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Ashoka is a not-for-profit
organization founded in 1980 by Bill Drayton in Washington, DC, USA. Today, it
employs 160 staff in 25 regional offices throughout Africa, the Americas, Asia,
Europe, the Middle East, and North Africa. Ashoka rejects government funding,
as it has opted to be financed solely by individuals, foundations and business
entrepreneurs from around the world
Drayton, a pioneer in the
global field of social entrepreneurship, established Ashoka believing that most
the effective way to promote positive social change is to invest in social
entrepreneurs with innovative solutions that are sustainable and replicable,
both nationally and globally.
The focal point of Ashoka's
effort is thus, people. It invests in people - not just anyone, but people who
it identifies as social entrepreneurs. Ashoka's credo is that social change may
be initiated and steered forward by persons who have powerful ideas aimed at
solving pressing social problems. Just as business entrepreneurs launch
innovative solutions and so often disrupt market places, so too, social
entrepreneurs facilitate change in society. Having recognized this basic fact -
that ‘there is nothing as powerful as a new idea in the hands of a first-class
entrepreneur' - Ashoka seeks to encourage these change agents to convert their
ideas into reality and further, into flourishing professions.
Supporting
ultimate realists: In India, Vinoba Bhave is a classic example of a
social entrepreneur, who as founder and leader of the Land Gift Movement, made
possible the redistribution of more than 70,00,000 acres of land India's
untouchables and landless. Overseas, Florence Nightingale, who founded modern
nursing by establishing the first school for nurses and simultaneously fought
to improve hospital conditions, also typifies social entrepreneurship.
What is similar about all
Ashoka's change agents, or Fellows, is that they are ambitious visionaries
willing to work consistently to achieve their goal. After all, social change,
in many ways, calls for a greater commitment vis-à-vis the business sector.
Encouraging societies to adopt a new approach, and not depend on interventions
by the government or business sector can be painstaking work. For this reason,
many social entrepreneurs commit their lives to changing the direction of their
field.
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Ashoka has taken huge
strides to encourage individuals willing to think of and drive change.
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Ashoka's Fellows: Although hard to set
rolling, change is often a catchy process. It is upto a social entrepreneur to
present his/her solution as user-friendly and easily understandable, so as to maximize the number of local people that will stand
up, seize the idea, and implement with it.
Thus, by inspiring and engaging widespread support, change-makers act as mass
recruiters of local change-makers, who may then collectively persuade entire
societies to take new leaps.
Since 1980, the
organization has elected over 1800 leading social entrepreneurs in more than 60
countries as Ashoka Fellows. These men and women have benefited by becoming a
permanent part of the Ashoka global association. Each receives a living stipend
for an average of three years to allow him/her to concentrate on building
his./her social career, avails of a professional support network that often yields
partnerships with professional consultants, and enjoys access to a global
network of peers.
A
three-pronged approach: This financial and professional support to
individual social entrepreneurs - throughout their life cycle - is only the
first level of work done by Ashoka. The organization also focuses on groups of
social entrepreneurs, by bringing them together on one platform to help leverage their impact, scale their ideas, and
capture and disseminate their best practices.
This collaboration among
peers ensures that Ashoka is able to distill the most effective patterns and
unify them into a "mosaic," a synthesis of the commonalities and intersections
of key principles that guide Fellows' individual solutions. These overarching
mosaics are then disseminated globally, and form the basis of programmatic
initiatives specific to each field of work, such as youth development or the
environment.
Thus, group
entrepreneurship not only furthers the work of individual Fellows but also
helps Ashoka identify and implement cutting edge trends in the citizen sector.
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The organization cites the
King Ashoka as the earliest example of a social innovator for his creativity,
global mindedness and tolerance.
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Finally, it promotes the
citizen sector by putting in place the infrastructure - such as access to
social financing, bridges to business and academic sectors, and frameworks for
partnerships that deliver social and financial value - needed to support its
growth and facilitate the spread of social innovation globally. Ashoka
especially recognizes that the citizen sector stands to improve its efficiency
by learning from and reproducing competitive business models in its own sphere.
Ashoka's three leveled
interventions represent a multi-pronged approach that furthers its commitment
to encourage the replication of the innovative social ideas implemented by its
Fellows by fostering collaboration between peers. Perhaps for this reason, the
organization is ideally represented by an oak tree, known for its strength,
sturdiness and broad spread.
Everyone is a Change-maker
Ashoka's vision is easily
summed up as, a world where ‘Everyone is a Changemaker,' and hence where social
challenges are quickly and effectively solved.
Although these individuals
may work in every field of human need, the work of the organization broadly
falls into six major fields - civic engagement, economic development, health,
human rights, environment, and learning/education. Of course, some endeavors
overlap these categories and others may fit into other niche sectors.
According to the Ashoka
website - http://www.ashoka.org - its civic engagement initiatives aim
to organize and amplify the voices of private citizens, empowering a culture of
participation. Economic development projects expand economic opportunities,
strengthen bargaining power, and develop markets that are more responsive to
the poor, in order to create economic independence for under-privileged individuals.
