment during the communist era in parts of Eastern Europe is now being seen as
an advantage in the global tourism trade. Well off the beaten path for tourists, areas as diverse as
Chechnya and Romania are working to turn their rustic rural hinterlands into a strategic advantage in
grabbing the market for ecotourists. Ecotourism – tourism that takes people to fragile and beautiful areas –
is one of the tourism industry’s fastest growing areas.
At stake is the lucrative and ever-growing world tourism market. Global tourist arrivals passed 800 million in
2006, with tourism in the world up by 5.5 per cent (World Tourism Organization), earning US $680 billion
globally. In 1993, just seven per cent of travel was nature tourism; that share has now passed 20 per
cent.
Romania, now a member of the European Union, boasts rural countryside like Europe of old: all hillsides are
common land and there are no walls or fences to impede the view. Life is heavily dominated by agriculture
and the rhythms of farm life.
Southern Transylvania is a high plateau of wooded hills and valleys and shielded by the Carpathian
Mountains.
“The Carpathians of central and eastern Europe,” said Achim Steiner, head of the UN Environment
Programme, “are among the world’s richest regions in terms of biodiversity and pristine landscapes. I have
no doubt that the Carpathians, like the Alps, the Himalayas and the Rocky Mountains, will become world
famous for walking, hiking, climbing, wildlife watching, photography and similar leisure pursuits.”
In order to preserve this way of life and generate income, various schemes are encouraging low-key
tourism. This takes the form of renovating decaying farm buildings for guesthouses. The guesthouses are
kept clean and simple and the focus is on typical local food like hearty stews and soups and pork sausages.
Much of this has been paid for by the Mihai Emenescu Trust, a charity seeking to preserve the traditions of
the Saxon villages.
Patrick Holden of the Soil Association, a patron of the Mihai Eminescu Trust, thinks the organic agricultural
methods of the local farmers could be a model for the rest of Europe.
Romania is also part of the Organization for Black Sea Economic Cooperation (BSEC), which is taking the
lead in promoting ecotourism as an economic development option.
Ex-communist nation Bulgaria has also turned to ecotourism, launching its “Ecotourism: Naturally Bulgaria”
campaign in September.
Even the once-war-torn Russian republic of Chechnya is trying to radically re-shape people’s perceptions. It
is hard to believe, but the former site of a bitter civil war that left the capital Grozny in ruins now wants to
be Russia’s Switzerland.
Shatoy region in southern Chechnya, during Soviet times, saw 20,000 visitors every month to ski, ride
horses, and hike in the Caucasus Mountains. The new government plans to spend UK £40 million on new
hotels, reconstructing old holiday camps, building spas and health centres. The region’s head of
government, Mr Khasukha Demilkhanov, is confident that natural beauty can compete with the West: in the
Argun Gorge, he pointed out to the Guardian newspaper, the scene is reminiscent of a 19th century
woodcutting. Stone towers litter the hills, alpine meadows are full of wild flowers, the mountains are snow-
capped and new roads have been built.
The Chechens hope to start with Russian holidaymakers and extreme tourists from the West, before
moving more into the mainstream market.
LINKS:
n Ecotourism.org: The International Ecotourism Society.
n Ecotourism Kazakhstan: Kazakhstan has put together a dedicated website on ecotourism.
n Planeta: one of the first ecotourism resources to go online (since 1994) and still offers plenty of
information for those wanting to start a business.
6. Popular Characters Re-invent Traditional Carving
The popular cartoon characters from the long-running series The Simpsons are breathing new life into
traditional African stone carvings.
A traditional craft in many cultures, carving adds value to local resources and provides an excellent source
of income for local artisans and entrepreneurs. While wood or stone carvings are a popular tourist souvenir
throughout Africa, Asia and Latin America, most carvers stick to traditional subjects.
However, a group of villagers in western Kenya have transformed their economy by swapping carvings of
elephants and Cleopatra for Homer, Marge and Sideshow Bob.
According to the book Carving out a Future by the Centre for International Forestry Research (CIFOR),
carving exports from the island of Bali in Indonesia total US $100 million per year. India’s industry is worth
US $65 million. In Oaxaca, Mexico, carvings earn US $2,500 per household, increasing access to education
and health. In Kenya, carving involves more than 60,000 people and provides household income for more
than 300,000. In some communities in South Africa, households can earn between US $500 and US $2,000
per year from carvings – 80 per cent of a household income.
Research into carving has identified several factors that are critical to maximising profits: quality is critical,
and the best woods and stone must be used. Diversity is an important element: too much of the same
thing being made available damages the market. And sustainability: the wood and stone resources must
not be used up.
It is this novelty and diversity that The Simpsons carvings address. By tapping into the global market for
official licensed merchandise, the Tabaka carvers of the Abagusi tribe - well-known carvers in western
Kenya - have significantly increased their income. And they are cashing in on the global popularity of the
first Simpsons movie released this year.
