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March 14, 2006 Skoll Foundation Awards $16 Million to Nonprofits Around the World in Support of Social EntrepreneurshipPALO ALTO, Calif.—March 14, 2006—The Skoll Foundation today announced it is awarding $13 million to recipients of the 2006 Skoll Awards for Social Entrepreneurship and $3 million to Ashoka for a partnership to help build the field of social entrepreneurship. The Skoll Awards for Social Entrepreneurship honor and provide support for established organizations led by social entrepreneurs who are applying innovative and effective approaches to resolve critical social issues around the world. This year, 16 organizations are receiving the three-year grant investments, including three organizations that are receiving follow-on funding. The Skoll Awards are designed to advance solutions to critical social challenges of our time and recognize programs effecting positive and measurable change in six issue categories: tolerance and human rights, health, environmental sustainability, economic and social equity, institutional responsibility, and peace and security. Each year’s recipients are identified through an open competitive process that honors social entrepreneurs whose work has already demonstrably improved the lives and circumstances of marginalized, disadvantaged or disenfranchised populations throughout the world. Skoll Award funding supports the expansion and larger-scale replication of awardee programs. The award winners also are eligible to apply for program-related investments from the foundation during the three-year grant period. In addition to naming the Skoll Award recipients, the Skoll Foundation announced a $3 million, three-year field-building partnership with Ashoka, a global organization based in Arlington, Va. With a 25-year history and a global network of more than 1,700 social entrepreneurs in 60 countries, Ashoka is a key Skoll partner and is instrumental in developing and cultivating a pipeline for social entrepreneurship worldwide. The competitive Skoll Awards will be personally presented by Skoll Foundation Chairman Jeff Skoll on March 30 at the third annual Skoll World Forum on Social Entrepreneurship at the University of Oxford in England. The World Forum convenes a global community of outstanding practitioners and thought leaders in social entrepreneurship to set the future agenda for visionaries who want to transform society. The organizations receiving three-year 2006 Skoll Awards for Social Entrepreneurship through the open competition have all proved effective at a local or regional scale and are poised to expand to a national or multinational scale. They are: Afghan Institute of Learning, $480,000; Benetech, $1,215,000; Ceres, Inc., $525,000; Child Savings International, $765,000; CIDA City Campus, $1,015,000; Ciudad Saludable, $615,000; College Summit, Inc., $1,515,000; Health Care Without Harm, $765,000; Institute for Development Studies and Practices, $450,000; International Bridges to Justice, $765,000; Renascer Child Health Association, $615,000; Riders for Health, $765,000; Room to Read, $1,215,000; Roots of Peace, $765,000; Search for Common Ground, $765,000; and VillageReach, $765,000. The Skoll Foundation’s mission is to advance systemic change to benefit communities around the world by investing in, connecting and celebrating social entrepreneurs—individuals dedicated to pioneering new solutions that result in lasting improvements to complex social problems. “Idealism and money alone, while valuable, can’t resolve the highly complex root causes of poverty, disease, illiteracy or strife that plague so many areas of the world today,” said Sally Osberg, President and CEO of the Skoll Foundation. “Effecting true and lasting change also demands a deep understanding of the many forces shaping a community, endless ingenuity and, finally, perhaps most importantly, a clear-eyed practicality. The awardees we’ve selected—whose work ranges from increasing access to critical medicines through motorcycle maintenance to improving the health of rural poor through community waste management—and the measurable improvements they’ve achieved, all reflect the essence of a Skoll social entrepreneur: a practical innovator who resolves social problems and builds civil society’s infrastructure and effectiveness. “As we have done in preceding years, we’ve cast our net across the globe to find the world’s most effective social entrepreneurs,” said Osberg. “Each organization in our portfolio of Skoll Awards for Social Entrepreneurship is tackling a complex social problem in order to promote healthy, sustainable communities. And each one is poised to expand that model to a new level. Together, these organizations represent an incredibly powerful force for systemic social change.” About the Skoll Foundation Headquartered in California’s Silicon Valley, the Skoll Foundation was created by eBay’s first president, Jeff Skoll, to promote his vision for a more peaceful and prosperous world. Today the Skoll Foundation advances systemic change to benefit communities around the world by investing in, connecting and celebrating social entrepreneurs—individuals dedicated to pioneering new solutions that result in lasting improvements to complex social problems. The Skoll Foundation invests in social entrepreneurs through the Skoll Awards for Social Entrepreneurship. It connects them through Social Edge, an online community at www.socialedge.org, and via the annual Skoll World Forum on Social Entrepreneurship at the Skoll Centre for Social Entrepreneurship at Said Business School, University of Oxford. It celebrates social entrepreneurs through projects such as The New Heroes, a public television documentary series that tells 12 dramatic stories of social entrepreneurs who bring innovative, empowering solutions to intractable social problems around the world. For more information, visit www.skollfoundation.org. DESCRIPTIONS OF 2006 SKOLL AWARDEES The organizations receiving Skoll Awards for Social Entrepreneurship through the open competition are:
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