Tuesday, December 27, 2011

3rd Wave of m:lab Training - Call for Applications


A core focus of m:lab’s operations is on training in mobile application development with an intent to catalyze operations of a mobile economy.

The m:lab has successfully undertaken 2 cycles of training and have opened up applications for the 3rd wave of training which will begin in January 2012.

Costs / Tuition Fee Structure:

• infoDev Subsidy over KSh.90,000,
• Non-refundable Commitment fee KSh. 5,000
• Refundable deposit KSh. 5,000 (based on attendance history)
• Total Cost Over Ksh. 100,000 (including infoDev Subsidy)


Friday, December 23, 2011

Call for Curation Proposals


The Open Society Foundations’ Youth Initiative requests proposals for up to $10,000 in funding to develop and curate thematic pages on the new global youth portal and community at youthpolicy.org

The site aims to consolidate knowledge and information on youth policies across the international sector, ranging from analysis and formulation to implementation and evaluation.

Friday, December 16, 2011

Social Innovation, Social Enterprise, Social Change, Civil Society, State and Markets in the New Paradigm - Call For Papers


International Conference
Europe 16th – 17th July 2012


Around the globe, we are all searching for ways to empower citizens and communities, build new forms of enterprise and association, and develop new models of public governance.

Papers and presentations are invited which examine these issues, either on a global or regional basis, or with a single country focus. Presentations may be papers, addresses, workshops, interactive forums, or displays.

Expressions of interest in making a presentation should be forwarded, in no more than 300 words by 31st March 2012.

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Youth and ICTs: Call for articles


ICT Update magazine is looking for articles for its forthcoming issue of March-April on Youth and ICTs.

Anyone working on agricultural or rural development projects involving young people in African, Caribbean and Pacific countries, where ICTs (mobile phones, computers, GIS, email, internet, radio, TV, etc) are used to improve employment opportunities or to encourage an interest in traditional agricultural practices is encouraged to submit an article.

Monday, December 12, 2011

The Stephen Lewis Foundation - Call For Proposals 2011/2012


The philosophy of the Stephen Lewis Foundation is firmly rooted in the notion that if anyone is going to turn the tide of AIDS in Africa at the community level, they will be found in the communities themselves. The Foundation has worked to create a funding model that is responsive and flexible, and reflects the needs and priorities on the ground. To do this requires flexibility, openness and constant learning.
Initial grants are often small – ranging from $10,000 to $35,000.

Stephen Lewis Fund for Local Cooperation

The Fund for Local Cooperation is a fund managed by the Foundation in East Africa. The fund supports initiatives of local Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs), Community-based Organizations (CBOs), and other institutions in Kenya and other East Africa States.

Objectives of the Fund

The objective of the fund is to complement other development efforts in the field of human rights, democracy and good governance, and strengthen the civil society in particular. In addition the fund provides support to cultural and social development activities at small-scale. The approach is to establish long-term partnerships with a limited number of organizations instead of supporting one-time activities, workshops, seminars, etc. 

Read more by visiting http://www.yipekenya.org/Stephen.htm

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Echoing Green Fellowship - Call for Applications


Echoing Green have announced the dates of the 2012 Fellowship Application. The online application will be open from December 5th 2011 through January 9th 2012.

Through the two-year Echoing Green Fellowship program, start-up capital and technical assistance is provided to help new leaders launch their organizations and build capacity.

On offer:

  • A stipend of $60,000 for individuals ($90,000 for 2-person partnerships) paid in four equal instalments over two years
  • A health insurance stipend
  • A yearly professional development stipend
  • Conferences led by organizational development experts
  • Access to technical support and pro bono partnerships to help grow your organization
  • A community of like-minded social entrepreneurs and public service leaders, including the Echoing Green network of nearly 500 alumni working all over the world

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Global Social Benefit Incubator (GSBI™) program – Call for Applications


The Santa Clara University’s Center for Science, Technology and Society has opened the application process for the Global Social Benefit Incubator (GSBI™) program which gives an opportunity to socially-minded entrepreneurs to build sustainable, scalable organizations that solve problems for people living in poverty around the world.

