All Change Agent
- Toilet tech fair takes on global sanitation woes
Some 2.5 billion people still have no access to modern sanitation. But beyond providing proper facilities future toilets may become profit-generating resources that create electricity, fertilizer, or fuel.
- In Colombia, cows, crops and timber coexist
An ambitious program in Colombia shows that mixing grazing, agriculture, and trees can coax more food from each acre, boost farmers' incomes, restore degraded land, and make farming more resilient to climate change.
- Shai Reshef is bringing the university to the people
The founder of the nonprofit University of the People, an online, degree-granting institution, wants to educate the world – for free.
- Razia Jan fights to educate girls in rural Afghanistan
Returning to Afghanistan from the US, Razia Jan stood up to opposition and founded the Zabuli Education Center, which now has a roster of more than 400 girls in kindergarten through ninth grade.
- A rainbow for China’s orphans
The Rainbow Program is a groundbreaking partnership between the Chinese government and international nonprofit groups that's helping China reimagine its entire child welfare system.
- In Kenya, selling human waste could revolutionize sanitation
Working directly with residents of Mukuru, one of Nairobi's largest slums, Sanergy has developed a promising new method to improve sanitation through low-tech, low-cost toilets that create organic fertilizer.
- Gloria Shin works to end modern-day slavery
She left her full-time marketing job to join the global fight against human trafficking and modern-day slavery.
- Turning over a new leaf in the rainforest
Under intense pressure from customers and conservation groups, forest-products giant Asia Pulp & Paper has embarked on a series of changes that could significantly reduce deforestation in Indonesia and serve as a model for forestry reform.
- Local advisers deliver products and profits to Cambodia's rural farmers
Lors Thmey, which means 'new growth' in Khmer, teaches local entrepreneurs how to advise small farmers by providing farming necessities and technical know-how that boosts incomes.
- Teenage advocate of native education in Canada becomes comics superhero
Shannen Koostachin, a teenage activist in Canada who died before ever seeing the results of her work, has inspired a new hero in the DC Universe.
- Krochet Kids knits together sustainable jobs
Krochet Kids teaches textile skills like crochet or knitting to women in Uganda and Peru, helping the women create a livelihood and escape poverty.
- Mariano Rivera's latest 'save' is a church
Retired New York Yankees relief pitcher Mariano Rivera was instrumental in restoring a 107-year-old church for Refugio de Esperanza, or Refuge of Hope, the Pentecostal Christian congregation led by his wife, Clara.
- Impassioned evangelist David Burstein urges millennials to get involved
Activist, speaker, and filmmaker David Burstein says being fearless about learning new things is the place to start.
- The Malala Fund spotlights need to educate child refugees
The Malala Fund, co-founded by Malala Yousafzai, the teenage girl from Pakistan who was shot by the Taliban for promoting the education of girls, is working to put refuge children from Syria back into school.
- Discipline with dignity: Oakland schools try talk circles
As executive director of Restorative Justice for Oakland Youth, Fania Davis sees programs like hers helping to shut down the school-to-prison pipeline.
- Small sources could yield an energy windfall
'Energy scavenging' draws on a wide array of untapped energy sources – radio waves, vibrations created by moving objects, waste heat from computers or car exhaust systems — to generate electricity.
- Jacob Lief uses an 'old recipe' to help South Africa's poor
His Ubuntu Education Fund provides intensive, long-term help to 2,000 impoverished children and their families in South Africa.
- Audrey Forshey gives the gift of education in Kenya
The Gift of Education event supports the St. Monica's Children's Home outside Nairobi, Kenya, and covers most of the education costs for the 44 girls who live there.
- Tiny houses for the homeless: an affordable solution catches on
Governments and nonprofits are working together on a practical solution to homelessness through the construction of tiny-house villages.
- Who'll fund journalism? Meet the new Medicis
With newspaper revenues falling billionaires are stepping in to fund reporting, either by buying existing media outlets or starting new ones.