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10.09.2008 - 03:00pm ET
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Clinton Global Initiative Announces Student and University Winners of CGI U Outstanding Commitment Award
Wal-Mart Foundation will support philanthropic projects through forty-five student grants and two university grants
(CSRwire) NEW YORK, NY. - October 9, 2008 - On September 26th, Clinton Global
Initiative University (CGI U) and the Wal-Mart Foundation announced
the winners of forty-four student grants and two university grants through
the CGI U Outstanding Commitment Awards. The grants, made possible by the
Wal-Mart Foundation, will support innovative, high-impact commitments to
improve communities and lives around the world.
"CGI U is an empowering platform that brings together students and
universities to make a positive difference, whether locally or on a global
scale," said Bob Harrison, CEO of the Clinton Global Initiative (CGI). "The
Outstanding Commitment Awards funding from the Wal-Mart Foundation will
expand the impact and reach of these exceptional commitments, which were
made by students and universities who are working hard to improve the
lives of others."
Through a grant from the Wal-Mart Foundation, winners will receive funding
for their CGI U Commitments to Action: new, specific, and measurable plans
to address a global challenge of the winners' choosing. The CGI U
Outstanding Commitment Awards are designed to support innovative,
high-impact work that creates lasting and positive social change, most
notably within CGI U's focus areas – energy and climate change, global
health, human rights and peace, and poverty alleviation. The awards
recognize students and student organizations from a wide variety of
graduate schools, historically black colleges, Ivy League institutions,
religious and tribal universities, and state schools.
"As a company focused on environmental sustainability at every level, the
Wal-Mart Foundation is proud to partner with CGI U to reach hundreds of
students and university officials who, like Wal-Mart, are committed to
making a change to improve the environment for generations to come," said
Margaret McKenna, president of the Wal-Mart Foundation. "By partnering
with organizations like CGI U, we are also able to connect with pioneering
experts that will, in turn, help Wal-Mart in our goal to become a more
sustainable company."
In March 2008, President Clinton encouraged students and universities
attending the inaugural meeting of CGI U at Tulane University in New
Orleans to apply for the awards. More than 1,000 commitments have been
made through CGI U since its launch in September 2007. CGI U is a
youth-focused project of the Clinton Global Initiative, which was founded
by President Clinton in 2005 to mobilize world leaders to take action on
major global challenges.
The forty-five student award recipients include Patricia Compas from the
California Polytechnic State University, whose new water treatment device
will revolutionize same-day relief efforts and quell the spread of
water-borne diseases, and Julie Carney from Yale University, whose Artemis
Project will digitize documents and records gathered by truth commissions
around the world to be made available globally online. Additionally, Mark
Young of Tulane University will receive a grant for a commitment he made
based on his invention, SafeSnip, a low-cost method for cutting umbilical
cords in the absence of proper medical delivery services; and Tony
Anderson of Morehouse College will be recognized for his pledge to deliver
one million energy efficient light bulbs to low-income areas.
Two awards were granted to universities: one to support a commitment made
between Providence-based Brown University and Dillard University in New
Orleans, whose initial partnership was announced at the 2006 CGI Annual
Meeting. Their 2008 CGI U commitment builds upon this partnership by
focusing on sustainability at Dillard University, ensuring that Dillard is
rebuilt in an environmentally sustainable manner, encouraging faculty,
students, and staff from Brown and Dillard to collaborate in advancing
energy efficiency, curriculum and research development, and community
projects, incorporating recycling and transportation improvements into
Dillard’s new community.
The second university award was given to the College of Menominee Nation
in support of its commitment to ensure that principles of sustainability
are adopted at all tribal colleges in the United States. The Sustainable
Development Institute at the College of Menominee Nations is developing a
toolkit which will enable other tribal colleges to monitor their own
sustainability performance.
Below is a full list of CGI U Outstanding Commitment Award winners.
UNIVERSITY AWARDS
Building a Sustainable Campus: Advancing the Brown-Dillard Partnership
Ruth Simmons & Marvalene Hughes (University Presidents)
This commitment will expand the Brown-Dillard partnership by providing
Dillard with the academic, administrative, technical and consulting
assistance to support the University's efforts to become a more
environmentally sustainable campus. The commitment focuses on greening the
physical infrastructure on Dillard's campus, but also includes strong
research and education components. Faculty, students, and staff from Brown
and Dillard will work together to advance energy efficiency, course and
curriculum development, research activity, and campus and community
projects in areas ranging from recycling to sustainable food and
transportation improvements.