The Program works with organizations that create value by lifting people out of poverty, utilizing self-sustaining community practices, and developing low-cost solutions. The GSBI is a combination of online, experiential, and skill-building offerings in a ten-month program. It also collaborates with a diverse group of partners including successful Silicon Valley executives, academic leaders, and the network of Jesuit universities.

Read more http://www.yipekenya.org/GSBI.htm

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Why Your Company Should Be Taking Social Media Steroids!


By Jessica Schow 

Millions of people sign in to social media websites every single day. And, as many people use Facebook, Twitter as well as other platforms, we find new purposes for using them. Currently, these media channels are not only utilized to share pictures, but to also tell a particular moment in your life. Social websites can also bring success to your new venture. Social networking has been utilized by people to be connected and this “connection” continues to be exploited by organizations to be successful.

Big and secure corporations are beginning to take note of the benefits that social media brings but it is more interesting to notice that this medium (social media) can give you even more for a startup company. The very nature to be smaller gives startup corporations the ability to focus clear without having to break down an objective into simpler plus more direct objectives. A larger business might have more channels but as time passes by, these channels suffer from insufficient updates and eventually become empty. 

To completely increase the benefits brought by social media for your expanding company, it would be helpful to consider a few things.

Read more http://www.yipekenya.org/Schow.htm

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Genesis Consult Entrepreneurship Training for Kenya & Tanzania


Do you want to develop your Business Idea?

Or, are you interested in developing your Business Plan for your Idea?

As a Partner Organization to International Labor Organization (ILO), Genesis Consult embarks on training potential and existing entrepreneurs for Generate Your Business Idea (GYBI) and Start Your Business (SYB) Programme, which will assist to harness your entrepreneurial spirit by implementing your Business Model.

Generate Your Business Idea (GYBI) targets potential and existing entrepreneurs’ who have various business ideas that they want to develop and implement. The programme uses a ILO methodology to scan idea competitiveness and potential.

Genesis Consult Entrepreneurship Training for Kenya & Tanzania


Do you want to develop your Business Idea?

Or, are you interested in developing your Business Plan for your Idea?

As a Partner Organization to International Labor Organization (ILO), Genesis Consult embarks on training potential and existing entrepreneurs for Generate Your Business Idea (GYBI) and Start Your Business (SYB) Programme, which will assist to harness your entrepreneurial spirit by implementing your Business Model.

Generate Your Business Idea (GYBI) targets potential and existing entrepreneurs’ who have various business ideas that they want to develop and implement. The programme uses a ILO methodology to scan idea competitiveness and potential.

Monday, December 5, 2011

2012 Thiel Fellowships for Youth Innovators – Call for Applications


The future will not take care of itself. Global prosperity is not inevitable. The world will only get better if visionary people are creative and relentless about solving hard problems.

The 2011 class of Thiel Fellows includes 24 people who are tackling breakthroughs in hardware and robotics, making energy plentiful, making markets more effective, challenging the notion that there is only one way to get an education, and extending the human lifespan. Several of them have already launched companies, secured financing, and won prestigious awards. As they're demonstrating, you don't need college to invent the future.

If you're under twenty and love science or technology, consider joining the 2012 class of fellows.

Sunday, December 4, 2011

The Dubai International Award for Best Practices – Call for Nominations

Nominations are currently being invited for 2012 Dubai International Award for Best Practices.

The Dubai International Award for Best Practices (DIABP) was started during the United Nations International Conference that was held in Dubai in 1995. Late Sheikh Maktoum Bin Rashid Al Maktoum played an important role in establishing this award, which reflects the commitment of the Dubai Government and the United Arab Emirates towards sustainable development of human settlements through mutual international cooperation.

This award aims to recognize the best practices with positive impact on improving the living environment. The governments of Dubai and UAE administer the award jointly with UN-HABITAT.

Friday, December 2, 2011

Strengthening Youth Entrepreneurship Support in Tanzania and Uganda - Request For Proposals

This Request for Proposals (RFP) is for a feasibility study to design appropriate youth entrepreneurship support interventions for the PPA Consortium in Tanzania and Uganda.

