5. Oaktree Foundation
Charity’s version of Menudo, the Oaktree Foundation is an aid and
development organization run exclusively by young people under the age
of 26. Listed achievements from a website littered with bad spelling include a 2006 Make Poverty History Concert (with Eddie Vedder
and, of course, Bono), an End Child Slavery campaign and Schools 4
Schools, an Australian school program raising awareness of global
poverty. Oaktree also supports the Adidome Modular Training program in
Ghana, which combats Trokosi religious practices of surrendering young
girls to shrines as reparations for supposed ‘crimes’ committed by
family members (many of these girls remain imprisoned for life).
4. Community Voice Mail
Homelessness
Community Voice Mail provides free voice messaging services for the poor or homeless throughout the United States. You and
I may snicker at the dated mention of “voice mail”, but to “those whose
street address is the license plate of their car, a simple voice mail
number may be the life line to mere survival” (US veteran). CVM has
found their service is particularly useful in helping the homeless find
employment, as it avoids the stigma of an employer contacting an
applicant at a homeless shelter. In 2009, CMV served 43,000 households and over 57,000 individuals with voice messaging support.
3. First Book
Literacy
Remember your first book? Mine was, honest to God, “Dick and Jane”. FIRST BOOK provides new books to children by mitigating the most important factor
affecting literacy—access to books. The group has distributed more than
60 million free and low cost books in thousands of US and Canadian
communities, using local volunteers and corporate donations. Key to
their success is marketing their near-Draconian financial efficiency –
non-programmatic costs total less than 3% of revenue, so 97% of revenue
is devoted directly to programmatic costs. As a result, every $1
donation places $10 worth of new books directly into the hands of
children in need. This achieves sky-high donor confidence, as evidenced
in Random House’s 1.9 million book donation in 2005.
2. Modest Needs
Financial Crisis
This is the only charity that rejects you if you’re too poor. Why?
Because Modest Needs’ unique aim is to stop poverty before it starts.
Their grant programs are designed
to assist people who generally pay their bills with no help from
anyone, but can’t qualify for conventional assistance. Usually, these
people are facing a single financial crisis or unexpected expense they
just can’t afford on their own. Donors register
with the Modest Needs website and review applicant cases, ‘voting’ for
each with points purchased with credit. When a case receives enough
points, the funds are released to the applicant. And when their crisis
passes, many recipients later become donors themselves.
1. Ushahidi
Information Technology
Founded by Kenyan journalists to map post-election violence, Ushahidi is
a free and open source web platform for data collection, visualization
and interactive mapping of fast-moving crises or political events. And
it’s been put to good use. To date, Ushahidi has used free
“crowdsourced” data from mobile phones,
email and the web to map and timeline Sudanese voting violence,
earthquake response in Chile and Haiti, violent crime in Atlanta,
uprisings in the Gaza strip and medical stockouts plaguing Kenya,
Uganda, Malawi, and Zambia.
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