renjie's posterous

too long for a tweet, too short for a blog post...

Young Social Entrepreneurs of Canada #revision2010 - Toronto March 27-28 2010

 
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YSEC just got funding. Guess who we're giving it to?

We're offering generous subsidies to attend re:Vision 2010, and extending registration.
    Apply by this Monday, March the 8th to be eligible for subsidies. Regular registration ends March 13th.

Who's Attending re:Vision 2010?

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re:Vision is a weekend conference for leaders, organizers, activists and entrepreneurs in Ontario, aged 17-34, who are spearheading social initiatives in their communities. If you're making positive change in your community, you might be who we're looking for.

Why should you attend re:Vision 2010?

You'll be among the province’s most innovative young leaders as you gain the foundation you need to make your projects more sustainable and have a more lasting impact. You will leave with practical know-how, new lenses for project design, a wealth of earned knowledge that can be applied to your initiative, and a strong network to help you along the way.

  What is Social Enterprise?

Social enterprises are organizations that apply market-based strategies to address social issues. These issues can be local or international, spanning health, education or the environment. Using a variety of financial models including both for- and not-for-profit, they are mission-driven enterprises that measure success with a triple bottom line: people, planet and profit.

  

Who are We?

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 Young Social Entrepreneurs of Canada (YSEC) is a youth-led non-profit organization that aims to ignite a nation-wide movement of young social entrepreneurs who align people, planet and profit.

Running a variety of networking and skill-building programs and services for young Canadian social entrepreneurs, YSEC serves as both a community-hub and a grower of youth-led social enterprises.

 

 

Exactly what will I be doing at re:Vision 2010?

 Check out our newly updated full program here 
Re:Vision 2010 will be held on March 27th - 28th, 2010 at Toronto’s Metro Hall

   

How do I apply?

Apply Online Here. Registration is limited to 100 participants. 

 


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This event is so notable that even NotableTV.com will be covering it.  Click here now to sign up to the exclusive NotableTV list and be kept in the know on this event and all the other events that young professionals need to know about

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Moment of Profound Social Change

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Photo courtesy of Toshio on Flickr - The Dance

I had the sincere pleasure of spending the day with Ben Ramsden, UK-based social entrepreneur and CEO of Pants to Poverty, yesterday as he came to visit Waterloo to meet with SiG, as well as a number of other social innovators and entrepreneurs based in the Waterloo Region. Ben also spoke with a group of students at the University of Waterloo later in the evening, at an event co-hosted with Engineers Without Borders Waterloo, discussing Pants to Poverty, fairtrade and ethical consumer purchases, as well as the rising tide of social enterprise and social entrepreneurs around the world. 

As the day progressed, him and I had a number of interesting discussions on the topics of social innovation, young people being drawn to social change-type activities, as well as the realities faced by the poor in developing countries around the world. 

However, one comment that Ben made certainly stuck with me, helping to paint a vivid picture of the world we currently live in and the realities we face with increasingly complex social and environmental issues.

"We are currently in a moment of profound social change. 

Imagine the world being a dance floor and there you are dancing to a song. The song is coming to an end, and as it fades out, you can hear the very faint beat of the next song. You adjust your dancing slightly, in anticipation of the new song. And as you look around at the crowd, some people are still dancing to the same old beat completely oblivious, while others, are getting ready just as you are for the new song to kick in.

This is the moment we are living in today."

Right on.

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A video of the lecture will be posted on the SiG@Waterloo website within a couple of days.

Edit: October 20, 2009

The video of Ben's talk on fairtrade, Pants to Poverty and social entrepreneurship, is now online.

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Survival of the Fittest: Why Young People want to Change the World

Ayllu Initiative

Guest post by Melissa Richer, 24, Executive Director of the Ayllu Initiative

This blog post first appeared on the Ayllu Initiative website, as a response to my blog post published yesterday on Opportunities to Create Social Change, which focused on my understanding of the process of transformative social change. Melissa is part of a growing number of young people interested and actively involved in social change around the world, that I am 'meeting' online though blogs, Twitter, Facebook and other social networking communities.