The study will involve:
• Analysis of Consortium partner approaches and future plans for target countries
• Analysis of youth entrepreneurship sector and key players in target countries
• Design of joint or mutually reinforcing interventions for the Consortium

The feasibility study will enable Consortium partners to determine suitable allocation of resources towards youth entrepreneurship interventions in Tanzania and/or Uganda in year two of the PPA. The project will be delivered by an external organisation or individual over 8 weeks starting January and concluding end March 2012.

The deadline for applications is: 9am Monday 5th December 2011.

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Second African Diaspora Marketplace Grants

Small Enterprise Assistance Funds (SEAF) is currently inviting applications for the Second African Diaspora Marketplace (ADM) grants. The second ADM has been launched as an initiative of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and the Western Union Company. 

The main aim of ADM is to encourage sustainable economic growth and employment by offering support to U.S.-based African Diaspora entrepreneurs with innovative ideas for start-up and established businesses in Sub-Saharan Africa.

It is expected that ADM will award 15-30 winning businesses with matching partnership grants approximately $50,000. The exact number of businesses supported will be determined by the availability of total funds. In addition, the ADM will facilitate access to technical assistance, capacity building and information on a range of follow-on financing options for all finalists. These opportunities will be afforded through linkages with existing USAID and other United States Government (USG) programs in Africa as well as ADM partnerships with the private and public sector.

Find out more by visiting http://www.yipekenya.org/Diaspora.htm

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

All Children Reading Competition – Call for Proposals


The United States Agency for International Development (USAID), the Australian Agency for International Development (AusAID), and World Vision are inviting grant proposals from interested organizations for innovative programs with potential to improve reading skills and low literacy rates among primary grade children.
Through a multi-year initiative called ‘All Children Reading – A Grand Challenge for Development (ACR)’, the Founding Partners have plans to collaborate to achieve the goal of global action to improve child literacy.

Objectives

The All Children Reading Competition aims to encourage innovative thinking and design to bring new knowledge to the challenge of improving primary grade reading rapidly and at scale in certain countries. Applications from and relating to low- and lower-middle income countries are particularly encouraged.

Monday, November 28, 2011

2012 Millennium Youth Camp


Venue: Helsinki

Technology Academy Finland and the Finnish Science Education Centre LUMA are going to organize the 2012 Millennium Youth Camp to be held in Helsinki Metropolitan Region, Finland in June 2012.

In this context, young people from all over the world born between 1993 and 1996 are invited to apply for a place in the 2012 Millennium Youth Camp.

During this camp, about 30 talented and young people from different parts of the world will meet for a week to work together on different projects on mathematics, science and technology. These young people will also get a chance to meet famous scientists as well as the 2012 Millennium Technology Prize Winner during this event.

About Millennium Youth Camp

The Millennium Youth Camp is held on an annual basis, attended by students from all continents. In 2011, almost 1500 young people from a hundred different countries applied to take part. One of the camp’s primary goals is to encourage young scientists to network at an early stage in their careers and help them launch a career in science or technology.

During the camp, Millennium Youth Campers are presented with an overview of Finnish expertise and top-level research in the natural sciences, mathematics and technology. They are introduced to a number of Finnish companies and institutes of higher education.

In addition to lectures, workshops and visits to Youth Camp partners, the camp programme includes project work supervised by top-level experts and carried out in small multi-national groups. The Millennium Youth Camp’s official language is English.

The week-long 2012 Millennium Youth Camp will take place in the Helsinki Metropolitan Region and start on 9 June 2012. Participation is free of charge. As in previous years, the project themes are:

  • climate change,
  • renewable natural resources and energy,
  • water,
  • ICT and digitalisation, and
  • applied mathematics.

This international camp offers like-minded young people who are interested in mathematics, science and technology a chance to spend a week doing project work together and also meet top scientists, the 2012 Millennium Technology Prize winner and people working in Finnish companies and organizations.

Camp Organizers

The camp’s main organisers are Technology Academy Finland and the Finnish Science Education Centre LUMA.

Application Process

In the first phase, young people from all over the world who were born between 1993 and 1996 are eligible to apply for a place in the 2012 Millennium Youth Camp using the online application form.

