Years of changing the world
Transcription
Years of changing the world
30 Years of changing the world Good News for social entrepreneurship Read exciting stories about great international business ideas 4 x per year. enorm concentrates on the good side of the economy without losing sight of the bigger picture. We believe in overcoming ecological and social problems through social business and social entrepreneurship. You can support this idea by subscribing to enorm. Together with Triodos Bank, we have set up a social fund and will use 15 % of your subscription fee to support social entrepreneurs in Germany. www.enorm-magazin.de enorm Nr. 1 April Mai 2011 Im Sog der Stadt Allahs Banker Keine Zinsen und ethische Geldanlagen gemäß Koran: Besuch bei der ersten muslimischen Bank in Deutschland € 7,50 04 Nirgends ist das soziale Unternehmertum so stark wie in Großbritannien. Vater des Erfolges ist Peter Holbrook. Ein Porträt Congratulations Ashoka! The whole enorm team wishes ashoka and all fellows worldwide a happy birthday and continuing success for changing the world into a better place. We are proud to be part of your movement for this great goal. KoMMune Die Rückkehr von Tante Emma CSR – das neue Wirtschaftswunder? SpeCial Mobilität Welcher Antrieb macht das Rennen? IKEA: Wie sauber ist Billy? SoCial entrepreneurShip In fünf Schritten zum Sozialunternehmer SpeCial MoDe Alles über Fair Fashion: Labels, Siegel, Shops Leihen, tauschen, teilen: Wie mobile Technik und soziale Netzwerke Konsum und Wirtschaft verändern € 7,50 01 Peter der Große ============================= 4 191828 907506 enorm 4 191828 907506 03 € 7,50 Wirtschaft für den Menschen Im Sog der Stadt Eine Agentur in London hilft frustrierten Bankern, ein neues Leben zu beginnen CSR – das neue Wirtschaftswunder? Raus hier! Wirtschaft für den Menschen Millionen drängen jedes Jahr in die Städte. Armut und Müllberge wachsen, Mitsprache Fehlanzeige. enorm zeigt Wege aus der Krise Entegas Weg zum Ökostrom enorm Millionengeschäft Hunger Zwei Konzerne streiten um das Patent für eine Paste, die Kinderleben rettet atoM-auSStieg Meins ist Deins 3.0 4 191828 907506 Die BusinessWohltäter Sie wollen mehr sein als nur Geldgeber: Wie die neuen Philanthropen soziale Projekte fördern und fordern. Plus: Peter Sloterdijk über Spenden-Ethik unternehMen ====================== Deutschland € 7,50 / BeNeLux € 8,20 Schweiz sfr 14,80 / Österreich € 8,50 ====================== 02 April Mai 2011 Nummer 1 www.enorm-magazin.de enorm www.enorm-magazin.de Nr. 2 Juni August 2011 ====================== Nr. 4 Nov. 2010 Feb. 2011 ====================== 4 191828 907506 Nr. 3 Sept. Nov. 2010 enorm Nummer 4 www.enorm-magazin.de enorm Nov. 2010 Feb. 2011 Several Ashoka fellows included Subscribe to German issue! 1 Over the telephone Call +49 40 4144 8472. Lines are open between 8am and 7pm, Monday to Friday 2 On the internet Log on to www.enorm-magazin.de and subscribe four German issues per year 3 Thomas Friemel editor-in-chief By email and post Send us your enquiries, thoughts and feedback to vertrieb@enorm-magazin.de or Social Publish Verlag 2010 GmbH, Planckstraße 13 (Innenhof), 22765 Hamburg, Germany call +49 40 4144 8472 / email vertrieb@enorm-magazin.de Ashoka at 30 | 03 A special moment in time Dear friends, → Diana Wells → Arnaud Mourot Ashoka is proud to be celebrating its 30th Anniversary this year. The three decades behind us mark a significant contribution to the development of the citizen sectors of over 70 countries, across five continents. Beginning with the pioneering concept of social entrepreneurship by Bill Drayton, Ashoka’s founder and CEO, these past 30 years also represent a historical shift in how societies perceive the agency of individuals to drive social change. Ashoka has managed to identify more than 2,700 leading social entrepreneurs whose new solutions are challenging conventional ideas and changing the world for the better. More recently, Ashoka has built programs and initiatives to extend its impact by mobilizing young people, university students, business entrepreneurs, and the general public to build an “Everyone a Changemaker” world because we understand that the only way to address the growing number of problems is to ensure that there are more problem-solvers. Thanks to our global network and partners, Ashoka has uncovered various insights about social change and impact. For example, the success of our global association of Ashoka Fellows -- more than half of whom have changed national policy after five years -- allows us to understand that the most profound change occurs when an entrepreneur pursues a system-changing idea. A further insight is that the scaling and replication of these models requires a particular enabling environment. Ashoka calls this enabling environment an “Everyone a Changemaker” world. This is a world that responds quickly and effectively to social challenges and where every individual is equally empowered to affect social change. At this special moment in time, an unprecedented number of social entrepreneurs gathered in Paris from June 20-24, 2011, to define and develop the necessary ecosystem for accelerating social change in Europe, while learning equally from the experiences of other innovators around the world. It was characterized by two ideas: Collaborative action and concentration of changemakers. And while this publication cannot possibly reflect everything that happened in Paris, it will hopefully provide you with a fascinating and