Tribal College Sustainability Indicators
Verne Fowler (College President)
This commitment will develop sustainability indicators and establish a
process and guidelines for tribal colleges and universities to measure and
monitor sustainability performance in a realistic, reliable, and culturally
appropriate way. These indicators will be identified, bench-marked, and
disseminated by the Sustainable Development Institute (SDI) at the
college, and will integrate students into the process. All the data,
frameworks, and processes identified by SDI will be collected into a
toolkit that other tribal schools can use as they assess prospects for
increased sustainability efforts on their respective campuses.
STUDENT AWARDS
LendforPeace.org
Sam Adelsberg of the University of Pennsylvania is connecting Palestinian
micro-entrepreneurs with individual lenders across the globe through his
website, LendforPeace.org. The website
facilitates direct loans to Palestinians working towards a peaceful
community, and aims to create a virtual, multi-cultural network to promote
the growth of business amidst current conflict.
Let's Raise a Million
Tony Anderson and his colleagues from Morehouse University have committed
to financing, distributing, and installing one million energy efficient,
compact fluorescent light bulbs (CFLs) in low-income areas. His student
group, Let's Raise a Million, aims to empower an underrepresented
demographic to take part in the clean energy movement.
A Locally Sustainable Food Loop for Lafayette College
Jennifer Bell of Lafayette College is leading a group of students who have
committed to reducing food waste and increasing the use of organically
grown local foods on their campus. They aim to develop an
institutionalized composting system and create gardens which will
incorporate the entire university community into the process of a
sustainable food system.
Threads That Teach Public School Program
Patricia Brady's NYU organization connects university students with New
York City public schools, facilitating entrepreneurial-based art classes
and fundraising efforts that can offset shrinking arts education budgets.
Workshops organized by the program help students design, market, and sell
apparel within their communities, and guide them towards understanding the
basic principles of management through hands-on business experience.
Campus INPower
Joanna Calabrese of the University of Maryland and her student group
Campus INPower focus on encouraging university students to bring clean
energy awareness to the administrations and the curriculums of schools
around the nation. Campus INPower members facilitate student action by
giving "An Inspiring Truth" presentations, developing campus toolkits,
connecting an online network of INPower students, and gathering
commitments from high-profile university presidents.
The Artemis Project
Julie Carney of Yale University and the Artemis Project aim to establish
databases of truth commission documents for global availability through
the internet. By establishing a central database of data and helping
countries which lack technological capacity to digitize their documents,
Carney and her colleagues have committed to creating a method to upload
relevant media from a wide range of truth commissions.
Gardens for Health International
Emma Clippinger of Brown University and her organization Gardens for
Health International (GHI) work to provide healthy food for people living
with HIV/AIDS in Rwanda, which in turn increases the effectiveness of
antiretroviral therapy. GHI aims to establish community agriculture
throughout Rwanda, and has committed to create five additional co-ops,
expanding their support to 1,500 people living with HIV/AIDS.
Water Treatment for Disaster Relief
With the help and guidance of several students and professors at
California Polytechnic State University, Patricia Compas is working to
develop and distribute the Polytech Waterbag, a lightweight device which
can provide drinkable water within a day to people living in disaster
zones around the world. This device has the potential to play a crucial
role reducing refugees' exposure to deadly water-borne diseases that
all-too-often arrive in the wake the disaster itself. Compas is currently
collaborating with the CDC and the Red Cross with the hope of bringing
these filtration systems to relief efforts by the end of 2009.
Peace in Focus
Kyle Dietrich and Kate Fedesova of Tufts University are using
photojournalism to engage underprivileged youth who are affected by
violence and political instability. Peace in Focus uses creative,
interactive workshops to encourage grassroots peace photojournalism. As
the first phase of the commitment, two pilot workshops have already been
taken place in Boston and Bujumbura, Burundi during the summer of 2008.
Mali Signs Project
Lizzy Dupont of the University of Texas is working through the UT Rural
Enhancement through Education and Design program to connect schools for
the deaf with university institutions and resources, and provides
educational health materials online based on community needs. Dupont's
initiative, the Mali Signs project, has committed to creating a three-way
partnership between two Texas schools and the University of Texas ASL
department, and is currently researching ways to expand their operations
into West Africa.
Banaa.org
Through his website, Banaa.org, Evan Faber of the George
Washington University provides talented Sudanese youth who have lived
through atrocity with undergraduate scholarship opportunities in the
United States. Faber has made a commitment to help Sudanese scholars
further their education in public health and political sciences, in order
to eventually improve Sudan’s communities through peace in the
future.
