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2014 Skoll Awards For Social Entrepreneurship

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An emotional highlight of the event, the Skoll Foundation invites you to attend the Skoll Awards for Social Entrepreneurship to honor the 2014 Awardees and to celebrate all those who are working to create a peaceful, prosperous and sustainable world.

MASTER OF CEREMONIES
Sally Osberg, President and CEO, Skoll Foundation

Jeff Skoll, Chairman, Jeff Skoll Group
Skoll Foundation, Skoll Global Threats Fund, Participant Media and Capricorn Investment Group

2014 SKOLL AWARDS FOR SOCIAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP
B Lab: Jay Coen Gilbert, Barton W. Houlahan and Andrew R. Kassoy

Slum Dwellers International: Jockin Arputham

Fundación Capital: Yves Moury

Water and Sanitation for the Urban Poor: Sam Parker

Medic Mobile: Josh Nesbit

Global Witness: Patrick Alley, Charmian Gooch, Simon Taylor

Girls Not Brides: Mabel van Oranje

The Skoll Foundation presents the Skoll Awards for Social Entrepreneurship each year to transformative leaders who are disrupting the status quo, driving large-scale change, and are poised to make an even greater impact on the world. Learn more about the Awardees here.

GUEST SPEAKER
Malala Yousafzai
The Malala Fund

Malala Yousafzai is a global human rights activist and co-founder of the Malala Fund. In October 2012, the then 15-year-old was shot by the Taliban while traveling home from school.  Since the attack, she has become internationally known for refusing to be silenced and continuing her fight for the right of every child to receive an education.

