Editor’s note: In this guest post David Ellis, Managing Partner of Flow Equity, argues for more investment in developing world businesses that earn too much to qualify for microfinance, but too little to attract commercial investment. The barriers to development in Uganda are manifold. Charities need to work smarter. Democracy has to work better. But at [...]
Why Philanthropy Needs to be Full Contact
Over three billion people—almost half the world’s population—live on less than $2.50 per day. Nearly one billion people do not have access to clean drinking water. Even in the United States, more than three million people experience the indignity and desperation of homelessness each year and nineteen percent of children are living in households below [...]
Families on Food Stamps With No Income Expose Hole in Safety Net
One in eight Americans, and one in four kids, receive food stamps (recently renamed SNAP). Furthermore, the New York Times reports that About six million Americans receiving food stamps report they have no other income, according to an analysis of state data collected by The New York Times. In declarations that states verify and the federal government [...]
Book Review: Gang Leader for a Day
This review is long overdue as I read Gang Leader for a Day this summer. I try to read as much as I can, it keeps my thinking about social services fresh and exposes me to new realities and ideas. Gang Leader for a Day, written by sociologist Sudhir Venkatesh, highlights the living conditions and [...]
Low-income Youth on MySpace, Non-Profits on Facebook
Social media researcher Danah Boyd recently concluded a study where she found that low-income, less educated, and minority youth are more likely to use Myspace, and white, well educated, wealthy youth are more likely to use Facebook. If Boyd is right, then why are so many non-profits choosing Facebook over Myspace? Assuming the purpose of [...]
Welfare-to-Work in a Jobless Economy
The recent rise in the national unemployment rate to 9.5% calls into question the wisdom of the 1996 welfare reform legislation that disbanded the Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) program in favor of the current Temporary Assistant to Needy Families (TANF), which among other changes requires adult welfare recipients to engage in “work-first” [...]
Do Gangsters Go to Heaven?
I live in the poorest census tract in a poor city. The downtown area where I live is pretty nice, but just outside downtown the poverty is inescapable. As is often the case in poor neighborhoods, there is a noticeable abundance of churches. I find the intersection of poverty and faith interesting, and on Sunday [...]
