Posts Tagged ‘social innovation’

The Serve America Act, Year Two: Looking Ahead

Friday, April 30th, 2010

In the current environment, we witness service:

  • easing the effects of a recession that has one in ten people jobless;
  • strengthening our nonprofits at a time when their services have never been more needed;
  • through partnerships, bridging the gaps left by state and local governments whose budgets have been slashed so that schools are furloughing teachers, state parks are closing, govt offices and libraries have reduced hours, after-school programs have been eliminated; and
  • propelling a civic-minded millennial generation just entering the workforce, who want to make a difference, are tech-savvy, and love a challenge; they are 75 million strong.

As it has been just over a year since the passing of the Serve America Act,  I’m thinking about the power of an extensive push to fully implement the Act and the power of the positive change that could unleash.

The passage of the Act was an all-too-rare example of bipartisanship.

It’s clear that we need to seize the momentum created by a dramatic confluence of events:  urgent economic needs, a President committed to service, a huge civic-minded generation of young people, and our own passion to truly make service part of our schools, our workplaces, and our culture.

We need to look at what and how we teach, how we rate companies, how companies incent their employees, how government and nonprofits partner with each other, how we measure success and how we benchmark best service practices.

Looking ahead, we need to think about the intersection of  service and social innovation – how can innovative, high-impact organizations to further leverage citizen service?

We must define strategies to sustain the momentum from the Serve America Act how can we seize the moment to fund the Act at the level it needs?  How can we demonstrate to the public and to government the high quality of programs made possible by the first investments in the Act?

We must re-imagine service how can communities leverage volunteers effectively to drive real social change?

David Bornstein Introduces Dowser.org

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

Today’s guest post comes from David Bornstein, a journalist and author  who specializes in writing about social innovation. He has published two popular books on the subject, “: Social Entrepreneurs and the Power of New Ideas” and “.”

Today I’m launching a new media site which will I hope will be a valuable resource for HandsOn Network, its affiliates and nonprofit partners.  The site is called Dowser (www.dowser.org) — which refers to a person who uses a divining rod to find water — and it will report exclusively on stories of social change.

Today, so many people — volunteers and professionals — are demonstrating new ways to bring about transformational change. But their stories are scattered and often hidden from view. At Dowser, we’ll bring them together.

When I was starting out as a journalist in 1991, I stumbled upon an article on the Grameen Bank, the anti-poverty bank that won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006. Up until then, I had imagined that poverty was unavoidable. But I became so intrigued by the idea of micro-finance that I quit my newspaper job in New York and traveled to Bangladesh to see it for myself. Since then, I’ve spent almost 20 years writing about social innovators around the world.

That one newspaper story changed my life. In Dowser, I hope to present stories that have the potential to change your life — by highlighting new possibilities, pathways and ideas to make a difference.

Every day, Dowser will provide detailed coverage in an effort to discover who’s solving what and how in various fields.

We’ll be looking for promising ideas and models and tracking emerging career opportunities. When stories pop up that are of direct relevance to the HandsOn Network, we’ll let you know.

More important, when you come upon great stories of social change in your communities, please let us know by submitting an idea! We’ll be on the lookout for them.

I hope you will think of Dowser as service to help you chart your own changemaking path at whatever level suits you. I look forward to building this site with you. There’s a feedback section on the site. Please let me know what’s working and what isn’t.

Thanks for reading!