Stanford Social Innovation Review

Stanford Social Innovation Review is an award-winning magazine covering best strategies for nonprofits, foundations, and socially responsible businesses. Published quarterly by the Stanford Graduate School of Business.

Articles: Social Entrepreneurship

Date Author Category Title
Spring 2004
Gerald Burstyn
Social Entrepreneurship Work Works

For Ready, Willing & Able, finding a home
starts with cleaning the streets.

Winter 2003
Vinay Jain
Social Entrepreneurship As Welcome as Can Be

For Manna, the path to affordable housing runs though a peer-support club.

Winter 2003
Michael Fitzgerald
Social Entrepreneurship Rolling Corporate Justice

New mechanism allows private investors to back
socially responsible startups.

Winter 2003
SSIR editor
Social Entrepreneurship 15 Minutes with Jeroo Billimoria

Social entrepreneur.

Summer 2003
Katherine Barr
Social Entrepreneurship Nothing Ventured, Something Gained

When Honest Tea said no to venture capitalists,
it waded into uncharted territory.

Summer 2003
Ken Yamada
Social Entrepreneurship One Scoop, Two Bottom Lines

Nonprofits are buying Ben & Jerry’s franchises
to help train at-risk youth.

Summer 2003
Vinay Jain
Social Entrepreneurship Not-So-Starving Artists

Artists for Humanity students are also employees.

Summer 2003
Muhammad Yunus & William Fuller
Social Entrepreneurship Credit to the Poor

Muhammad Yunus was getting nowhere in
Bangladesh – so he opened his own bank.

Spring 2003
Ken Yamada
Social Entrepreneurship Bank on It

Financial advisors pull people out of poverty, one deposit at a time.

Spring 2003
Victor Wishna
Social Entrepreneurship Let Them Make Fish

Matching unused resources with unmet needs.

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