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  • SOCAP, Here I come!

    5:04 pm on July 24, 2011 | 0 comments Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , journalism,

    I am SO excited to announce that I have the priv­i­lege to cover SOCAP 2011 Con­fer­ence in San Fran­cisco on behalf of socialearth.org I’ve been fol­low­ing the con­fer­ence from afar for the last few years and to be attend­ing and writ­ing about the con­fer­ence is one of my dreams come true! (Thank you socialearth & SOCAP!)

    SOCAP is a orga­ni­za­tion ded­i­cated in explor­ing the inter­sec­tion of money and mean­ing. Their annual con­fer­ence in San Fran is THE event to attend for lead­ing global investors, inno­va­tors, cura­tors and social entre­pre­neurs to build this social cap­i­tal mar­kets space.

    I will be pub­lish­ing a few pre-conference pieces and will write through­out the con­fer­ence on socialearth.org. I will also be live tweet­ing dur­ing some key speeches (will be reveal­ing who as the con­fer­ence draws closer!) — so fol­low me on twit­ter if you want to be updated! If you are plan­ning on attend­ing, pre­sent­ing or speak­ing at the con­fer­ence, I would love to be in touch. You can con­tact me here. I would seri­ously love to hear from you.

    My goal at the con­fer­ence not only includes high­light­ing and report­ing the event, but to also: 1) deepen my per­sonal under­stand­ing of this inter­sec­tion; 2) meet other indi­vid­u­als who are pas­sion­ate about this cause and 3) learn about oppor­tu­ni­ties and ini­tia­tives in this inter­sec­tion of money and mean­ing. Who knows what we may cre­ate after this!

    Check out more about the con­fer­ence here.

    Register here!

     
  • These Borrowed Words

    2:14 pm on March 27, 2011 | 2 comments Permalink | Reply
    Tags: books, , journalism,

    There is one ele­ment that has always been a con­sis­tent theme in my life, wher­ever, when­ever: and that is books. I’ve had a read­ing obses­sion ever since the age of seven, which till to this day, I remem­ber the book that started it all — The Magic Paint­brush. I remem­ber hid­ing books in the drawer of my school desk back in Malaysia, and when­ever I thought the teacher was look­ing the other way, I would pull the book out and sneak a cou­ple pages of read­ing. It was easy, see, with 50 other kids packed in a class, elbow to elbow, to get away with it. I believe(d) that books would teach me things about life that a class­room never could. One that I still main­tain to this day. I devoured books from Enid Blyton’s entire col­lec­tion to the rem­i­nis­cent Sweet Val­ley days of teenage-hood. And then, my world of books changed when I dis­cov­ered the world of lit­er­a­ture and non-fiction. I’ve never looked back since.

    I recently stum­bled across this incred­i­ble list of books, that I am now deter­mined to get through in a year (I’ll let you know how it goes!). It’s a list by one of my fav orga­ni­za­tions: Acu­men Fund and it’s actu­ally the rec­om­mended read­ing list for their Fel­lows. I’ll try to share my thoughts on each book as I move through the list. But mean­while, here it is, below:

    *I’ve bolded the ones I’ve read.. it’s a start!

    GOOD SOCIETY READINGS
    Rights and Responsibilities

    “Cul­ture Is Des­tiny: A Con­ver­sa­tion with Lee Kuan Yew” by Fareed Zakaria (For­eign Affairs, March/April 1994)
    “Empow­er­ment for a Cul­ture of Peace and Devel­op­ment” by Aung San Suu Kyi (address to World Com­mis­sion on Cul­ture and Devel­op­ment, Novem­ber 21, 1994)
    “Let­ter from Birm­ing­ham Jail” by Mar­tin Luther King Jr. (April 16, 1963)
    The Uni­ver­sal Dec­la­ra­tion of Human Rights (Gen­eral Assem­bly of the United Nations, Decem­ber 10, 1948)

