Ashoka: Innovators For The Public
Program provides fellowships
for more than 200 "public-service entrepreneurs"
in Latin America and Asia
by Donella H. Meadows
One of the articles in Earth & Spirit (IC#24) Late Winter 1990, Page 6
Copyright (c)1990, 1997 by Context Institute
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Every now and then the air in Mexico City gets so bad that flocks of migrating
birds flying overhead rain down dead on the city.
A million children in Mexico City are permanently condemned to be slow
learners because they have been poisoned by gasoline lead in the city
smog.
Neither the public nor the leaders of Mexico really understand the mounting
environmental problems that are undermining their own health and their
nation's
future. Furthermore, there is an atmosphere of profound cynicism and distrust.
The public sees the government as corrupt and business as exploitative;
the government sees the public as ignorant and foreign advisers as
self-serving;
business sees environmentalists as meddlers; and nobody spends much time
trying to communicate across these boundaries of suspicion.
Except Manuel Guerra, 38, a chemist. He has recently resigned as head
of Merck/Mexico to tackle the environmental problems of his country head-on,
full-time.
Guerra now hosts a call-in radio show, through which he informs the
residents
of Mexico City of the status of their air and water. (His reports are more
thorough, honest, and timely than those of the government.) He organized
a demonstration of 50,000 bicyclists to demand bikeways. (It is now suicidal
to try to ride a bike in the city.) He runs a magazine that analyzes Mexico's
environmental problems, one by one, and lays out clear-headed recommendations
for solutions.
He is organizing Mexico City's first serious efforts to manage hazardous
waste by bringing together industry, government, environmentalists and
engineers
for non-accusatory planning sessions. He has started a non-profit think-tank
to house and train more environmental analysts like himself, skilled not
only in technicalities, but in the arts of communication and conflict
resolution.
Guerra can devote his full energy to doing these things because he has
been chosen as an Ashoka Fellow. The choosing was done by a new nonprofit
organization called Ashoka: Innovators for the Public, which finds
extraordinary
"public-service entrepreneurs" like Guerra and supports them.
It has selected over 200 Fellows so far in Latin America and Asia. As its
budget expands, Ashoka's next Fellows will come from Africa. Ashoka was
founded by 1984 MacArthur Foundation Fellow William Drayton.
Another Ashoka Fellow is Anil Chitrakar from Nepal. Anil is a 28-year-old
mechanical engineer who has been doing research on solar energy for the
Royal Nepal Academy of Science and Technology. He found that the best part
of his work was testing and perfecting simple, effective devices in the
villages, with the help of young people there. His fellowship allows him
to launch a series of one-week training camps throughout Nepal to give
teenagers
hands-on experience with solutions to problems of sanitation, agriculture,
energy and conservation.
A workshop starts as the young people in a local school survey the
opportunities
and put forth ideas to improve their village (small-scale hydroelectricity,
a bee farm, reforestation for fuel and erosion control, a solar water pump).
With Chitrakar or one of his college-student trainers, they jointly plan
their activity. By the end of the workshop they have learned some science,
made a concrete start on a useful project (sometimes they've finished it)
and, more important, learned to look, imagine, work in groups, and see
themselves
as solvers of their own problems.
Now Chitrakar intends to set up an organization to keep in touch with
the village youth groups and provide them continuing support.
Ashoka does more than find people like Guerra and Chitrakar and fund
them. One of the most important things it does is introduce the Fellows
to each other, both in regional meetings and by connecting Fellows with
similar interests in distant lands. Chitrakar's efforts, for instance, have
been publicized by another Ashoka Fellow, who has established a "wall
newspaper" for rural Nepal.
Ashoka has introduced Marta Gil in Sao Paulo (who is building a
computerized
referral network for services for the disabled across Brazil) to Nandini
Mundkur (starting the first mass screening for infants with disabilities
in India) and to Marlene dos Cents (busily building Brazil's first
recreational
clubs for the handicapped). These three activists can now exchange ideas
with each other.
In this world that needs so much ingenuity, courage, and care, what most
deserves support, I have always thought, is not governments, not organizations
of any type, but people - the only source of ingenuity, courage, and care.
Ashoka, funded entirely by private donations, with a 1988 budget of only
$1.3 million, has found a creative way to do that. In its support of
"public
innovators," Ashoka has itself become a public innovator.
For more information write Ashoka: Innovators for the Public, 1200
North Nash Street, Arlington, VA 22209, Tel. 202-628-0370.
Donella H. Meadows is an adjunct professor of environmental studies
at Dartmouth College and a contributing editor to IN CONTEXT. For
information on her syndicated weekly newspaper column, "The Global
Citizen," write her at PO Box 58, Daniels Rd., Plainfield, NH
03781.
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