If not for Twitter, I would not have discovered the amazing work that the Ayllu Initiative is doing in Brazil, together with Ashoka and Artemisia, in supporting young social entrepreneurs to develop sustainable and innovative business models with the potential to move millions out of poverty. The Ayllu Initiative has an ambitious goal of being present in 10 countries in 10 years, having impacted 10 million people by that time.

In the blog post below, Melissa clearly articulates why young people are drawn towards 'world-changing activities' in massive numbers everywhere, not out of 'youthful idealism', but rather, as an imperative need to survive in a world faced with intractable and increasingly complex social problems.

Follow Melissa and the Ayllu Initiative on Twitter: @ayllu


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Survival of the Fittest: Why Young People want to Change the World

This morning, a buddy from Twitter, @Renjie Butalid, wrote a blog post about young people and their role as world changers. As an example of this trend, he featured my efforts to kickstart Ayllu. Renjie's post is part of a widespread, dynamic conversation, which revolves around the economic crisis, young people's alternative career choices, and their distinctive participation in 'making-a-difference-efforts.' A good place to look for consistent, mainstream reporting on this topic is the New York Times, where Nicholas Kristof has showcased a slew of youth/social change articles over the last few years.

Targeting poor, unemployed young adults (under age 35) to run social enterprises is a major part of Ayllu's strategy. People often ask us why. I'd like to respond to Renjie's post by explaining why I think global problems will never be solved if youth are not part of the equation.

Youth population statistics are astounding. Before I'm even old enough to retire, the global population will grow by the same number (in billions) of people that it has since my great-grandmother was born in 1896. The sheer magnitude of people that are arriving is unfathomable to me. Almost all of this growth will happen in developing countries (as represented in blue). This is everyone's problem because it will affect those of us from industrialized nations in every way: water, climate change, food security, national security, health, energy...

 

World Population Growth to 2050

 

Right now on July 18, 2009:

  • Over 50% of humanity is under 25 years old (UNFPA)
  • Over 50% of unemployed humanity is under 30 years old and seeking work (UNFPA)
  • Of 2+ billion youth, 50% will never be employed in their lifetimes (Andrew Zolli)

Anyone who assumes my generation is gravitating toward 'world changing activities' in droves because of youthful idealism, is out of touch with the consequences of inaction. I think Darwin would agree that my peers and I want to change the world because we want to survive in it, in the most fit way.

Based on my experience over the last 2 years as a 24-year old trying to change the world by employing youth in problem-solving business, I can say that almost everyone I meet of all ages understands why youth are so important to the equation. Most of the naysaying that goes on has to do with investing in a youth-run organization with no track record, not in the inability of youth to change the world.

What I've seen [in Peru, Costa Rica, Mexico, Ecuador, Brazil, The Netherlands, Germany, France, Qatar, Russia, Tanzania, South Africa... ] is that young people under 35 years of age feel an obligation to act. This isn't rooted in altruism, but in survival. As a result, the lines are blurring: doing good is no longer distinct from what we do in the rest of our lives (a lot of parallels/connections can be drawn here to the role of online social networks in youth culture). In Brazil, almost every social enterprise I've run across is run by young adults. I've been told by Artemisia, the pioneer in social enterprise here, that this is a turf held almost exclusively by young entrepreneurs.

So to answer the question "why are youth important to social enterprise?

  • Youth are the most chronically unemployed group in the world and they make up half the population. Social enterprise offers new job opportunities.
  • Youth feel an obligation to act, so solving problems through business makes sense to them.
  • The 1-2 billion people arriving by 2050 will ALL be young and they will need work. We believe social enterprise will have explosive market share over this time. Based on demographics, if social enterprise reaches it's full potential, young people will be at the helm.