The names of the 100 applicants selected for the second phase of the application process will be published on 1st February 2012, and they will be given a period of four weeks to produce project plans. Some applicants will be interviewed by telephone in connection with their proposals.

The 30 camp participants will be selected by a steering group consisting of representatives of Finnish higher educational institutions and Millennium Youth Camp partners. The names of the successful applicants will be published on 15 March 2012.

Last date for submitting the applications is December 19th 2011.

Saturday, November 26, 2011

Ashoka Changemakers and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s Pioneer Portfolio Innovations for Health Competition


Ashoka Changemakers, in association with the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s Pioneer Portfolio, invites entries around the world in the form of innovative health care solutions having potential to improve health care situation in other countries and regions. 

The contest is entitled as Innovations for Health: Solutions that Cross Borders. You can either submit the solution or nominate a project. The organizers are especially looking for the entries that have displayed positive impact in helping populations at risk.

Thursday, November 24, 2011

Cordes Fellowships


Cordes Fellowships provide exceptional social entrepreneurs and nonprofit leaders engaged in poverty alleviation and economic justice enterprises the opportunity to participate as Delegates in the Opportunity Collaboration. 

The purpose of the Cordes Fellowship program is to:

·         open doors, minds and networks for emerging social entrepreneurs and nonprofit executives,
·         enrich the Opportunity Collaboration with new, emerging leaders and
·         infuse the collaborative discussions with a diversity of perspectives.

Get more details by visiting http://www.yipekenya.org/Cordes.htm

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Africa Enterprise Challenge Fund


The Africa Enterprise Challenge Fund provides grants and interest free loans to businesses that wish to implement innovative, commercially viable, high impact projects in Africa.
The AECF supports businesses working in:

• Agriculture
• Financial services
• Renewable energy, and
• Technologies for adapting to climate change.


AECF also supports media initiatives and information services that relate to the above sectors.

Read more http://www.yipekenya.org/AECF.htm

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

The Tech Awards 2012 – Call for Nominations


The Tech Awards is an initiative of the Tech Museum that was launched in November 2000 to recognize innovators who try to apply technology for the benefit of the humanity.

These awards honour individuals, non-profit organizations and for-profit companies who are using technology to significantly improve human conditions in 5 award categories.

The award concept and the five different categories of Tech Awards were inspired in part by the State of the Future report, published by the Millennium Project of the American Council of the United Nations University.

The Tech Museum is currently inviting nominations for the Tech Awards 2012. The Tech Awards program inspires global engagement in applying technology to humanity’s most pressing problems by recognizing individuals, organizations, and companies that use innovative technology solutions.


Monday, November 21, 2011

Social Enterprise Profile: Getembe High Vision Youth Group


Getembe High Vision Youth Group based in Nyamira County in Kenya was formed in January 2006 as a merry-go-round youth club. It was later registered as a farming youth organization. Due to the high rates of poverty, food scarcity and unemployment, the members were stimulated to initiate this project to address food insecurity, the poor health status of children resulting from under nourishment, juvenile delinquency, child labor abuse and youth unemployment.

Read our interview with Jones Oyugi, Secretary of Getembe High Vision Youth Group »»

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Business templates: Community Group Constitution


A constitution provides the framework for the way an organisation operates. It outlines what the organisation is, the mission, activities and rights and responsibilities of members.

It is worth having a constitution, particularly if your group is seeking grant funding. This template will assist you in developing a constitution for your group.

Access the Group Constitution template http://www.yipekenya.org/Constitution.htm

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Refinancing your Business Assets


Asset finance involves either funding the purchase of a new asset e.g. vehicles or machinery or it can also include raising working capital by refinancing against your existing asset (using your assets as security). 

Refinancing assets is emerging as a popular option for small businesses who would not qualify for unsecured loans. Banks may also ask for exorbitant security for their business loans, thus locking out the new entrepreneur seeking a small cash infusion to expand their production and marketing.

