Articles Tagged With 'Capacity+Building'
| Date | Author | Category | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| Summer 2007 | Economic Development • Nonprofit Management • Philanthropy & Responsible Investing |
Microfinance Misses Its Mark [Free!]
Despite the hoopla over microfinance, it doesn’t cure poverty. But stable jobs do. If societies are serious about helping the poorest of the poor, they should stop investing in microfinance and start supporting large, labor-intensive industries. |
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| Summer 2007 | Nonprofit Management |
Crushing Corruption
To find out how best to stem corruption in development projects, a Harvard economist conducted a sophisticated experiment in 608 Javanese villages. His results challenge current wisdom: Send in the outside auditors, rather than rely on local monitors. |
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| Spring 2003 | Nonprofit Management |
Going to Scale [Free!]
The challenge of replicating social programs. |
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| Summer 2003 |
The Power of Persuasion [Free!]
Putting the science of influence to work in fundraising. |
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| Winter 2003 | Nonprofit Management |
Steppenwolf’s New Stage
A theater ensemble transforms into a company with a bottom line. |
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| Winter 2005 | Corporate Social Responsiblity |
15 Minutes with Margaret Henningsen
How an African-American banker is rebuilding her community. |
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| Spring 2006 | Nonprofit Management |
Capacity by Any Other Name
Donors don’t know much about capacity building, except that they don’t like the term. |
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| Summer 2006 | Nonprofit Management |
15 minutes with Jonathan Reckford [Free!]
Habitat for Humanity’s new CEO picks up the hammer. |
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| Fall 2006 |
Review: The White Man’s Burden
Why the West’s Efforts to Aid the Rest Have Done So Much Ill and So Little Good
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| Winter 2007 | Nonprofit Management • Social Entrepreneurship |
One Buyer at a Time [Free!]
International development organizations spend lots of money and effort building the capacity of small businesses. Yet they often fail to ask whether people want the businesses’ goods and services. As these stories from Peru show, successful programs start with real buyers who are willing to buy real products. |
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