Climate Change and Indoor Air Pollution Abatement in the Himalayas
through Novel Solar Technology
Frank Scot of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and fellow
students are aiming to develop a solar cooker and heater which could be
distributed in the remote Himalayan regions of China. Scot's group is
hoping to teach communities to construct, use, and repair these devices,
while increasing their availability across the region. These solar cookers
and heaters will reduce indoor air pollution, reduce rural fuel combustion
and its effects on climate change, and diminish the time spent by women on
gathering fuel, freeing them to cultivate their educations and incomes.
World Faith Emergency Rest Centers
Frank Fredericks of New York University has committed to mobilizing a team
of religiously-diverse youth to train members of houses of worship for
emergency situations. The team will work with other disaster management
centers and local governments in order to enable houses of varied faiths
to satisfy the needs of a crisis. Fredericks has made a commitment to
expand the World Faith work internationally.
Community Reintegration Program
John E. Goetz of the University of Alabama and his group are working to
establish a community re-entry program for ex-offenders within Tuscaloosa
County area. Their goal is to successfully reintegrate this population
into the business community with faith-based mentoring programs, employer
networking, and relationships with Alabama social service providers that
could assist with resume-building and interview skills.
Implementing Holistic Responses to Health Problems in Pemón,
Venezuela
Yongjun Heo of Swarthmore College has made a commitment to send students
to an understaffed medical clinic in Venezuela every summer. As a result,
this work will have a major impact on addressing the crises of pollution,
malnutrition, and malaria for over 3,000 Pemon people. Heo will also lead
students to create and expand a waste management program, to reduce the
incidence of bacterial infections, improve crop yields, and use low-cost
incentives to promote community involvement in recycling and the reduction
of pollution.
Multifunction Energy Platform (MFP) Pilot in Uganda
Janelle Heslop and Columbia University's Engineers Without Borders chapter
have committed to implement a Multifunction Energy Platform in Uganda,
which will use jatropha oil as a sustainable fuel source. The program will
work with a Ugandan NGO to install one MFP on a farming cooperative, and
will further gauge the viability of using MFPs and jatropha oil in eastern
Africa.
Improving Health Literacy Through Health Information Resources
Books
Maria Kambouris of Charles Darwin University has committed to producing a
resource book which will provide basic health information to young people
in the Northern Territory of Australia. The Personal Health Resource Book
will indicate positive health strategies, and through a two year pilot
period, will test the ability of the program to increase health literacy
throughout the region.
Loyola Microfinance Initiative
Aaron Kirsh of Loyola University New Orleans is working with his group to
provide capital to under-financed entrepreneurs in the New Orleans region
who are attempting to rebuild the post-Katrina economy through grassroots
micro-enterprise. The students at Loyola have committed to collaborating
with other student-managed microfinance organizations, to create a
national network of loans which will alleviate poverty by facilitating
small business.
Designing Peace
Arianna Kouri and fellow University of Florida architecture students have
committed to designing and constructing a recreational space for young
members of the New Hope Ministries in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. They plan
to construct the building adjacent to the current New Hope facility, with
the help of the founder of the Ministries, Edson Souza.
Global Peace Exchange, Free IT Center for Rwandan Orphans
Maria Kuecken of Florida State University and the Global Peace Exchange
have committed to funding the creation of a self-sustaining IT center in
Gitarama, Rwanda. The IT center will provide free primary and technical
education to the boys of the Umuryango Children’s Network and the
surrounding communities. It will also support itself economically by
functioning as an internet café in off-hours.
Improving Health and Well-Being Through language Access in Post-Katrina
New Orleans
Victoria Lattone of the Tulane University School of Social Work and her
colleagues at Tulane have made a commitment to establish interpretation
services which will connect low-income, Limited English Proficient (LEP)
populations in Post-Katrina New Orleans with healthcare and social
services. Latton's group is devoted to helping the growing Spanish,
Portuguese, and Vietnamese speaking LEP demographics to find necessary
care in the recovering city.
Innovative Healthcare Financing in Sikoroni, Mali
Rachel Levenson of Brown University and the Mali Health organizing Project
(MHOP) have made a commitment to exploring the potential for a
community-based health financing program (CBHF) in Sikoroni, Mali. The
Brown University students will create locally-specific models designed for
each Malian community, and will investigate whether the CBHF scheme will
actually increase access to healthcare for low income citizens.
Diagnostic Lab in a Backpack
Di Ling of Rice University and her peers have committed to prepare a
medical diagnostic backpack for nomadic doctors working with the Pediatric
AIDS corps in Tanzania, Lesotho, Botswana and Malawi. The group will
provide specialized items to suit the needs of the different regions.
