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.

Browse Content

Date Author Section Category Summary
Fall 2008
Jennifer Roberts
Articles Health Care • Social Entrepreneurship What’s Next: LivingGoods Calling

LivingGoods sends its version of Avon ladies—white-uniformed “health promoters"—knocking on doors in hundreds of Ugandan communities.

Fall 2008
Suzie Boss
Articles Arts, Culture, and Religion • Social Entrepreneurship Monk E-Business

LaserMonks, a multimillion-dollar enterprise, sells ink-jet cartridges and other office supplies online to support its Cistercian abbey in Wisconsin and to help others, also.

Fall 2008
Robert Jungerhans
Articles Nonprofit Management • Social Entrepreneurship Soup Kitchen Confidential

To share its expertise without jeopardizing its mission, FareStart spun out a new organization.
left: FareStart’s Chef Ben works with a trainee in a Seattle kitchen.

Fall 2008
James A. Phills Jr.
Articles Social Entrepreneurship • Government Q & A: David Gergen

In this interview with James A. Phills Jr., the Stanford Social Innovation Review‘s academic editor, former presidential advisor David Gergen discusses his views on social innovation, why social entrepreneurs should be more engaged in politics, and how the federal government can work with and even fund social entrepreneurs.

No author cited
Opinion & Analysis Social Entrepreneurship Fail Faster, Succeed Sooner
Fall 2008
David Lehr
Articles Economic Development • Social Entrepreneurship Dialing for Development

The world’s neediest people are using mobile phones in ways that were never intended, and with great success. With wireless technologies, Indian farmers are finding out the latest crop prices, Nigerian youth are learning how to prevent the spread of HIV/AIDS, and Peruvian citizens are reporting criminal activity in their neighborhoods. Yet dialing into these powerful tools is not always straightforward. The author explains how to make the wireless revolution ring in economic growth and prosperity for people living at the bottom of the pyramid.

No author cited
Opinion & Analysis Social Entrepreneurship Kiva Introduces Lending Team Feature
Fall 2008
Suzie Boss
Articles Environment • Nonprofit Management • Social Entrepreneurship The Cultural Touch

By tailoring its methods to local values and needs, Rare has slowly seeded conservation programs in 40 countries. Yet as more and more species teeter on the brink of extinction, the organization must expand quickly. Here’s how the boutique nonprofit is delivering customized Rare Pride social marketing campaigns to millions of people in the planet’s most fragile ecosystems.

No author cited
Opinion & Analysis Social Entrepreneurship Social Enterprise in Scotland: The World Forum
No author cited
Opinion & Analysis Social Entrepreneurship How I Became a Social Entrepreneur
Fall 2008
Jennifer Roberts
Articles Nonprofit Management • Social Entrepreneurship • Philanthropy & Responsible Investing What’s Next: MBA Students Venture Out

MBA students turn their attention to social enterprise.

Fall 2008
David Bornstein
Articles Economic Development • Social Entrepreneurship Inspiring Innovation

THE SOUL OF A NEW MACHINE by Tracy Kidder

Fall 2008
James A. Phills Jr., Kriss Deiglmeier, & Dale T. Miller
Articles Social Entrepreneurship • Corporate Social Responsiblity • Philanthropy & Responsible Investing Rediscovering Social Innovation

Social entrepreneurship and social enterprise have become popular rallying points for those trying to improve the world. These two notions are positive ones, but neither is adequate when it comes to understanding and creating social change in all of its manifestations. The authors make the case that social innovation is a better vehicle for doing this. They also explain why most of today’s innovative social solutions cut across the traditional boundaries separating nonprofits, government, and for-profit businesses.

No author cited
Opinion & Analysis Social Entrepreneurship We Are Media Project: A Lesson in Eating Your Own Dog Food
Summer 2008
Brandon Keim
Articles Environment • Social Entrepreneurship From the Ground Up

Part academic institution, part activist group, part think tank, ATREE crosses sectors to breed a new species of conservation agency in India.

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