Assemblany: Towards Democratic Corporations

Monday, June 11, 2007

My Favourite Charities

This blog post is completely subjective - I'm only talking about my current favourite charities and the reasons why I donate to them. I currently donate most to charities that are trying to address global poverty.

I've been a long-time Oxfam supporter, and still donate on a monthly basis. I occasionally donate to the Red Cross and the Leprosy Mission (hoping to help eradicate leprosy). These charities and others like them have achieved a lot, and certainly health (as measured by e.g. infant mortality rates and life expectancies) has improved remarkably the past few decades.

But for some reason there seem to be a lot of exciting new charities with new approaches springing up. (Maybe there have been for years and I just haven't noticed.) Maybe it's my scientific bent, but I like to see statistics as well as read stories in order to know what effects the charity has already had, as well as what needs they're addressing. I already know that the needs are desparate; what I want to know is, will my donation make a difference?

So statistics like the number of people (families) helped out of poverty in the last year are just what I like to see. If the charity also states how much money was spent to achieve this (so some kind of measure of the effectiveness of each dollar), so much the better.

All of the following charities are very transparent and visible about what donations achieve. They also all support entrepreneurs/small businesses (including farmers), which is definitely an approach worth trying.

* Kiva These guys are doing amazing things. Knowing (and choosing) exactly who I'm helping - lending money to - is a powerful and moving experience. The outcomes feel much more tangible - yes, they're small-scale, but every person who is no longer hungry is a victory worth celebrating.
* KickStart The idea of appropriate technology has been around for a long time, but KickStart has really put it into practice. They develop and sell hand-held pumps to farmers in Africa, allowing them to increase their income up to ten-fold. They're also a great example of the kind of statistics I mentioned above, which was a significant factor in my choosing to donate to them.
* TechnoServe They provide business advice / professional development, for example to farmers in Africa to improve the quality of their coffee/pineapples/other export crops ... and thus earn higher prices.

I've seen a few other great ideas on the Web as well, but haven't yet donated to them:

* Acumen Fund They're doing things like building affordable housing and investing in water suppliers.
* Living Goods From microfinance to microfranchise ... Apparently they help "mobile health providers" to make a living selling health products - thus improving people's lives and providing employment at the same time.

More on the new approach to aid later.

5 Comments:

  • Interesting summary, Luke. I will check out these links.

    At the Free Telephony Project I am experimenting with a different approach - giving away Intellectual Property. For example, the design for a low cost telephone system that could serve a village or small community.

    The theory is that through leveraging normal commercial forces these designs will be absorbed into products that will lower the cost of infrastructure (telephony in this case) for the developing world.

    The advantage is very high leverage. One idea can be used millions of times.

    Cheers,

    David

    By Blogger Unknown, at 7:29 am, July 05, 2007  

  • I agree with David. Thanks for the listing.

    Intellectual Property is such an interesting topic these days. Have you seen the film "Bulls**t"? Fantastic discussion of how Vandana Shiva is fighting patents of plant life in foreign countries.

    By Blogger jeffrey keddie, at 5:02 am, November 08, 2007  

  • Good point David - you know I love open source software (and by extension hardware). I'd like to work on a OSS project when I have time ... but until then I'm trying to help out however I can.

    No I haven't jeffrey, though I have heard a little about the problems with patents of genetic data. IP is a hot topic - I follow Charles Stross' blog, and he's got a different perspective on IP than say (his good friend and sometime collaborator) Cory Doctorow ...

    By Blogger Luke, at 1:27 pm, November 08, 2007  

  • Good post.

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 5:32 pm, November 11, 2008  

  • learned a lot

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 11:53 am, July 01, 2011  

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