Environ-mental solutions are focused on protecting the environment while
simultaneously tackling closely linked social problems.
The health endeavours
supported by Ashoka aim to establish public-private partnerships to expand and
strengthen health care delivery systems and thus increase access to essential
medicines. Human rights solutions secure a full range of civil, political, and
social rights for all people. Lastly, learning/education innovations aim to
develop new methods for learning and education that engage youth in the
learning process, by encouraging problem solving, decision making,
responsibility, teamwork and creativity.
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The organization's mission
is wholly aimed at shaping and facilitating a thriving global,
entrepreneurial, competitive citizen sector.
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Ashoka
and India: Ashoka's relation with India goes back many years. Its very
name, Ashoka, honours India's ancient leader (by the same name) known for unifying the Indian subcontinent in the 3rd
century BC, but more so for renouncing violence and dedicating his life to
social welfare and economic development
after witnessing the disastrous effects of conquest wars.
Not surprisingly, then,
Ashoka's first Indian Fellow was selected way back in 1981. Gloria de Souza,
founded the ParisarAsha, Environmental Education Centre, a not-for-profit Trust
registered with the Charity Commissioner of Mumbai. The centre was envisioned
to offer the Environmental Studies Approach to Learning (ESAL-pronounced
‘ease-all'), a systemic alternative to deeply entrenched rote-learning. The
ESAL learning processes are environment-related, experiential and oriented
towards problem-solving. Parisar Asha's mission has been to provide quality
education for all, and especially to breach the disparity between those who fit
in with the Indian education system and those who don't and who therefore drop
out, most often because of being a family's ‘first-generation learner.'
Shelter
Associates: One of Ashoka's most recent Indian Fellows is Pratima Joshi,
founder and director of Shelter Associates http://www.shelter-associates.org, an organization registered in 1994 as Trust and
Society that works with urban poor, particularly women in informal settlements
to facilitate, and provide technical support to, community-managed housing
(slum rehabilitation) and infrastructure projects.
As
a group of experienced architects, Pratima and her team architecturally and
structurally design rehabilitation settlements, all the while taking care to
involve community members in the process. Once a design is frozen, Shelter
Associates prepares the drawings in the required format and submits these to
the local government for approval. Sometimes, the group also undertakes
construction and supervision responsibilities.
Sanitation in urban Indian
cities and towns is a grim affair, and has a negative impact on the quality of
lives of many informal settlers. This is yet another avenue where Shelter
Associates has aimed to make a difference. These projects have so far been successfully
implemented in the cities of Pune, Sangli and the Municipal Council of
Khuldabad in Aurangabad District.
As
part of her work Pratima has also been able to advocate for the poor and put
pressure on public officials, for example, to resettle communities in
flood-prone areas to safer locations. According to Pratima, "Following the
successful completion of this project, YASHADA - an apex government training
institute - made a 20 minutes documentary film to show how an NGO / CBO / local
government partnership can work for the poor and be replicated and scaled up."
An ideal Ashoka Fellow: A plan aimed at providing housing to
urban poor, which is easily replicable and self-sustaining - evidently,
Pratima's solution has all the makings of an idea worthy of Ashoka's backing. A
vital part of Shelter Associates' work that brought Pratima in the limelight,
is based on its recognition of the lack of credible information available for policy
makers and local government authorities to formulate realistic rehabilitation
plans for urban informal settlers. In view of this, Shelter Associates prepares
poverty mapping projects that include the costs of data collection and
collation, and that are funded by local governments. It then proceeds to
mobilize slum youth to collect data which is eventually integrated with
the map on a GIS platform.
Pratima says that this methodology works well as it
ensures that "the community members own the process and data, and the quality
of data is much better than it would have been if outsiders had gathered it."
Further, she continues, "Wherever possible, we have outsourced data entry to
slum dwellers having computers at home. We train them to enter data in this
case." Thus, the community is involved as far as possible in its rehabilitation
process. So far, over a lakh households in 200 settlements spread over 230
slums in Pune city have been surveyed.
Although she is a new Fellow, Pratima acknowledges
that "the Ashoka network will be immensely beneficial to our work." As she
shares, "I am already in touch with a Fellow counterpart in Brazil and we are
exploring whether we can introduce poverty mapping in their organization the
way we do it here. There is a provision of support by Ashoka for
such exchanges which can be mutually beneficial to Fellows. I have already
been linked through Ashoka to software engineers who are trying to locate software
that can be tailored down to our requirements of data entry."
Ashoka has selected all its Fellows for their ideas
and commitment to implementing their innovative solutions. Gloria, Pratima et
al are leading social change by example. Ashoka's success in backing its
Fellows and heralding change should inspire each of us to dwell on what we
could do to become change-makers. But the question that arises is - are we free
in our minds and willing to think on these lines and act accordingly?
Charu Bahri is a freelance
writer and author of two books. She also writes funding grants and software for
a charity working in the health sector.
Issue BG76 July07
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Call for Nominations For The ‘Social Entrepreneur
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