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Women of Vision Award for Innovation

Anita Borg Institute for Women and Technology (ABI) is an organisation that has developed tools and programmes designed to help industry, academia and government recruit, retain and develop women technology leaders since 1997. The organisation provides inclusive platforms designed to ensure women’s voices, ideas and spirits will result in higher levels of technical innovation. The ABI delivers programmes that are changing the world for women and for technology.

The ABI invites nominations for the Women of Vision Award for Innovation, which recognises a leading technical woman who has contributed significantly to technology innovation.

Monday, November 7, 2011

Youth Enterprise Development Fund – Call for Expressions of Interest to Develop Strategic Plan

The Youth Enterprise Development Fund (YEDF) is a project of Vision 2030 and provides loans and other enterprise development solution services to Kenyans aged 18 to 35 years.

Over the last five years, the Youth Fund has financed over 130,000 youth enterprises and supported thousands others through its business development services and through the jobs abroad programme.

Thursday, November 3, 2011

John S. Knight Journalism Fellowships

The John S. Knight Fellowships accepts applications from qualified journalists and journalism entrepreneurs from around the world for 20 Fellowships each year. Selected journalists will spend a year at Stanford, developing their knowledge and skills, as well as ideas for the betterment of journalism.

Fellows receive a stipend of $60,000, plus Stanford tuition and supplements for moving expenses, health insurance, books, housing and childcare. The deadline to apply is December 1st 2011.

For more information and to apply, visit http://knight.stanford.edu/application/

To find more fellowship opportunities, visit http://www.yipekenya.org/News.htm

Monday, October 31, 2011

Acumen Fund Global Fellows Program

The Acumen Fund are accepting applications for the 2012-2013 class of Acumen Fund Global Fellows

Fellows are drawn from a pool of highly-talented, passionate people who come from all geographies, sectors, backgrounds, and ethnicities. Last year, Acumen Fund received nearly 600 applications from over 70 countries.


Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Canada World Youth 2012 Leadership Awards

Canada World Youth (CWY) is currently seeking nominations for the 2012 Leadership Awards aimed at recognizing the excellent achievements of young Canadians and youth from around the world that are engaged in innovative initiatives promoting peace, intercultural understanding, and community and international Development. The candidates must be nominated by a third party.

CWY is a non-profit organization dedicated to enriching the lives of young people that have a desire to become informed and active global citizens. CWY programs are designed to help youth experience the world for themselves, learn about other cultures and diverse Canadian communities while developing leadership and communication skills.


Friday, October 21, 2011

2011 Innovators Challenge


The mHealth Alliance and the Rockefeller Foundation are seeking nominations from innovators across the world for the Top 11 in 2011 Innovators Challenge enabling them to attend the all-expense paid trip to the 2011 mHealth Summit in Washington, DC’s National Harbor to be held during December 5th – 7th 2011. The winners will be also honoured at a reception on December 4th.

The 2011 mHealth Summit will build on last year’s success by bringing a dedicated focus to the business, end-user, and policy perspectives of mHealth, fostering in-depth dialogue to identify and accelerate cross-cutting value chains and sustainable mHealth business models from around the globe. The summit will also provide a dedicated focus to the healthcare research and evaluation needs of mHealth, facilitating the development and commercialization of empirically-supported solutions.

The 2011 Innovators Challenge is aimed at identifying and awarding individuals who have used mobile technology in innovative ways to improve health systems and outcomes in even the most remote areas of the world.

Read more http://www.yipekenya.org/2011 Innovators Challenge.htm

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Ashoka – 20 Challenges for 20 Entrepreneurs

Ashoka, the world’s largest community of social entrepreneurs, with support from its global network of Fellows, business entrepreneurs, policy makers, investors, academics, and journalists works collectively to ensure that social entrepreneurs and their innovations continue to inspire a new generation of local changemakers to create positive social change.

During the past three decades after its launch, Ashoka has responded to a wider range of programs and initiatives to deal with the citizen sector’s growing needs by launching thousands of social entrepreneurs and helping them succeed.

In continuation of its efforts to achieve its objectives, Ashoka has now taken up to explore the challenges facing the world today and as a result it has determined 20 main issues that require an immediate attention of excellent entrepreneurs (social or business).