I do not intend to downplay the crucial role of seasoned professionals in enabling young changemakers to succeed. Such people include Bill Drayton, Mary Gordon, John Wood, and Robert Egger. These people have made it possible for my generation to rise to the complex challenges that Renjie says need 'systems-changing solutions'. Bill Drayton, grandfather of social entrepreneurship, believes that in order for systemic solutions to take hold, youth must be empowered. This is why Ashoka's Youth Venture was founded in the first place (Ayllu is collaborating with YV in Brazil).

Yesterday, I attended a Youth Venture Selection Panel in Cubatão, a Brazilian town where ~70 low-income youth presented their social change projects. Cubatão was, until recently, rated the worst place to live in Brazil. The pollution is so terrible that your eyes water and your nose immediately clogs up. Most of the income-generating projects that were presented focused on environmental change through conservation and recycling. When I asked the youth about why they chose the environment over other social problems, one of them actually said, "because in Cubatão we have all the environmental problems, so we're fittest to solve them."

Photos of Cubatão Panel, led by Ashoka's Youth Venture - Brazil.

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Opportunities to Create Social Change - Workshop Recap

Opportunities To Create Social Change

Understanding the process of transformative social change and how young people can become a part of the movement

I facilitated my first social innovation-related workshop on Thursday evening this past week and the response from the participants seemed positive.

To recap, I started out by playing the Playing for Change music video, Stand by Me, as people were filing into the workshop. I primarily used this to set the right tone for the evening, showcasing how this one particular song could unite musicians and inspire people around the world through music.

 

After introductions, I played the Yes We Can video from the Obama campaign, and as it played in the background, I talked about how Obama is easily the most visible transformational leader in recent times, and why many people, especially young people, were drawn to him and his inspirational message of hope in record numbers throughout his presidential campaign last year.

To further illustrate my point of young people being engaged in social issues more than ever, I also showed the Greenpeace "Angry Kid" video, going to the other extreme of young people being 'angry' at adults for not doing nearly enough to combat climate change. 

I related it to what I know many young people are searching for in their lives right now

The capacity to pursue their passions, and find meaning and fulfillment in the work that they are doing. 

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I come across many examples of this everyday, including a number of friends who are currently overseas doing international development work right now after having recently graduated from university: Kristina Lugo in Malawi, Ruby Ku in Botswana, and Majid Mirza in Pakistan.

I also shared my own story of literally stumbling into the field of social change back in September 2007, and this happened when my friend Andrew Dilts asked me if I was interested in helping him run a conference on 'social entrepreneurship' at the University of Waterloo and Wilfrid Laurier University. I said sure, not knowing what I was really getting myself into. 

And the rest, as they say, is history. 

In any case, the point that I was trying to make was that as soon as my interest was sparked in social entrepreneurship and social innovation, I did my homework and began to realize that there were many organizations and people out there involved in the process of transformational social change, adopting innovative solutions and sustainable business models to tackle complex and intractable social problems, in order to have a positive impact in peoples lives around the world. 

People such as Muhammad Yunus of the Grameen Bank and Bill Drayton of Ashoka have been engaged in this process of transformational social change for over thirty years now. And I know for many young people, including Dev Aujla of DreamNow, who spends his time between Toronto and New York City; Melissa Richer of the Ayllu Initiative currently living and working in Brazil; or Brooke Estin, who works for KivaChangeFusion and All Day Buffet and is based in Thailand; they are involved in this process in a leadership capacity and I know that they are loving every minute of it. 

What is inspiring to me is that there are certainly many more young people out there just like Kristina, Ruby, Majid, Dev, Melissa and Brooke who are passionate about having a positive impact in the world today.

But what is transformational social change

In order to address this question, I felt that it was necessary to provide some context on the nature of problems: simple (similar to following a recipe), complicated (sending a rocket to the moon) or complex (raising a child); and why for intractable social problems such as poverty or homelessness for instance, that have many underlying factors that contribute towards them, the simple and conventional approach of allocating more funding towards homeless shelters and food banks, hoping that more of these will simply solve the problem in the long-run, does not seem to work. 