Ensuring the Sustainability of Donated Medical Technology
Mambidzeni Madzivire of the Mayo Graduate School is committed to examining
ways in which her peers at Mayo can assist in providing medical technology
through the donation and rehabilitation of used medical equipment to
communities that need it the most. Those involved with this commitment
will identify the needs of health care facilities, build a database of
students and staff who have expertise in global health, and train
engineers and technicians in developing countries to repair donated
medical equipment.
Creating Waste Management Solutions in the Slums of Mali
Waste build-up is the cause of innumerable public health issues in Malian
slums. Caroline Mailloux of Brown University and her peers will
collaborate with Malian leaders and the Mali Health Organizing Project to
implement a waste management system in Sikoroni, Mali, which will extend
higher levels of waste management to three times as many community members
by the end of 2008.
Giving Hope through Universal Education
Kroo Bay is a slum located near Freetown, Sierra Leone which holds over
2,000 children. Joseph Martin of the University of Texas and the Kroo Bay
Initiative have made a commitment to ensure that these children receive
renovated solar-powered educational facilities with a computer literacy
program. Additionally, they plan to secure funding which will decrease
instruction fees and supplement the salaries of local under-funded
teachers with merit-based pay.
Improving Lifestyle Health
Rachel McCandless of the University of North Florida is one of the many
students who have committed themselves to reducing health disparities in
urban populations by highlighting the benefits of physical activity and
proper diet. Students at the university will set up community gardens,
provide classes on culinary arts, and train mentors on how to forge a
sustainable, socially responsible community.
Design and Implement Teen Fatherhood Program
A teen father himself, Rajen Mehta of the University of Michigan Ann Arbor
aims to develop a program which will teach other teen fathers to become
actively engaged in their families. The program will help young fathers
understand their paternal responsibility, and demonstrate the principles
of basic care and parenting.
A's & Aces
Tulane University student Anna Monhartova's program A's & Aces works to
provide academic assistance, life skill education, and tennis lessons to
New Orleans public school children. The program brings together the
greater New Orleans community with Tulane University and local businesses
to help children gain access to quality athletic and academic programs.
Bicycles Against Poverty
Through fundraising efforts at Bucknell University, Dick Muyambi was able
to commit to create the project Bicycles Against Poverty, which will
provide at least 100 bicycles to low-income families in the district of
Gulu, Uganda. Each bicycle will be shared among a group of five
individuals who will maintain the bicycle and contribute 1000 shillings
(50 cents) every month to go towards expansion of the program.
VVOCF:
Psychosocial Support for Children and Youth Made Vulnerable by HIV/AIDS
Through collaborative efforts of Michigan State University and the
community of Zonkizizwe, Guateng (South Africa), Ramya Naraharisetti and
her peers have committed to maintaining a children's center which will
provide physical and psychosocial support to orphans and children made
vulnerable by HIV/AIDS. During the upcoming year, these commitment-makers
will focus on increasing attendance to programs and increasing the
availability of testing for children in the community.
Use of Mobile Phone Technology to Create Better Disease Surveillance
System
Mayuri Panditrao of the University of California at Berkeley has
committed to developing a method of reporting cases of vector borne
diseases in India through mobile phones. The use of mobile phones to
submit data will increase the accuracy of geographical studies of disease,
and will expedite responses to outbreaks while enabling efficient
allocation of resources to potential epidemic areas.
Addressing Pesticide Exposure in Paraguayan Farming Communities
Alison Quady of Tufts University will work with Alter Vida, a local
Paraguayan NGO, to implement pesticide monitoring workshops for
Paraguayans living near genetically modified soy plantations. Quady will
implement her monitoring program in five communities, in addition to
teaching individuals to test for water contamination and studying the
prevalence of disease in individuals in exposed versus unexposed
communities.
Using Solar-Energy to Power Telemedicine Services in Rural Sindh,
Pakistan
Ambreen Rahman of Columbia University has committed to providing
solar-powered telemedicine terminals to regions with scarce access to
reliable electricity in Sindhi, Pakistan. These terminals will allow
doctors in major cities to communicate with patients and caregivers in
rural areas, and the solar power will allow these terminals to be
consistently available.
ESL Initiative
Shelley Ramsey of Trinity University in San Antonio and the Trinity ESL
Initiative have committed to providing the janitorial and dining staff of
the University with free English lessons from student tutors. Tutors will
benefit from the practice of speaking Spanish with employees who serve
them during the semester, while the project will be a serve as a small
step towards educational equality within the greater San Antonio
community.