Tabaka is a village three hours by bus from Kenya’s capital, Nairobi. In Nairobi, the carvers would sell their
soap stone carvings to middlemen, often for a pittance compared to what they would in turn charge
tourists. Negotiations with these vendors could take days and waste the precious income of the carvers as
they waited around for the deal to come through.
Craft Village UK has organised the carvers to produce Simpsons statuettes for the worldwide market. The
carvers were able to win the official merchandise license from The Simpsons’ owners, Twentieth Century
Fox, after its vice-president saw a video of the carvers. They were initially awarded the license to craft 12
of the show’s characters for the US and UK markets, but last month they gained the worldwide license.
Craft Village’s founder, UK-based Paul Young, had the idea three years ago when his sister returned from
living in Uganda with soap stone carvings. Impressed by the quality of the workmanship, he thought they
would sell better in a western market if they reproduced popular images from films and TV. In 2005, he
made contact with the carvers through a crafts company in Nairobi. He sent initial plastic figurine models
and photos to help the carvers get the statues right. He flew to Kenya in 2005 to meet the carvers for the
first time and video the carving process.
Initial prototypes were too heavy and some would break. And it took 12 months of trial and error to get the
quality high enough to approach Twentieth Century Fox.
“Familiarizing the carvers with The Simpsons was difficult,” said Young. “Making the carvers understand the
importance of quality control and the need for benchmark standards and uniform carvings was - and still is -
a challenge.”
“I don’t know who they are,” said Pauline Kemunto, who helps her husband with the carvings. “But I like
them because I earn from them.”
In a community known for growing bananas, David Atang’a, master carver and former soldier, supports five
children. “If this Simpsons project succeeds, I hope to educate my children in university,” he said.
Two groups of 15 members each are divided between Tabaka Master Carvers and Tabaka Classic Carvers.
Women take over and wash, polish and shine the pieces. Each piece is numbered and signed (Craft Village
UK products).
The carvers now make 450 Kenyan shillings per statue (UK £3) – between four and six times what they
would have got for a traditional carving. Where work before was sporadic, it is now regular and employs 80
people. The extra income means the carvers can now send their children to secondary school.
Enosh Onsombi grew up with no electricity and no television. But since the community started carving the
Simpsons characters, “Life has changed so much,” he told The Independent newspaper. “The Simpsons
has changed everything.”
LINKS:
7. n Nonprofit Enterprise and Self-sustainability Team (NESsT): works in emerging markets by “developing
and supporting social enterprises that strengthen civil society organizations’ financial sustainability and
maximize their social impact.”
8. Window on the World
Job Opportunities
n MicroFranchising: Creating Wealth at the Bottom of the Pyramid
by Jason S. Fairbourne et al, Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing
Website: www.amazon.com
n Too Poor for Peace? Global Poverty, Conflict, and Security in the 21st Century
by ed. Lael Brainard and Derek Chollet, Publisher: Brookings Institution Press
Website: www.brookings.edu
n Flat World, Big Gaps: Economic Liberalization, Globalization, Poverty and Inequality
by ed. Iorno K.S. with Jacques Baudot, Publisher: Third World Network and the UN
Website: www.panaseanemall.org
n Here or There? A Survey of Factors in Multinational R&D Location
A study of more than 200 multinational companies finds emerging countries like China and India will
continue to be beneficiaries of R&D expansion.
Publisher: Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation
Website: www.kauffman.org
n Rapid Assessment of Cell Phones for Development
by Sally-Jean Shackleton, Publisher: UNICEF
Website: www.apc.org
n Doing Business 2008
This World Bank annual survey of the best places to do business finds Egypt, Ghana, Kenya, Colombia
and China have all made significant improvements.
Website: www.doingbusiness.org
n Wikinomics: How Mass Collaboration Changes Everything
by Don Tapscott and Anthony Williams, Publisher: Atlantic
Website: www.wikinomics.com
n Emerging World Cities in Pacific Asia
edited by Fu-chen Lo and Yue-man Yeung, Publisher: United Nations University Press
Website: www.unu.edu
n Africa Recruit Job Compendium
n Africa Union
n CARE
n Christian Children&'s Fund
n ECOWAS
n International Crisis Group
n International Medical Corps
n International Rescue Committee
n Internews
n IREX
n Organization for International Migration
n Oxfam
n Relief Web Job Compendium (UN OCHA) (1)
n Relief Web Job Compendium (UN OCHA) (2)
n Save the Children
n The Development Executive Group job
compendium
n Trust Africa
n UN Jobs
n UNDP
n UNESCO
n UNICEF
n World Bank
n World Wildlife Fund (Cameroon)
Please feel free to send your comments, feedback and/or suggestions to Cosmas Gitta
[cosmas.gitta@undp.org] Chief, Division for Policy, Special Unit for South-South Cooperation
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