Don't get me wrong, I do believe that homeless shelters and food banks are essential and do provide a great service for those in need in the short run. However, if the goal is to really get at the root of the problem of homelessness and poverty, i.e. for a developed country like Canada, why are there even homeless shelters and food banks in the first place? - then perhaps a different approach needs to be taken.

And this is exactly what the Hamilton Roundtable on Poverty Reduction is doing with their approach to reducing poverty in Hamilton. Rather than taking the conventional approach, they are working in a multi-sectoral, collaborative manner to make the city of Hamilton the best place to raise a child. I think this approach is brilliant and have also blogged about why I think it is so, here. I am also glad to see that the Government of Ontario is using the same approach and way of thinking with their province-wide poverty reduction strategy Breaking the Cycle, as well. 

This is where Social Innovation Generation's definition of transformative social change, or social innovation comes in:

An initiative, product or process that profoundly changes the basic routines, resource and authority flows or beliefs of any social system. These social innovations have broad impact, durability and scale; and also have recognizable stages and phases linked to the dynamics of resilient systems. 

In other words, social innovation or transformational social change, should have the capacity to impact a broad number of people on an ongoing basis, scaled across multiple sectors and communities spread apart by large geographical distances, and can adapt and respond to massive change while still maintaining the integrity of the original. It is important to note that I use the word resilience instead of sustainability in this case, as resilience is about having the capacity to adapt to change, whereas sustainability, focuses on maintaining a stable state at any scale. 

I also went through the Adaptive Cycle, using the birth, growth, destruction and renewal of a forest, to demonstrate how patterns found in ecological systems, can also be applied to social and political systems as well. Social Innovation Generation has a great primer on resilience and the adaptability cycle on their website, for those of you who would like to gain a deeper understanding on this topic.

And with that, I rounded off the workshop with an exercise and a facilitated discussion that I hope helped to illuminate further understanding of the concepts that were presented in a short amount of time. 

I hope it was a great learning experience for everyone who attended. It was certainly a great learning experience for me as well, helping to solidify my understanding of the theory behind the work that has sparked my passion and interests for close to two years now. I am certainly excited for the road ahead.
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Young People in Politics

A survey conducted by the Pew Research Center between October 2007 and March 2008 found that 58% of voters under the age of 30 identified or leaned more towards the Democratic Party, compared with only 33% who identified with the GOP. It seems that the Democratic Party's current lead in identification among young voters has more than doubled since the 2004 campaign, from 11 points to 25 points.

This is significant considering the vast number of young people supporting the Obama campaign last year, whether it was volunteering for the Obama campaign through small-donor fundraising (made simple with the effective use of my.barackobama.com and other social media tools) or helping to get the vote out on Election Day itself. One such person who decided to get involved was Rahaf Harfoush, who upon hearing Will.I.Am's Yes We Can video, decided to join the Obama campaign at the Chicago HQ, and then went on to write the book Yes We Did: An Inside Look at How Social Media Built the Obama Brand detailing her experience with the Obama Campaign. 

Rahaf's presentation below certainly helps to break down the elements of how the Obama campaign effectively utilized social media to engage people on the issues that matter to them. My friend Mark Kuznicki has some great commentary on this presentation and how it relates to social media here.

Yes We Did: Strategic Insights from the campaign that redefined modern politics

On a personal note, and to keep a long story short, some friends and I decided to go on a road trip across the United States in February last year, and through the my.barackobama.com website, we were fortunate to attend an Obama fundraiser in Washington DC hosted by the LGBT Democrats of DC on the last leg of our trip.

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As the Pew Research Centre survey also point outs:

"The current generation of young voters, who came of age during the George W. Bush years, is leading the way in giving the Democrats a wide advantage in party identification, just as the previous generation of young people who grew up in the Reagan years - Generation X - fueled the Republican surge of the mid-1990's."