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Call for Curation Proposals

The Open Society Foundations’ Youth Initiative requests proposals for up to $10,000 in funding to develop and curate thematic pages on the new global youth portal and community at youthpolicy.org

The site aims to consolidate knowledge and information on youth policies across the international sector, ranging from analysis and formulation to implementation and evaluation.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

2012 STARS Impact Awards

The STARS Foundation (STARS) improves the lives of disadvantaged children around the world by supporting organisations which meet their health, education and protection needs. STARS believes that effective and well-run local NGOs are best placed to respond to the needs of those they serve.

Founded by the Dabbagh Group in 2001 and based in London, STARS has provided grants to non-profit making organisations working with disadvantaged children and in 2007 launched the STARS Impact Awards. Each year, the STARS Impact Awards identify and support local organisations that achieve excellence in the provision of services to disadvantaged children and that demonstrate effective management practices.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Buckminster Fuller Challenge

The Buckminster Fuller Challenge Award 2011 worth $100,000 in prize money is aimed at supporting the development and implementation of a strategy that has significant potential to solve humanity’s most pressing problems.

Buckminster Fuller Challenge: Program Goals

The Program’s guiding objective is to catalyze wide-spread change in the understanding and approach to solving complex global problems.

To achieve this, the program seeks to:

• Create a rigorous, transformational process for entry in which applicants grapple deeply with a unique set of criteria.
• Promote and disseminate an integrated, comprehensive, systems-based approach to the design of solutions.
• Highlight and reward exemplary strategies which embody this approach.
• Accelerate the implementation of these solutions.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Tribute to the late Prof. Wangari Maathai

This article below was first published on June 4th 2009, and is republished as a tribute to the late Prof. Wangari Maathai. Founder of the Green Belt Movement as well as the first African Woman Nobel Laureate, Prof. Maathai was indeed a trail-blazer. Her life and courageous achievements will always serve as a role model for us all. Let us continue to fight Disempowerment.  R.I.P. Prof. Wangari Maathai - Ed

 

An ethical business revolution is emerging


Kenyan Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Prof. Wangari Maathai has written a fascinating article posted on opendemocracy.net titled “An African future: beyond the culture of dependency”.

Prof. Maathai writes that as a result of the G20 London meeting where leaders pledged more funds for development aid to Africa, she was concerned that this injection may not be effective in enabling Africans to rise out of the poverty, as the money may not in this case be spent effectively.

Prof. Maathai goes back to one of the root causes of poverty naming powerlessness or disempowerment as a key factor in its perpetuation. African leaders in the past (and some today) have been deified to the point where they took all the power, leaving the common African dependent on them to make all the decisions.

This resulted in a feudal scenario where the common man was beholden to the ‘mweshimiwa’ (Honourable person) for almost everything ranging from allocation of relief food, to obtaining jobs for relatives and school fees handouts.

Prof. Maathai posits that this disempowerment has infected the psyche so that even one’s self esteem and dignity have been derogated. She writes:

“Disempowerment - whether defined in terms of a lack of self-confidence, apathy, fear, or an inability to take charge of one's own life - is perhaps the most unrecognised problem in Africa today. To the disempowered, it seems much easier or even more acceptable to leave one's life in the hands of third parties (governments, aid agencies, and even God) than to try to alleviate one's circumstances through one's own effort.”

She terms this as a syndrome that has been so far neglected by policy makers and development pundits. And it is this same alienation of the common man, that has allowed corruption to seep right down to Africa’s (grass)roots.

A matter of survival

Prof. Maathai in the Open Democracy article tells the story of the macadamia nut farmers in her constituency (pre-2008 when she was a Kenyan Member of Parliament) who approached her for assistance. The macadamia nut industry is indeed a lucrative sector, and not only for the nut’s edible attributes. The nut’s active ingredients have been used for many products ranging from cosmetics to sexual dysfunction aids. Kenya is in the fortunate position of being climatically suitable for growing macadamia trees, so of course it was not surprising that many farmers have entered this sector.

This should have been the vehicle to prosperity for the farmers who approached Prof. Maathai when she was their Member of Parliament. However and this also applies to the plight of Africa’s youth entrepreneurs, disempowerment is what caused their macadamia nut project to flounder and is also what causes enterprise death amongst the majority of young enterprises.

