Showing posts with label Charity Recommendation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charity Recommendation. Show all posts

Friday, August 27, 2010

Village Micro-credit Project

Supporting economic self-sufficiency and technical assistance

The concept of micro-credit is simple yet empowering. Micro-credit is the extension of small loans to entrepreneurs who are too poor to qualify for traditional bank loans. The loans are typically short-term (a year or less), are not secured by collateral, and require repayment in weekly installments.

Giving individuals the opportunity to start micro-enterprises (small businesses) has proven an effective and popular measure in the ongoing struggle against poverty. Micro-credit empowers individuals to use their existing skills to create viable businesses, which allows them to improve their living standards, and ultimately benefits the entire community.

Get Involved

Volunteer with a micro-credit project in Ghana, Kenya or India.

Donate seed money for village micro-credit projects.

Contact our office to learn more about how you can support micro-credit projects in rural village communities.

Village Volunteers

Thursday, August 26, 2010

350.org: The Power of One (10/10/10)

The Day the World Came Together - The 350 Movement: October 24, 2009

350.org: Because the world needs to know


What does the number 350 mean?
350 is the most important number in the world—it's what scientists say 
is the safe upper limit for carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.
Two years ago, after leading climatologists observed rapid ice melt in the
Arctic and other frightening signs of climate change, they issued a series of 
studies showing that the planet faced both human and natural disaster if atmospheric 
concentrations of CO2 remained above 350 parts per million.
Everyone from Al Gore to the U.N.’s top climate scientist has now embraced this goal 
as necessary for stabilizing the planet and preventing complete disaster. Now the trick 
is getting our leaders to pay attention and craft policies that will put the world on track 
to get to 350.
Is 350 scientifically possible?
Right now, mostly because we’ve burned so much fossil fuel, the atmospheric 
concentration of CO2 is 390 ppm—that’s way too high, and it’s why ice is melting, 
drought is spreading, forests are dying. To bring that number down, the first task is to 
stop putting more carbon into the atmosphere. That means a very fast transition to sun 
and wind and other renewable forms of power. If we can stop pouring more carbon 
into the atmosphere, then forests and oceans will slowly suck some of it out of the air and 
return us to safe levels.
Is 350 politically possible?
It’s very hard. It means switching off fossil fuel much more quickly than governments 
and corporations have been planning. But we can change that--if we mobilize the world
to swift and bold climate action, and shift the world to a clean energy future.


CHARITY:WATER - Give up your birthday and ask for DONATIONS!

Check out my @mycharitywater campaign. Help me raise money for clean water. http://www.mycharitywater.org/feedvillages 

PLEASE HELP REACH THE GOAL BEFORE MY 30th BIRTHDAY!  

Here are the facts:
$20 means one person can get clean water for 20 years.
$250 means two families of six can get clean water.
$5,000 means clean water for a community of 250.
 

CHARITY:WATER - Give up your birthday and ask for DONATIONS!

http://www.charitywater.org/
TO DONATE  http://www.mycharitywater.org/feedvillages 

BIRTHDAYS CAN CHANGE THE WORLD. 
There are a billion people living without clean water. Four Septembers ago, we had a crazy idea. We asked our friends to give up their birthdays and ask for donations instead of gifts. We used 100% of the money raised to build water projects. Every year, it got bigger. We've now helped over a million people get clean water. This September, join us again. Watch the Trailer. Start a campaign. Give up your birthday. It can change the world.

charity: water 2010 September Campaign: Clean Water for the Bayaka from charity: water on Vimeo.

Habitat for Humanity

Click the link for more info, get involved, or donate!

The state of the world’s housing
The world is experiencing a global housing crisis. About 1.6 billion people live in substandard housing and 100 million are homeless, according to the United Nations. These people are increasingly urban residents, and every week more than a million people are born in, or move to, cities in the developing world. Today, a billion people―32 percent of the global urban population―live in urban slums. If no serious action is taken, the United Nations reports that the number of slum dwellers worldwide will increase over the next 30 years to nearly 2 billion.

In the United States alone, 95 million people have housing problems



That’s one third of the nation. These problems include payments too large a percentage of their income, overcrowding, poor quality shelter and homelessness. Throughout the world, people live in inadequate housing, and Habitat for Humanity is dedicated to providing decent, affordable homes for those in need.
   



Importance of clean, decent, and stable housing
Habitat for Humanity has shown that building homes does more than put a roof over someone’s head. In clean, decent, stable housing:
  • Families can provide stability for their children.
  • A family’s sense of dignity and pride grow.
  • Health, physical safety, and security improve
  • Educational and job prospects increase.
Through our own programs we have witnessed the transformational ability of good housing.
Scholarly research confirms what Habitat for Humanity has known for so long. A report issued by the Planning and Development Collaborative International stated, “Clean, warm housing is an essential input for prevention and care of diseases of poverty like HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, diarrhea, and malaria.” An Emory University research study on Habitat for Humanity’s work in Malawi found Habitat housing improved the health of young children as much as water and sanitation programs. The study found that children under 5 living in Habitat for Humanity houses had 44 percent less malaria, respiratory or gastrointestinal diseases compared to children living in traditional houses.
 

The future rests in the decisions made today
Bad housing has its greatest impact on children. As Lisa Harker, a British housing expert, explains, “Childhood is a precious time when our experiences shape the adults we become―but children who grow up in bad housing are robbed of their future chances….” Those chances are stolen by the detrimental impact poverty housing has on everyday life.
 

Housing is a great means of wealth creation.
For families, especially those with a lower income, who are able to own a home, ownership is an important means of wealth accumulation in the form of equity and forced savings resulting from mortgage repayment. In low-income countries, housing construction creates job opportunities for migrants to cities and stimulates the creation of small business. The process of securing land tenure for informal settlements helps to increase access to credit.
 

Good housing in communities attracts economic investment and development
Good housing also contributes to thriving school systems and community organizations. It is a catalyst for civic activism and a stimulus for community-based organizations. Safe homes and neighborhoods, in which residents are satisfied with housing conditions and public services, help to build social stability and security.



Housing must become a priority
If action to decrease poverty is to be successful, increasing the housing supply across the globe is essential. Adequate housing is vitally important to the health of the world’s economies, communities, and populations, yet the percentage of people without access to decent, stable housing is rising. The United Nations projects that by the year 2030 an additional 3 billion people, about 40 percent of the world’s population, will need access to housing. If we are to prevent such a dramatic escalation of the housing crisis, and if we are to succeed in the fight against poverty, we must support the expansion of housing both as policy and as practice.