    Lib­erty and Social Order
    “The Con­trari­ness of the Mad Farmer” by Wen­dell Berry in Farm­ing: A Hand Book (Har­court, Brace, Jovanovich)
    “Democ­racy” by Langston Hughes
    Leviathan by Thomas Hobbes
    “Mes­sage to the Con­gress of Angos­tura, 1819” by Simón Bolí­var
    The Prince by Nic­colò Machi­avelli
    “Two Con­cepts of Lib­erty” by Isa­iah Berlin (address before Uni­ver­sity of Oxford, Octo­ber 31, 1958)
    Equal­ity and the Quest for Social Jus­tice
    The Com­mu­nist Man­i­festo by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels
    Democ­racy in Amer­ica by Alexis de Toc­queville
    Long Walk to Free­dom: The Auto­bi­og­ra­phy of Nel­son Man­dela by Nel­son Man­dela (Lit­tle, Brown and Com­pany)
    “O Yes” by Tillie Olsen in Tell Me a Rid­dle (Ran­dom House)
    The Social Con­tract by Jean-Jacques Rousseau

    Com­mu­nity and the Search for Human­ity
    The Book of Gen­e­sis
    The Four Noble Truths of Bud­dhism
    “How to Write about Africa” by Binya­vanga Wainaina (Granta 92, Win­ter 2005)
    On Iden­tity by Amin Maalouf (Harvill Pan­ther)
    Silent Spring by Rachel Car­son (Houghton Mif­flin)
    “Speech upon Receiv­ing the Philadel­phia Lib­erty Medal” by Václav Havel (July 4, 1994)
    Prop­erty and Pro­duc­tiv­ity
    Devel­op­ment as Free­dom by Amartya Sen (Anchor)
    Equal­ity and Effi­ciency: The Big Trade­off by Arthur M. Okun (The Brook­ings Insti­tu­tion)
    The Muqad­dimah by Ibn Khaldūn (Prince­ton Uni­ver­sity Press)
    The Repub­lic by Plato

    LEADERSHIP READINGS
    “Because We Can, We Must” by Bono (com­mence­ment address at the Uni­ver­sity of Penn­syl­va­nia, May 17, 2004)
    A Con­fes­sion by Leo Tol­stoy
    Death and the King’s Horse­man by Wole Soyinka (W.W. Nor­ton)
    “A Far Cry from Africa” by Derek Wal­cott in The Nor­ton Anthol­ogy of Poetry (W.W. Nor­ton)
    Good to Great: Why Some Com­pa­nies Make the Leap…and Oth­ers Don’t by Jim Collins (Harper­Collins)
    “Great Expec­ta­tions” by Bill Gates (com­mence­ment address at Har­vard Uni­ver­sity, June 7, 2007)
    Lead­er­ship on the Line: Stay­ing Alive Through the Dan­gers of Lead­ing by Ronald A. Heifetz and Marty Lin­sky (Har­vard Busi­ness School Press)
    Lead­ing from Within: Poetry that Sus­tains the Courage to Lead by Sam M. Intra­tor and Megan Scrib­ner (Jossey-Bass)
    Let­ter to Daniel: Dis­patches from the Heart by Fer­gal Keane (Pen­guin Books)
    The Oppos­able Mind: How Suc­cess­ful Lead­ers Win Through Inte­gra­tive Think­ing by Roger L. Mar­tin (Har­vard Busi­ness School Press)
    “Rebel­lion” by Fyo­dor Dos­toyevsky in The Broth­ers Kara­ma­zov
    Self-Renewal: The Indi­vid­ual and the Inno­v­a­tive Soci­ety by John W. Gard­ner (Harper­Collins)
    Ser­vant Lead­er­ship: A Jour­ney into the Nature of Legit­i­mate Power and Great­ness by Robert K. Green­leaf (Paulist Press)

    FICTION
    Black Boy by Richard Wright (Harper­Peren­nial)
    A Fine Bal­ance by Rohin­ton Mis­try (Vin­tage Inter­na­tional)
    A Grain of Wheat by Ngugi wa Thiong’o (Heine­mann)
    Inde­pen­dent Peo­ple by Halldór Lax­ness (Vin­tage Inter­na­tional)
    Midnight’s Chil­dren by Salman Rushdie (Pen­guin Books)
    The Ones Who Walk Away From Ome­las by Ursula K. Le Guin (Cre­ative Edu­ca­tion)
    Pur­ple Hibis­cus by Chi­ma­manda Ngozi Adichie (Anchor)
    Sea­son of Migra­tion to the North by Tayeb Salih (NYRB Clas­sics)
    Shadow Lines by Ami­tav Ghosh (Mariner Books)
    Shoot­ing an Ele­phant by George Orwell (Pen­guin Books)
    The Tem­pest by William Shake­speare
    Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe (Heine­mann)