New Orleans Project
Lafayette College student Katherine Reeves, a member of the Economic
Empowerment and Global Learning Project Team (EEGLP) at Lafayette, has
committed to partnering with residents in the Lower 9th Ward (L9W) of New
Orleans. The EEGLP will help to develop the community in a way which is
environmentally conscious and economically just.
Gage Based Flood Relief in the Dominican Republic
Hilary Robinson of Rice University has committed to organizing the
implementation of a flood alert system in the community of Bonao in the
Dominican Republic. In a region highly susceptible to flash floods, the
system will utilize a network of rain gauges to provide input to a
hydrologic model and alert system which will be able to warn residents of
future floods by cell phone messages.
An Easily Replicable Recreational Therapy and Anti-Obesity Program for
Autistic Young People
Noah Rosenberg of the University of Massachusetts Medical School has
committed to create a program of recreational therapy and anti-obesity
training for children ages 6-12 with autism in Worcester, MA. The after
school program will stress collaborative development within the group,
which will both cultivate social skills and promote physical health and
fitness.
It Is Only Through Attempting the Absurd...
Philip Schapker of Tulane University and his Juggling Club has committed
to using startup capital to create a community garden and bicycle shop
where free lessons will be provided on bicycle mechanics and gardening.
The garden and shop will eventually support itself through revenues from
vegetable and bicycle sales.
Building a School for Burmese Refugees on Thai/Burma Border
Jordan Spatz of the University of California Los Angeles, working with the
Engineers Without Borders chapters at UCLA and MIT, has committed to
building a new, three room school building for the Burnese/Thai refugee
children of No Lao, Thailand in December 2008. Spatz and his colleagues
plan on building the school in response to a request from His majesty, The
King of Thailand’s Royal Foundation, and the group will also conduct a
health assessment of the villages surrounding the school.
Housing Opportunities Program: Preventing Homelessness through Micro
Loans
Lekha Tummalapalli of Harvard University and the Housing Opportunities
Program (HOP) have committed to providing 100 no-interest loans of
$500-$1000 to clients in danger of eviction from homes. These loans can
ultimately help to sustain the long-term stability of those in danger of
homelessness.
Recycle to Eradicate Poverty
The One Million Cell Phone Challenge invites participants to recycle one
million cell phones, saving 350 trillion gallons of water and allowing
100,000 women to rise from poverty through microfinance. Brian Weinberg of
the University of North Texas and the Recycle to Eradicate Poverty program
at UNT have committed to beat this challenge, and to use the resulting
funds from recycling donated phones to directly provide loans to the
poor.
Brown-Providence Microfinance Collaborative
Mollie West of Brown University and the Brown-Providence Microfinance
Collaborative have committed to connecting students with community
organizations to help provide loans to low income people. In addition to
providing small loans of less than $5,000 to individuals without the
collateral or legal status to utilize the formal banking system, the
collaborative will also establish a program to teach business skills to
that population.
SafeSnip
Mark Young of Tulane University and his group of undergraduate students
have committed to produce and distribute a device called SafeSnip, which
provides a low-cost method to clamp, cut, and disinfect the umbilical
cord, in a method that significantly decreases the risk of infection.
SafeSnip will ensure healthier births in regions of the developing world
that suffer from the absence of viable healthcare infrastructure.
About Clinton Global Initiative University (CGI U)
CGI U, a new project of Clinton Global Initiative (CGI), challenges
college students and universities to address global problems with
practical, innovative solutions. At CGI U, young people and universities
do more than simply discuss the world's challenges – they take real,
concrete steps towards solving them.
About the Clinton Global Initiative (CGI)
CGI is a project of the non-partisan Clinton Foundation that brings
together a community of global leaders to identify and implement
innovative solutions to the world's most pressing challenges. Since 2005,
CGI’s Annual Meetings have brought together more than 100 current and
former heads of state, hundreds of leading global CEOs, heads of
foundations and major philanthropists, directors of the most effective
non-governmental organizations, and prominent members of the media. These
CGI members have made nearly 1,200 commitments valued at $46 billion to
address poverty alleviation, climate change, global health, education and
other issues. These commitments have already impacted more than 200
million lives in 150 countries. Commitments made at the 2008 Annual
Meeting are expected to impact almost 160 million people.
About Philanthropy at Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.
Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. (NYSE: WMT) and the Wal-Mart Foundation are proud to
support the charitable causes that are important to customers and
associates in their own neighborhoods. Through its philanthropic programs
and partnerships, the Wal-Mart Foundation supports initiatives focused on
enhancing opportunities in education, job skills training, sustainability
and health. In 2007, Wal-Mart, Sam’s Club and the Wal-Mart Foundation
gave $296 million to communities across the United States. To learn more,
visit www.walmartfoundation.org.
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