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
Summer 2003
Vinay Jain
Arts, Culture, and Religion • Nonprofit Management • Social Entrepreneurship Not-So-Starving Artists

Artists for Humanity students are also employees.

Summer 2003
Muhammad Yunus & William Fuller
Social Entrepreneurship • Philanthropy & Responsible Investing Credit to the Poor

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

Summer 2003
Katherine Barr
Social Entrepreneurship • Philanthropy & Responsible Investing Nothing Ventured, Something Gained

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

Summer 2003
Michael Fitzgerald
Social Entrepreneurship • Philanthropy & Responsible Investing The Benefit of Doing Good

The “social discount” may not be as steep as investors think.

Spring 2003
Ken Yamada
Economic Development • Social Entrepreneurship • Government Bank on It

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

Spring 2003
Michael Fitzgerald
Social Entrepreneurship • Corporate Social Responsiblity Community Capitalists

How one company deals with the fallout over giving something back.

Spring 2003
Victor Wishna
Nonprofit Management • Social Entrepreneurship Let Them Make Fish

Matching unused resources with unmet needs.

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