    Train to Pak­istan by Khush­want Singh (Grove Press)

    BOOKS ON INNOVATIVE SOLUTIONS FOR POVERTY ALLEVIATION
    “A Behavioral-Economics View of Poverty” by Mar­i­anne Bertrand, Send­hil Mul­lainathan, and Eldar Shafir (Amer­i­can Eco­nomic Review 94, no. 2)
    The Bot­tom Bil­lion: Why the Poor­est Coun­tries are Fail­ing and What Can Be Done About It by Paul Col­lier (Oxford Uni­ver­sity Press)
    Cap­i­tal­ism as if the World Mat­ters by Jonathon Por­ritt and Amory B. Lovins (Earth­scan Pub­li­ca­tions)
    Devel­op­ment as Free­dom by Amartya Sen (Anchor)
    The End of Poverty: Eco­nomic Pos­si­bil­i­ties for Our Time by Jef­frey D. Sachs (Pen­guin Press)
    The For­tune at the Bot­tom of the Pyra­mid: Erad­i­cat­ing Poverty Through Prof­its by C.K. Pra­ha­lad (Whar­ton School Pub­lish­ing)
    Mak­ing Glob­al­iza­tion Work by Joseph E. Stiglitz (W.W. Nor­ton)
    Max­i­mum City: Bom­bay Lost and Found by Suketu Mehta (Knopf)
    The Mys­tery of Cap­i­tal: Why Cap­i­tal­ism Tri­umphs in the West and Fails Every­where Else by Her­nando de Soto (Basic Books)
    Patholo­gies of Power: Health, Human Rights, and the New War on the Poor by Paul Farmer (Uni­ver­sity of Cal­i­for­nia Press)
    Phil­an­thro­cap­i­tal­ism: How the Rich Can Save the World by Matthew Bishop and Michael Green (Blooms­bury Press)
    Plan B 2.0: Res­cu­ing a Planet Under Stress and a Civ­i­liza­tion in Trou­ble by Lester R. Brown (W.W. Nor­ton)
    Port­fo­lios of the Poor: How the World’s Poor Live on $2 a Day by Daryl Collins, Jonathan Mor­duch, Stu­art Ruther­ford, and Orlanda Ruthven (Prince­ton Uni­ver­sity Press)
    The White Man’s Bur­den: Why the West’s Efforts to Aid the Rest Have Done So Much Ill and So Lit­tle Good by Williams Rus­sell East­erly (Pen­guin Books)
    Wiki­nomics: How Mass Col­lab­o­ra­tion Changes Every­thing by Don Tap­scott and Anthony D. Williams (Port­fo­lio Hard­cover)

    The World’s Banker: A Story of Failed States, Finan­cial Crises, and the Wealth and Poverty of Nations by Sebas­t­ian Mal­laby (Pen­guin Press)

     
  • Listening to Global Voices

    12:36 am on August 20, 2010 | 0 comments Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , journalism, , ,

    I recently attended a round­table hosted by the Asia Pacific Foun­da­tion of Canada for a 25@25 dis­cus­sion. The dis­cus­sion emerged from the 25@25 video com­pe­ti­tion as a forum for par­tic­i­pants and part­ners to share their expe­ri­ences and exam­ine future ways to engage youth in pro­mot­ing Canada-Asia relations.

    The video com­pe­ti­tion was a huge suc­cess and what I thought to be a really cre­ative way of engag­ing youth to think about issues about Canada-relations. The issues that came out of the con­test, har­ness the col­lec­tive capa­bil­ity and genius that would spur growth and research direc­tion of the foun­da­tion. Some of the themes that emerged included: Peo­ple as a resource, rep­re­sen­ta­tion in the media, self-identity and green tech­nol­ogy exchanges.

    Capa­bil­i­ties to develop new kinds of rela­tion­ships, sense impor­tant devel­op­ments, add value and turn nascent net­worked knowl­edge into com­pelling value are becom­ing the bread and but­ter of wealth cre­ation and success.”

