Blog

Quick Update!

Hi Everyone!

Just checking in to give a quick update. Our Winter Fellows arrived in Tamale tonight safe and sound, are all checked-in at the guest house and enjoying their air-conditioned rooms!

Michelle (who was on our only delayed flight!) will be arriving in the morning just in time for Orientation. The Fellowship Leaders and I can’t wait to start teaching the Fellows all about CWS and are so excited for our busy day tomorrow! We’ll hopefully have some great pictures to start sharing soon!

Happy New Year!

Kate

An (almost) successful travel day!

I think this has been the one of the luckiest travel days in the history of the CWS Fellowship Program! 30 of our Fellows flew to Ghana today and only 1 was delayed. Considering its the middle of the winter, I’d say we’re pretty lucky! Our 1 delayed Fellow (Michelle) will be landing tomorrow and will head up to Tamale with Shak on Friday. If all goes as planed Michelle and Shak will also be bringing up the four pieces of luggage that didn’t make it to Accra with their traveling Fellows!

Can’t wait for our whole group to be together in Tamale!

-Kate

Let the fun begin!

Welcome to Ghana! (the view from the plane when landing in Accra! Parents and Friends - this is probably the very first taste of Ghana our Fellows will experience!)

The first small group of Fellows (Alex, Emma, and Brittany) have arrived safe and sound in Accra and are relaxing at the guest house with our awesome Fellowship Leaders. The the rest of the group arrives tomorrow and then everyone will head up to join me in Tamale on the 29th. I just can not wait for everyone to get up here!
I’ll be sure to post on the blog tomorrow night once everyone is here safe and sound – so parents, you can check back tomorrow for a quick update!

-Kate

Happy Holidays from Community Water Solutions

Image from pinterest*

 

Happy Holidays from your friends at Community Water Solutions! This time next week our 2012 Winter Fellows will be enjoying their last day at home before heading over to Ghana.  We’ve had a busy month preparing for their arrival and are counting down the days until December 27th! Stay tuned from some exciting posts from our biggest-ever Fellowship Program.

-Kate

 

*Since this blog will soon be filled with pictures of our Fellows working hard in the hot African sun, I thought it would be nice to post this image of a beautiful winter wonderland as we sign-off for the Holidays.

Holiday Online Auction Success & Spring Fellowship Application due on Monday

Our CWS Holiday Online Auction was great success! Thank you to all of our bidders! We are so thankful for your support during the holidays and hope we provided you with some great gifts for your friends and family!

On another note… the Spring Fellowship Application is due Monday Dec. 12th at 5pm EST! Whether you are a recent college grad and still unemployed OR work for a company and looking for an amazing opportunity, then this is the program for you!! The Spring Fellowship Program will take place from April 2nd to the 23rd. Join us in Ghana this Spring and do something awesome!

Occupy the Developing World

2011 Winter Fellow Nate Bernard was recently published on MicoDINERO.com, an online news source for all things micro-finance. We thought his article was so great we wanted to share it with all of you! Great job Nate!

-Kate

Occupy the developing world


Thursday, November 03, 2011
Nathan Bernard

Nathan Bernard, left, is the co-founder of the social enterprise AnaGenesis.

Occupy Wall Street, a protest against capitalist excess, has been spreading across the United States over the past six weeks, raising concerns about the state of the economy and the decisions of the U.S. government.

The main concerns of the protesters are health care, student loans and unemployment, a survey by social media outlet Tumblr found.

With these in mind, I will examine the Occupy protest through the lens of the developing world.

What if emerging markets had the same access to social media and the Internet and could organize a similar protest? What issues would they address and how would they relate to the three big concerns of Occupy protesters?

This comparison should help us recognize the similarities and differences between the needs of the U.S. and developing world, as well as to understand the potential application of developing world solutions within the U.S.

Student Loans

The Occupy Wall Street protesters share two common educational concerns with the developing world: the financial hurdles associated with attending university and the quality of education. This is why many students will turn to debt relief agencies like CreditAssociates to help them, especially if they’ve made poor choices in trying to clear their debt otherways over the years.

To address the first, a number of U.S. crowd-funding websites have established microloan programs for aspiring students in the developing world. The loans are repaid once the graduate is employed with a steady income. Vittana, a Seattle-based non-profit, plans to offer these educational microloans to one million people by the year 2015. More organizations are doing the same.

For the second concern, we can look to the increasing number of bilateral partnerships between U.S. and developing world universities. California universities, for example, have begun a program in Haiti designed to improve the State University of Haiti’s curricula. Through this program, professors are chosen to fill educational gaps identified by State University staff, a move that mitigates the risk of imposing foreign standards on the curricula and thus maintains access to a higher quality education.

Unemployment

A big concern for the developing world is the need to create a job market, whereas in the U.S. the issue is the lack of jobs now. This problem is not easily resolved, but the provision of microfinance services to expand businesses is one possible solution. This can be achieved through organizations like Kiva that create an outlet for socially inclined individuals to provide loans directly to microentrepreneurs. These organizations can further facilitate the loaning process for business owners with the help of technology such as a lead managment software that can keep up-to-date records of all lenders as well as borrowers, allowing for increased communication and support. This could help by potentially allowing entrepreneurs to access their loan amounts quicker and make use of it for business growth, while also being able to effectively bring any concerns they may have, to their lenders.