Brokers, middle men and “connections” agents

Due to their lack of resources, most small enterprises have to go through brokers, middlemen or whatever other names they go by. For the macadamia farmers they had to go through a broker to link them to an exporter. In the case of the young entrepreneur starting out, if they want to get work from a large company or even the government, they too need a middleman who sub-contracts the work out to them. They are thus not masters of their own business, having to share profits with these brokers, who for the most part hardly incur any costs of their own.

However, as is also the case in the macadamia nut farmers story, asymmetry of market knowledge in the broker’s favour translates into a higher “brokerage” fee which if not paid means the end of that enterprise.

The green eyed monster

Prof. Maathai’s macadamia farming constituents also complained that as their standard of living began to overtly manifest the effects of increased household income, they became targets for theft from neighbours. This theft had serious repercussions. She writes:

“… the farmers were unhappy. When we met, they explained that, because there was so much money to be made in the macadamia nuts, their neighbours, also farmers, had begun to steal. Now, macadamia nuts need to be fully ripe to be ready for processing, and they are not fully ripe until they fall to the ground. But some people (the farmers told me) had started shaking the trees before the nuts were ripe, in order to make them fall … In the end, the greed had become so enormous that some individuals had simply crept onto the farmers' land at night, cut down the trees, and hauled them away, so they could harvest every single nut for themselves.”

This same avarice and wanting to reap where one has not sown is what has brought many young businesses to come to an abrupt end. In a scenario where an entrepreneur is climbing the financial ladder, they also have to face their peers ostracising them. Comments such as “I wonder how so and so made so much money in such a short time … they must have stolen it ...” begin to emerge.

Jump aboard and hijack the product

Eventually as even the macadamia thieves started selling poor quality nuts, the middle-man told the farmers he wouldn’t buy any more nuts from them. So what began as a very promising income generating activity that would have eventually enriched the entire community simply died.

Taking a walk through African cities, one notices that the enterprises operated by the youth tend to fall within a narrow category of retail business types. There is hardly any manufacturing and even more disturbing is the lack of innovativeness on the part of youth entrepreneurs. Just how many pirated DVD shops can a city have? The answer to that question depends on how many young entrepreneurs there are. This may sound cynical, but if one just strolls through Africa’s business districts patterns of mobile phone accessory shops, small clothing stalls and the emerging number of cramped cyber café’s tell the story of an over-saturation of enterprise but no individual firm growth. It’s no wonder most of these outfits hardly last a year.

The failure of a colonial developed education system

Education has also failed Africans. In countries such as Kenya and Nigeria, the education system was geared towards creating employees and not employers. Farming and agriculture have also been variously frowned on as backwards. Prof. Maathai writes:

Such farmers may have little or no formal education, and may therefore be functionally or actually illiterate. Even if they are able to read or write, they lack access to written materials or the internet to inform themselves about the crops that are their primary source of income.”

Likewise, the formal education system has let down young entrepreneurs. By not inculcating financial literacy, business and personal management skills, how then can a person of say 19, 25 or even 35 years be expected to start and grow a profitable enterprise?

Working together for the greater common good

Apart from institutional challenges the macadamia farmers faced, ultimately Maathai writes that it was “own failure to understand the consequences of its self-destructive actions. Instead of working together to further the common good of their communities, each person pursued his individual interests - and all lost.”

Just as the macadamia thieves ruined this entire industry, so have unethical entrepreneurs also sullied the name of business. So often cases are brought to our attention at Yipe of ruthless middle-men who give out work to young entrepreneurs and yet do not pay them their just dues.

Similar to the macadamia thieves, as Prof. Maathai writes this is corruption, nothing else. It doesn’t matter whether it is at the farm level, the local kiosk or State House. Living off the sweat of another is corruption.

However there is a ray of light beginning to emerge. Groups are now being formed leveraging social media to fight this corruption by raising awareness of these rogue entrepreneurs.

So as Prof. Wangari Maathai writes, there is an ethical revolution in the making. And young entrepreneurs are sure to be in the fore-front of this change.