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
Playing For Change Band

Speakers

  • , Playing For Change
    The PFC Band is a group of musicians united through the Playing For Change Songs Around The World videos. They come together from five different continents, and each musician brings a different culture, experience and sound to the group. From the streets to the stage to the hearts of the people, the PFC Band plays music that transcends our differences and inspires a world where we are going to make it as a human race, one heart and one song at a time.
  • Director, Global Witness
    Simon is a co-Founder & Director of Global Witness. He has investigated malfeasance of the extractives industries - oil, gas and mining sectors over the past 25 years and campaigned to hold them to account. He is a conceiver and co-founder of the International Publish What You Pay (www.pwyp.org) Campaign. Simon is currently focussed on accountability of the fossil fuel industry, in particular related to the climate crisis, and their serially corrupt business practices and lax environmental controls. Simon is a Steering Committee member of the Fossil Fuel non-Proliferation Treaty campaign.
  • Jockin Arputham worked for more than 40 years in slums and shanty towns, building representative organizations into powerful partners with governments and international agencies for the betterment of urban living. Arputham was the president of the National Slum Dwellers Federation which he founded in the 70s and of Slum Dwellers International which networks slum and shack dweller organizations and federations from over twenty countries across the world. The National Slum Dwellers Federation works closely with Mahila Milan, a collective of savings groups formed by homeless women and women living in slums across India, and with SPARC, a Mumbai-based NGO, and together they have been instrumental is supporting tens of thousands of the urban poor access housing and sanitation. Jockin realized that slum dweller organizations had to change their strategy. They had to make governments see them as legitimate citizens with knowledge and capacities to implement solutions. So they sought to work in partnership with government to address their housing problems – and other problems. He often said that how can you reduce urban poverty if you do not listen to and work with the urban poor. In this way, he built more than 20,000 toilet seats in Mumbai alone. He insisted on new standards on redeveloped housing. Over the years, Arputham built 30,000 houses in India, and 1,000,000 houses abroad. Funding for his work came from many sources. He visited many other countries to encourage and support slum or shack dwellers to organize and to encourage them to take their own initiatives to show government what they are capable of. He was the winner of the 2000 Ramon Magsaysay Award for Peace and International Understanding and an honorary Ph.D. from KIIT University, Bhubaneswar, in 2009. In 2011, the Government of India bestowed on him its fourth highest civilian honor, the Padma Shri award. The Skoll Foundation deeply mourns the loss of Jockin Arputham who passed away in 2018.
  • Founder, President & CEO, Fundación Capital
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  • Co-Founder and Advisor, B Lab
    Jay Coen Gilbert is founding CEO of Imperative 21, a global network building narrative power for a just economy. I21 believes the imperative of the 21st century is to reimagine and redesign our economic system so that its purpose is to maximize wellbeing, not profit. I21 builds on Jay’s experience as cofounder of B Lab, the nonprofit behind the B Corporation movement, with 6,000 companies across 80 countries. Along with his B Lab cofounders, Jay received the UMKC Entrepreneur of the Year Award, the Skoll Award for Social Entrepreneurship, and the McNulty Prize at the Aspen Institute. Since 2016, Jay has been called into antiracism work, recently co-founding an antiracist community of practice called White Men for Racial Justice. Prior, Jay co-founded AND 1, a $250M basketball footwear, apparel, and entertainment company, and subject of documentaries on Netflix and ESPN. Jay grew up in NYC and graduated from Stanford University.
  • Ambassador to Malala Fund, Malala Fund
    Malala is the ambassador and co-founder of the Malala Fund and global human rights activist. Born in 1997, Malala Yousafzai grew up in the Swat Valley in northern Pakistan with her parents and two brothers. From the age of 10, Malala has campaigned for the rights of girls to receive an education. Using a pseudonym, Malala wrote a blog for the BBC detailing her life under Taliban rule and her views on promoting education for girls. In October 2012, the then 15-year-old Malala was shot by the Taliban while travelling home from school on the bus with her friends. Since the attack, she has become internationally known for her courage in refusing to be silenced and continuing her fight for the right of everyone to receive an education. Following the outpouring of support that Malala received throughout her ordeal, she set up an international fund – the Malala Fund – which is dedicated to help promote education for girls throughout the world.
  • Founder, FIGURE80
    Graduating from Oxford University in 1983, Sam Parker started his career in business, working for 6 years in the agrochemical industry, with a focus on Latin America. After a two-year break, working as a volunteer with street children in Sao Paulo, Brazil, Sam returned to business with 11 years at UK-based commodity trading company, ED&F Man. Following posts in London, Caracas, New York and Singapore, Sam was appointed Managing Director of the company’s Asian business. In 2002, he returned to the development sector with a role at the International Save the Children Alliance, leading the organisational development of its 30 national members. 2006, Sam joined Water & Sanitation for the Urban Poor (WSUP), as its first CEO. WSUP is a not-for-profit company, which brings together private sector and NGO expertise to address the pressing global challenge of delivering water and sanitation services to the growing number of people who live in urban slums. In 2014, Sam won a Skoll Foundation Award for Social Entrepreneurship. In 2015, Sam was appointed Director of the Shell Foundation, which co-creates and funds the growth of social enterprises bringing essential services to low-income consumers, with a focus on renewable energy, sustainable mobility and SME finance. Recognizing the crucial importance of social entrepreneurs in achieving the SDGs, in 2021, Sam founded FIGURE80, an advisory firm that helps social enterprises to modernize governance and recenter business strategies for maximum impact.
  • Co-Founder & Director, Global Witness
    Charmian Gooch jointly led Global Witness's first campaign, exposing the trade in timber between the Khmer Rouge and Thai logging companies and their political and military backers. Subsequently, Charmian developed and launched Global Witness’s ground-breaking campaign to combat ‘blood diamonds’; Global Witness was nominated for the 2003 Nobel Peace Prize as a result of this work. In 2014 Charmian was awarded the TED Prize, given to an ‘extraordinary individual with a creative and bold vision to spark global change’. In the same year, Charmian along with Global Witness co-founders Patrick Alley and Simon Taylor, received the Skoll Award for Social Entrepreneurship, awarded to ‘transformative leaders who are disrupting the status quo’. She was also named one of Fast Company’s 100 most creative people in business and is a Young Global Leader Alumni.