It is crucial to understand the importance of the transition from microenterprise to small and medium enterprise (SME). This change generally occurs when a microbusiness owner begins to employ two or more people. At this stage microbusinesses require increased financial services and need more advanced training in the areas of financial literacy and effective business practices. For this purpose, they might reach out and look for options like availing small business loans in Tampa or ask around the local moneylenders to gain financial stability. SME and microlenders around the world are beginning to employ this education-focused approach. Boston-based ACCION International is a big promoter. If applied in the U.S., I believe this methodology would create a greater opportunity for local businesses to achieve more scale, effectively creating localized job opportunities for the middle class.

Health-Care

The developing world has concerns not only about access to health services but the overall health of the community as well. This problem has multiple moving parts, but let us focus on clean water and sanitation.

There are initiatives around the world focusing on providing clean water, but one particularly effective project is Community Water Solutions (CWS), a Boston-based MIT startup that operates in Tamale, Ghana. It helps women in communities there to turn water filtration systems into small businesses by training them in financial literacy and then providing the initial materials to build the systems. Models such as CWS solve a health-related problem and provide job opportunities for the community.

Another MIT startup, Sanergy, devised a novel model for addressing sanitation issues by producing low-cost toilets in poor communities. Sanergy engages local entrepreneurs to build toilets, collect waste and then convert that waste into energy and fertilizer. Quite a lot of people also make use of skip bin hire sydney or elsehwere to collect the waste. The waste is then either used within the community as fertilizer or sold to outside vendors as an energy input. Jobs are created at each step in the process, and this helps to stimulate the local economy and allow people to join financial institutions.

All told, it is important to understand the similarities and differences between the financial demands of the U.S and developing world. But in both cases education and entrepreneurship are key. It is not simply the dispersion of financial resources that will sustain and meet the needs of these populations. It is innovative models that create new businesses, employ more people and stimulate local and national economies that will achieve sustainable financial development.

Nathan Bernard is a student at Boston University. He has worked with ACCION International, Community Water Solutions, FAMILY Inc, Nyumbani Aids Orphanage and Hillel. He runs AnaGenesis, a social enterprise that selects and trains American university students to work in helping provide financial inclusion and to compile case studies on their projects. You can follow Nathan on Twitter @NathanTBernard, LinkedIn: Nathan Bernard and YouTube: MrMicrofinance

source: http://www.microdinero.com/

The 2012 Winter Fellows!

CWS is very excited to announce the newest members of our team, the 2012 Winter Fellows:

Alex Browmwell
Anthony Kuzma
Ashley Williams
Asia Stuerznickel
Boyd Stith
Brenna Saucier
Brianan Kiernan
Brittany Bieber
Caitlin Mitchell
David Massey
Emma Suojanen
Hannah Staiger
Janelle Pelli
Janelle Tensley
Janna San Juan
Jasdeep Singh
Katie Hites
Kelly Petterson
Kristen Felicione
Larissa Ruckl
Laura Simmons-Stern
Lindsey Dukes
Luke Lavin
Mark Hrdy
Matt Gilstrap
Melissa Allardyce
Michelle Butler
Nathan Jones
Patricia Welling
Peter Massoud
Sarah Curzon
Sarah Jordan
Tim Bernica
Walter Bromwell
Whitney Millegan
Zander Rounds

This January, this amazing group of students and young professionals will be traveling to Ghana to implement 9 (yes, 9!) new CWS water businesses in rural villages. We are thrilled to have these 36 new Fellows join our team!

But thats not all….

Due to the overwhelming amount of interest in the Fellowship Program, CWS has decided to offer a THIRD Fellowship Session this spring! This session will take place in Tamale, Ghana from April 2nd – 23rd. Applications are available now and are due on December 12th at 5pm EST. Apply now and join us as we work eradicate the need for safe drinking water in Ghana!

CWS Bookshelf

I am always looking for a good read. So now that a new batch of fellows are trying to wrap their minds around their upcoming Ghana experience, I thought I’d take the opportunity to recommend some reading material I find interesting or relevant to my time here in Tamale. Past fellows, please keep this discussion going with any books you loved and would recommend!

#1 most important book for traveling in Ghana

Ghana: The Brandt Travel Guide. Go for the most recent addition you can get your hands on – recommendations about where to sleep/visit/eat have been so essential to traveling here. CWS Field Staffer Wahab borrowed my copy from the office, and while he says some of the information is a little off, he is reading it cover to cover so it can’t be that bad!

Some background info on the global water crisis:

WHO/UNICEF’s Progress on sanitation and drinking water: 2010 update. Disclaimer: This publication is 60 pages BUT has some good visuals. There’s some great info here but if you read it cover to cover you will resurface speaking NGO-ish and referring to everything you love by acronyms.

UN Water’s Gender, water and sanitation: a policy brief. A more concise summary of the relationship between women and water in the developing world.

Good Reads:

The CLASSIC Things Fall Apart. It’s become the pillar of West African literature, so…

Half of a Yellow Sun by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. Ok, so this is about Nigeria’s Biafran war of the late 60s, (not Ghana – historically very stable and peaceful!) but I just love her colorful and nuanced descriptions of foreigners in West Africa, gender roles, familial relationships, urban vs rural spaces … well I just love it in general.

This book was so fascinating it inspired me to work on a book of my own. Although my book is still a work in progress I would love to have my writing published one day. I have a lot to say about my time in Africa and the people I have met along the way and I think writing a book would be the best way to document everything that I have learned.

Nowadays, you can even publish a book independently so getting your writing out there has never been easier. A lot of people have asked me ‘is self publishing a book a good idea?’ but I think that as long as you do plenty of research, you can easily make the best decision for your needs. What do you think? Have you always wanted to write a book?

Ok enough of my thoughts! Past fellows – what books or articles helped shape the way you thought about your CWS experience? Extra points if they are fun to read!

-Kathryn