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Gates Foundation names a new director

From the New York Times: “… Jeffrey S. Raikes, 49, will replace Patty Stonesifer, another former Microsoft executive who helped Bill and Melinda Gates start the foundation in an office over a pizza parlor.”

Chris Carmody
www.carmodyandcompany.com

‘Bloomberg Turns Attention to Solar Power’ - NY Times, April 8, 2008

Undaunted by legislative rejection of his plan to relieve congestion in New York, Mayor Michael Bloomberg pushes for further sustainability measures - covered in today’s NY Times “City Room” blog.

Chris Carmody
www.carmodyandcompany.com

Fuqua’s Footprints Conference & CASE Leadership in Social Entrepreneurship Award and Lecture

April is a big month for social entrepreneurship at Duke’s Fuqua School of Business. Fuqua’s annual Footprints conference will feature Gary Hirshberg, CEO of Stonyfield Farm and author of “Stirring It Up: How to Make Money and Save the World”. On April 22nd, CASE will hold its annual Leadership in Social Entrepreneurship Award and Lecture, featuring David Bornstein. Bornstein is a journalist and author of “How to Change the World: Social Entrepreneurs and the Power of New Ideas,” as well as several other award-winning books. Gary Hirshberg, Chairman, President and CEO, Stonyfield Farm

Ivan Schwarz, Director of the Greater Cleveland Film Commission, on film production in Ohio

Schwarz talks about his transition from Hollywood to Cleveland, Cleveland’s effort to attract the NEHST Studio Headquarters, and what state government has to do to level the playing field in attracting film production to Ohio.

Chris Carmody
www.carmodyandcompany.com

March 17 at Duke’s Sanford Institute of Public Policy: “The New York Times and John McCain”

George W. Bush endorses Senator John McCainMonday, March 17, Duke’s Sanford Institute of Public Policy will host New York Times reporter Stephen Labaton. Labaton will discuss the New York Times’ recent (and highly controversial) coverage of John McCain. While I try to avoid discussions of partisan politics in this blog, I think this controversy will end of being one of the most important discussions on journalism this year: after all, the New York Times is the ‘paper of record,’ setting journalistic standards not only for the U.S. but for much of the world.

A fresh presidential approach to ‘national service’: Obama’s support of social entrepreneurship

Check out “Obama Promises Government Help for Nonprofit Groups” — Suzanne Perry’s piece in The Chronicle of Philanthropy. For years, I’ve had very mixed feelings about Federal public service programs. While the value of John F. Kennedy’s Peace Corps speaks for itself, most other programs proposed by federal politicians somehow remind me of the Works Progress Administration (WPA) era - in other words, ‘make work’ programs. Indeed, many of these programs seem to me to be simply politically opportunistic - something that sounds good and that politicians on both the left and the right feel obligated to propose during election cycles - but without real substance. Senator Barrack Obama is the first presidential candidate in my memory to actually recognize social entrepreneurship as an approach for civil participation and social change.

Obama has proposed the creation of a ‘Social Investment Fund Network’ and a ‘Social Entrepreneurship Agency for Non-Profits.’ The Social Investment Fund Network would be organized similarly to the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, using “federal seed money to leverage private sector funding to improve local innovation, test the impact of new ideas and expand successful programs to scale” (for the whole policy paper, see http://obama.3cdn.net/3b3158f85f69a39217_hydpmvzbb.pdf). It would also bring many of the research tools that The Urban Institute’s Center on Nonprofits and Philanthropy and The Center for Effective Philanthropy bring to existing philanthropic efforts.

“Faces of Social Entrepreneurship”: A photo essay by the New York Times

The Times’ photo essay in this weeks Times Magazine with several articles on social entrepreneurship. Michael Gainer, founder of Buffalo ReUse

Back to the Future: More in the New York Times series on old-school new energy

An Acciona solar thermal power plant, located south of Las Vegas.“On sunny afternoons, those 10 plants would produce as much electricity as three nuclear reactors, but they can be built in as little as two years, compared with a decade or longer for a nuclear plant.”

GuideStar’s “Five Fundraising Mistakes We Make with Our Boards”

Thoughts on the question most frequently asked by directors of small non-profits.

www.guidestar.org/news/features/board_fundraising.jsp

Just who *should* be there to answer ‘the Red phone’ at 3a.m?

For my ivory tower friends. - C

http://www.phdcomics.com/comics.php?n=985