    - Wiki­nomics, Don Tapscott

    On a another level, it was a great learn­ing oppor­tu­nity for me to step into an area and net­work of which I was not really con­nected to, all because I stepped out of my net­work cir­cle. It reminded me a great TED video by Ethan Zuck­er­man on Lis­ten­ing to Global Voices. He spoke about how even though the web con­nects the whole world, we really end up being stuck in our own web bub­ble rather than lis­ten­ing to what the world has to share.

    So in the spirit of col­lab­o­ra­tion, here are my favourite sites on lis­ten­ing to global voices:

    1) OpenIDEO: An online plat­form where peo­ple col­lab­o­rate to design bet­ter for social good. It’s a won­der­ful dynamic resource on tack­ling global resources and I’m going to sub­mit a solu­tion to one of their prob­lems soon!

    2) World Pulse: A global net­work that broad­casts and unites women’s voices from all over to cre­ate a pow­er­ful voice for change. What I love about this is not only is it a print and web mag­a­zine but it’s also an inter­ac­tive com­mu­nity newswire, PulseWire, where women can col­lab­o­rate and con­nect to solve global problems.

    3) Global Voices: An inter­na­tional com­mu­nity of blog­gers who report on dif­fer­ent global issues with top­ics rang­ing from arts to pol­i­tics. It’s an amaz­ing resource and my fav fea­ture is the dif­fer­ent lan­guages that you can read the web­site in. (I occa­sion­ally flip the switch over to Indone­sian, just cause! And it’s so inter­est­ing to read the same arti­cle both in Eng­lish and in another language!)

    4) paper.li: This is a lit­tle dif­fer­ent than the above three plat­forms as it really is more a snap­shot of the things/links that you tweet about, but I love the cre­ative for­mat and I find it super inter­est­ing the way it picks up on the dif­fer­ent things I’m browse through online. Below is a snap­shot of what it looks like and I thought I’ll share this one just for fun!

    So..what global voices have you been lis­ten­ing to?

     
  • 10 ideas that are changing our world right now!

    4:24 pm on November 7, 2009 | 0 comments Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , journalism,

    As my time in the last month or so has been pre-dominantly con­sumed by prep­ping and par­tic­i­pat­ing in a busi­ness case com­pe­ti­tion in Texas, I found my read­ing list to be nar­rowed down to database/news/papers/reports on cur­rent mar­ket trends, the eco­nom­ics of emerg­ing mar­kets and [insert topic of case research here].

    What I did come across in my mean­der­ings across the inter­webs was this [recent-ish] issue of the TIME’s mag­a­zine, which high­lights “10 ideas that are chang­ing our world right now”. The com­piled list of ranged from issues in reli­gion to infra­struc­ture to the econ­omy, one of which I found to be of par­tic­u­lar inter­est to me.

    Africa: Open for Business

    The arti­cle high­lights that Africa has long been per­ceived as a con­ti­nent of where progress is irrel­e­vant regard­less of the efforts being done — for­eign aid, eco­nomic stim­u­lus, etc. Africa is essen­tially viewed as hope­less, and a $40 billion/yr for­eign indus­try has been built around that per­cep­tion to the point where peo­ple are start­ing to ques­tion whether aid is even doing any good at all. Thus, when the world’s econ­omy went into Def­con 5 last year, the $40 bil­lion indus­try started being called into ques­tion with debates and books being writ­ten that for­eign aid is bad, fuels cor­rup­tion, under­mines gov­ern­ments, unsus­tain­able and is  counter pro­duc­tive. (ie. Dead Aid — Dambisa Moyo, for­mer Gold­man Sachs and World Bank economist)

    Drilling down to the actual rel­e­vancy of aid and devel­op­ment, the arti­cle points out the obvi­ous fact that has been star­ing us in the face all this time. That through­out the noise of the aid indus­try, real­ity is that aid is no longer Africa’s main source of for­eign income. Yes, that’s right. Africa is now a busi­ness destination.

    So, I did some eco­nomic dig­ging and cam across some very inter­est­ing information.