And they also have this to say about voter identification across all age groups:

"Since 2004, identification with the Democratic Party has increased across all age groups. Four years ago, 47% of all voters identified with or leaned toward the Democratic Party, while 44% identified with or leaned toward the GOP. In surveys from October through March, Democrats held a 13-point party identification advantage (51% to 38%)."

These numbers should be of concern to any person involved with the GOP right now. 

It seems that week after week, we hear of issues and antics that do not showcase the Republican Party in a positive light at all. Aside from the sex scandals of Mark Sanford and John Ensign, or the political bombshell dropped by Sarah Palin dominating headlines news in recent weeks, young people in the GOP have also been making news recently. Namely Audra Shay, the 38 year old Army veteran, mother and event planner from Louisiana who was recently elected as head of the Young Republicans, despite revelations of derogatory comments on her Facebook wall which Shay seemed to tacitly support and even encourage, comparing President Obama to known terrorist leader Osama bin Laden, and African-Americans to 'mad coons'.

With Sonia Sotomayor's US Supreme Court confirmation hearings taking place this week, Jason Mattera, spokesperson for the Young America's Foundation whose motto is "The Conservative Movement Starts Here," is another young Republican who has found himself in hot water recently. Mattera posted the following violent racist rhetoric on his Facebook, in reaction to the first batch of senatorial statements about US Supreme Court nominee Sotomayor: (note: David Weigel first broke this story on the Washington Independent)

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After this story was picked up by Think Progress, Mattera posted a response yesterday on HotAir.com, justifying his comments by pulling the "Sonia Sotomayor grew up in The Bronx. I grew up in Brooklyn. She’s Puerto Rican. I’m Puerto Rican. She’s purportedly from a rough area. So am I" card.

Give me a break.

Mattera then ups the violent, racist rhetoric by first apologizing that Sotomayor would not "shank" Scalia on the bench, she would instead shoot him up in a drive-by. And I am supposed to find this statement funny how?

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What is interesting to note is that in my message to Mattera above, in no way did I mention my political leanings, all I did was express my disappointment in his comments and that he should have known better.

In any case, with Sotomayor's nomination to the Supreme Court of the United States, I seriously doubt that having grown up in The Bronx makes Sotomayor somehow better qualified for the Supreme Court. Perhaps what makes her qualified has something to do with her having worked hard all her life, graduating summa cum laude from Princeton University with an A.B in 1976, graduating from Yale Law School with a J.D. in 1979, and her years of experience as a lawyer and as a judge, where she was appointed to the US District Court for the Southern District of New York by President George H.W. Bush in 1992, and then to the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in 1998 by President Bill Clinton.

To go back to the motto "The Conservative Movement Starts Here," if Mattera and Shay are indicative of the young leaders rising within the Republican Party, perhaps the conservative movement has already stopped dead in its tracks. 

It seems that David Eaves may be right, writing in the Neo-Progressive Manifesto:

Dear conservatives on the Left and Right – and those beholden to them.

We would like to break up with you.

Every day, we see a widening gap in how you and we understand the world — and what we want from it. It's been a long time coming but we have irreconcilable differences.

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Opportunities to Create Social Change - Workshop

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I am running a workshop next week at WCRI on the topic of "Opportunities to Create Social Change" where I will be focusing on my understanding of the process of transformative social change and how young people can become a part of the movement. This is the first time that I will be running this particular workshop, but I promise that it will be a lot of fun! I am certainly excited to deliver it!

This event is free to attend but you have to RSVP as space is limited. You can RSVP by emailing Alisha Ramji, info@sig.uwaterloo.ca or through the Facebook event here http://bit.ly/2pRzyD I will also be making my slides available after the event, for those of you unable to attend.

The workshop takes place next Thursday, July 16th from 530pm-730pm.

Would love to see you there!

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A Vision of Students Today

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Generation WE: The Movement Begins...

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