  • Vice Chair and Senior Advisor, Skoll Foundation
    As the first President and CEO of the Skoll Foundation, Sally Osberg partnered with Jeff Skoll to build it into the leading philanthropy in the field of social entrepreneurship. During her tenure, the Foundation supported more than 100 entrepreneurial organizations driving equilibrium change on many of the world’s most pressing problems and developed innovative platforms for connecting civil society, government and private sector leaders with societal problem solvers. Among these platforms are the annual Skoll World Forum on Social Entrepreneurship, the Skoll Centre at Oxford University’s Said Business School, and the Sundance Institute’s “Stories of Change” initiative. In 2015, Sally and Roger Martin published Getting Beyond Better: How Social Entrepreneurship Works, which articulates a theoretical framework for social entrepreneurship and distills lessons for practitioners, academics and impact investors. Her thought pieces have appeared in leading social impact and business journals and books; in 2015, she and Roger Martin were honored by Thinkers 50 for their intellectual leadership in the field of social enterprise. Prior to joining Jeff Skoll and the Skoll Foundation, Sally served as the founding Executive Director for Children’s Discovery Museum of San Jose, a pioneering institution in the field. Sally currently serves as the Chair of the Camfed (the Campaign for Female Education in Africa) USA Foundation, on the Philanthropy Advisory Council of the Royal Bank of Canada, on the Advisory Council of the Elders, as Vice Chair of the Social Progress Imperative and as a board director for New America and the Palestine-based Partners for Sustainable Development. She is also an Associate Fellow of the Said Business School of Oxford University. She received her M.A. in English and American Literature from the Claremont Graduate School and her B.A. in English from Scripps College, where she was elected to Phi Beta Kappa.
  • Co-Founder & Director, Global Witness
    Patrick is one of the three founders of Global Witness. Founded in 1993 Global Witness has become one of the world’s leading investigative organisations dedicated to rooting out corruption and environmental and human rights abuses around the world, with Patrick taking part in over fifty field investigations in South East Asia, Africa and Europe. Taking the findings to lawmakers and into the boardrooms of multinational companies Patrick and his colleagues have challenged the assumption that you can’t change things. Global Witness now has major focus on tackling the climate crisis. Patrick is the author of Very Bad People, published in 2022, which charts some of Global Witness’ key investigations. Alongside his two co-founders Patrick received the 2014 Skoll Award for Social Entrepreneurship, the same year that Global Witness won the TED Prize. Global Witness was nominated for the 2003 Nobel Peace Prize for their work exposing the murderous trade in blood diamonds.
  • Former Chief Executive Officer, Medic
    Josh Nesbit is the co-founder and former CEO of Medic, a nonprofit organization founded to improve health with and in the hardest-to-reach communities. The open-source software helps over 35,000 community health workers provide care for more than 20 million people in Africa and Asia. These health workers deliver care and services, door-to-door, through more than 1.5 million home visits each month. Together with our partners, we envision a more just world in which health workers are supported as they provide care for their neighbors, universal health coverage is a reality, and health is secured as a human right. Before co-founding Medic, Josh studied global health and bioethics at Stanford University, where his qualitative research focused on pediatric HIV/AIDS in Malawi. Josh is an Ashoka Fellow, PopTech Social Innovation Fellow, Echoing Green Fellow, and Rainer Arnhold Fellow. He has served on the Board of Directors for Developing Radio Partners and IntraHealth International. Josh was selected by Devex as one of 40 Under 40 Leaders in International Development, received the Truman Award for Innovation from the Society for International Development, and was named by Forbes as one of the world’s 30 top social entrepreneurs. In 2014, Medic received a Skoll Award for Social Entrepreneurship. In 2016, Josh accepted a Muhammad Ali Humanitarian Award. Josh is continually inspired by health workers around the world.
  • Co-Founder, B Lab
    Bart Houlahan co-founded B Lab in 2006. B Lab is a non-profit organization with offices in 33 countries, driving economic systems change to build a more inclusive, equitable and regenerative economy. Its mission is to serve a movement of people using business as a force for good by shining a light on leaders through a corporate certification (6000+ Certified B Corporations in 70+ countries), and then providing easy pathways for others to follow. B Lab encourages all companies to manage their social and environmental impact using the B Impact Assessment (250,000+ companies engaged). The organization also advances policy initiatives to upend shareholder primacy and advance stakeholder governance (Benefit Corporation legislation passed in 43 states and 10 countries). Prior to B Lab, Bart was President of AND 1, a $250 MM basketball footwear and apparel company. Bart is a Henry Crown Fellow of the Aspen Institute and a recipient of the 2014 Skoll Award for Social Entrepreneurship.
  • Co-Founder & CEO, B Lab
    Andrew Kassoy is co-founder and CEO of B Lab. B Lab is the nonprofit organization behind the B Corp Movement. B Lab’s vision is an inclusive, equitable, and regenerative economic system for all. B Lab drives systemic change through interrelated initiatives that change the culture, behavior, and structure of business and the capital markets. The movement is led by the example of over 3,600 Certified B Corporations in 70 countries who meet the highest standards of social and environmental performance, legal accountability, and transparency, creating a stakeholder economy that benefits workers, communities, and the environment, not just shareholders. Their example has inspired over 100,000 other companies to measure and manage their impact with the same rigor as their profits, 10,000 companies to adopt benefit corporation statutes in 43 states and 5 countries that make them accountable to balance the interests of their stakeholders with their shareholders, and millions of consumers to support them. Before leaving the private sector to form B Lab with two college mates, Bart Houlahan and Jay Coen Gilbert, Andrew spent 16 years in the private equity industry - as a Partner at MSD Real Estate Capital, an investment vehicle for Michael Dell; Managing Director in Credit Suisse First Boston’s Private Equity Department; and a founding partner of DLJ Real Estate Capital Partners. With his partners, Andrew received the Skoll Award for Social Entrepreneurship and was featured as a New York Times Visionary. He is a Board Member of Echoing Green, was a member of the U.S. working group of the G8 Social Impact Task Force, and on the Forbes Impact 30 list of leading social entrepreneurs. Andrew was raised in Boulder, Colorado and graduated with Distinction from Stanford University where he was a Truman Scholar and President’s Award winner. In 2001, he was named a Henry Crown Fellow at the Aspen Institute. He lives in Brooklyn with his wife and 4 children.