    1) For­eign Direct Invest­ment (FDI)  inflows into Africa have improved tremen­dously in the last 6 years. From $14.6 bil­lion in 2002 to $53 bil­lion in 2007 (UNCTAD World Invest­ment Report, 2008). This trans­lates into a 263% growth rate over a 6 year period!

    Note: FDI refers to invest­ment in domes­tic struc­tures, equip­ment and orga­ni­za­tion by for­eign pri­vate sec­tors or gov­ern­ments. Does not include for­eign port­fo­lio invest­ment in a domes­tic econ­omy. FDI con­tributes to the eco­nomic per­for­mance of a host coun­try by: first,representing addi­tional resources which can be used to build addi­tional phys­i­cal cap­i­tal and cre­ate more employ­ment. Sec­ondly, increases a country’s out­put and pro­duc­tiv­ity by encour­ag­ing effi­cient use of exist­ing resources by increas­ing the size of the cap­i­tal stock. Over­all, FDI also improves local skills and tech­nol­ogy know-hows which trans­late into growth and development.

    The IMF puts Africa’s aver­age annual growth for 2004 to ’08 at more than 6% — bet­ter than any devel­oped econ­omy — and pre­dicts the con­ti­nent will buck the global reces­sion­ary trend to grow nearly 3.3% this year — Time Magazine

    2) The rea­son for an increase in FDI is an improve­ment in both eco­nomic and polit­i­cal con­di­tions on the continent.

    Eco­nomic Con­di­tions: The UNCTAD Report stated that not only has Africa’s econ­omy grown over 5%/yr since 2001, but cross bor­der M&A’s in the extrac­tion and related ser­vice indus­tries of Africa has tripled. Com­bined with the fact that the high prices and demand for resources like oil has attracted invest­ments from both devel­oped and devel­op­ing coun­tries. An inter­est­ing fact to note is that because Africa’s econ­omy is rel­a­tively dis­placed from the global econ­omy, it is actu­ally to their advan­tage dur­ing the cur­rent eco­nomic cri­sis, that they have been rel­a­tively unaffected.

    Per­haps the most attrac­tive ele­ment of the improv­ing African eco­nomic con­di­tion is the very fact that China has devel­oped a healthy inter­est in the continent.

    While the old super­pow­ers still ago­nize over Africa’s poverty, the new one is cap­ti­vated by its riches. Trade between Africa and China has grown an aver­age of 30% in the past decade, top­ping $106 bil­lion last year. — Time Magazine

    The Chi­nese has changed the psy­cho­log­i­cal approach on Africa. They enter the con­ti­nent to trade, not to pro­vide aid. In her book, Dead Aid, Dambisa Moyo pointed out that those who still needs con­vinc­ing about Africa should ask them­selves if they are con­vinced about China, “because if you back China, you’re back­ing Africa.”

    Polit­i­cal Con­di­tions: The turn of the new mil­len­nium has brought about a wave of peace, with a rapid decline in civil wars and con­flicts. Democ­racy is up, trade is improv­ing, infla­tion is declin­ing and growth is hap­pen­ing. Yes Africa still has its Zim­bab­wes, Dar­furs and Con­gos, but the truth of the mat­ter is, the con­ti­nent is trend­ing towards a more peace­ful and demo­c­ra­tic region as a pow­er­ful con­sen­sus is emerg­ing across Africa for good gov­er­nance and as nearly all African coun­tries have been involved in some type of polit­i­cal and insti­tu­tional change.

    This is reflected by the fact that bet­ter gov­er­nance means bet­ter stan­dards of liv­ing, infra­struc­ture, edu­ca­tion and although most Africans are not mid­dle class, most are also not liv­ing in extreme poverty.

    The per­cent­age of Africans liv­ing on $1.25 a day or less dropped from 59% to 51% from 1996 to 2005 and has decreased fur­ther since — World Bank

    For those who are curi­ous, the full list is:

    1. Jobs are the new Assets

    2. Recy­cling the Suburbs

    3. The New Calvinism

    4. Rein­stat­ing the Interstate

    5. Amor­tal­ity

    6. Africa, Busi­ness Destination

    7. Rent-A-County

    8. BioBanks

    9. Sur­vival Stores

    10. Eco­log­i­cal Intelligence

    The TIMES’s arti­cle can be found here

     
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