Posts Tagged ‘social entrepreneur’

New Noises in those Old Hallowed Halls

Thursday, May 8th, 2008

The idea of applying market savvy to the social sector is still a pretty young one, but is growing up fast. We can now see social entrepreneurship, one of the more enduring labels attached to this idea, becoming institutionalized - for example, in our institutions of higher learning.

The Catherine B. Reynolds Foundation is sponsoring a Program in Social Entrepreneurship, which they define (rather nicely I think) as

“a form of public leadership that maximizes the social return on public service efforts while fundamentally and permanently changing the way problems are addressed on a global scale.”

Reynolds offers full scholarship and other support to the most promising future social entrepreneurs it can find at the two universities it endows: The Kennedy School at Harvard University, and The Wagner School of Public Service at NYU.

I know a good deal about this program, since I am a proud and active alum of Wagner myself, and was pleased to serve as a judge for selecting the 2008 Reynolds fellows earlier this month.

This was a tough gig - largely because by the time we judges came along, the huge number of applicants was whittled down to the most promising four score or so. Such pre-screening guaranteed that pretty much all the candidates we saw demonstrated a clear vision of their future as social entrepreneurs, on top of a history demonstrating their clear ability to walk their talk.

I see a trend, and I like it. In just a few short years, social entrepreneurship has migrated from the fringes of social science to its very core. As a result, some of our most promising young minds are incorporating its ideals into their own plans for their place in the world - and from what I’ve seen of those minds, the world will be the better for it.

Back to the harsh reality of limited resources, only a few of the candidates I saw made the final cut to become Reynolds Fellows. This is of course sad, but there is this consolation: who better than these budding social entrepreneurs to tackle this classic problem of too many worthy social causes and not enough money to support them?


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