inspiring snapshot of Ashoka at 30 years. As you are reading the following pages, we would ask you to “lean forward” and not “lean backward”, to identify opportunities for action. You are very much part of the movement thousands Ashoka Fellows and supporters are building across the world – and everyone listed in the directories at the end of this document will be keen to engage with you on your journey to changing the world. The world Ashoka ultimately strives to create is about everybody affecting change, and we welcome you as a cocreator. Diana Wells President of Ashoka Global Arnaud Mourot Director Ashoka France, Belgium, Switzerland Editorial | 04 | Ashoka at 30 Contents The 30th anniversary magazine Happy Birthday, Ashoka 20+30 → Fellows and friends of Ashoka sent in birthday cards 12 → Bill Drayton told sharing some of their 44 → Ashoka has editor Jenny Hoff how personal moments of how identified more than a culture of change is they strive to make a 2,700 fellows in 30 years created in schools change to this world – here’s a list of them Imprint Editor Ashoka Global Headquarters, 1700 North Moore Street, Suite 200 (20th Floor) Arlington, VA 22209, USA fon: 703-527-8300 info@ashoka.org, www.ashoka.org Contributing Editor Jenny Hoff Contributing Photographer Jean-Charles Caslot Publishing House Social Publish Verlag 2010 GmbH Planckstraße 13 (Innenhof) 22765 Hamburg, Germany kontakt@social-publish.com Design: g64 Medienwelten GmbH Note for iPad and iPhone users: Due to Apple's technical restrictions the Safari browser blocks links. Please use the pre-installed iBooks application We’re social: | Contents Ashoka 6 Introduction 8 Testimonials about Ashoka at 30 | 10 Working across silos → How to build a global team of teams 12 Interview with Bill Drayton → by Jenny Hoff 16 Empower them to help others → Ashoka’s Youth Venture Community 18 Essay: Everyone a changemaker → by Bill Drayton 05 20+30Happy Birthday, Ashoka → Members of the Ashoka community sent in messages from all around the world 22Essay: A europe of changemakers → by Felix Oldenburg 26 Partners’ dinner → An elegant ending to a weeklong 30th birthday celebration 32Essay: A new alliance for global change → by Bill Drayton, Valeria Budinich 34 Photo highlights 38Essay: Understanding the impact of Social Entrepreneurs → by Noga Leviner, Leslie R. Crutchfield, Diana Wells 41 Ashoka by the numbers 42 Staff list 44 List of Ashoka Fellows Contents | 06 | Ashoka at 30 → Paris, 21-23 June Getting together to celebrate change T he idea came to Ashoka founder Bill Drayton 30 years ago: to harness the entrepreneurial spirit of socially-minded individuals and give them the tools they need to spread their idea throughout their community and across the world. 2,700 Ashoka fellows later, Drayton’s idea of social entrepreneurship has become global, with hundreds of fellows introducing projects in multiple countries and creating changes that have affected millions of lives. For Drayton, however, his work has just begun. Having enabled thousands to find solutions to global problems is just the start of an “Everyone a Changemaker” world. As society evolves at an everescalating pace and old institutions are broken down, Ashoka’s hope is to have all people find their own way to be a Changemaker in a more global and connected world. With the first event of this kind, Ashoka celebrated its 30th birthday by bringing together more than a thousand social entrepreneurs, private business people, finance experts and young changemakers for a weeklong convention aimed at spreading ideas and formulating new ones. The event, held at Paris business school HEC, included small focus groups, informational seminars, interactive projects and the introduction of Ashoka’s Youth Venture program in France. It was a gathering of energy and creativity as well as an example of how Ashoka has influenced the corporate world. Historically, big businesses have typically put their philanthropic dollars toward charities, often removed from the donation with the exception of a banquet dinner or thank-you note. With Ashoka’s aim to make Everyone a Changemaker, however, companies interested in spending their dollars with the organization are themselves promoting social entrepreneurship. This is evident through the participation of Ashoka’s biggest donor, Germany-based pharmaceutical company Boehringer Ingelheim, at the “Changemakers’ Week” in France. Not only did the company commit to three years of supporting 50 Ashoka fellows who have projects aimed at changing the healthcare system, but the 150 year-old company also sent 40 of its own employees to immerse themselves in the Ashoka conference and work closely with the social entrepreneurs. With almost 3,000 fellows in dozens of countries, Ashoka’s vision of a world where every person has the freedom, confidence and support to enact change is getting ever closer to reality and will hopefully be fully realized well before Ashoka’s 60th birthday. | Introduction Ashoka at 30 | 07 The drummers of Johannesburg‘s Drum Cafe performing on stage, promoting intercultural understanding Introduction | 08 | Ashoka at 30 Testimonials about Ashoka → Pierre Omidyar, Chair of the Omidyar Foundation and Founder and Chairman of E-bay → Bradford Smith, Vice-President of the Ford Foundation → Peter Goldmark, Former CEO of the International Herald Tribune & Former President of the Rockefeller Foundation “We believe one measurement of an effective community is exhibiting durable communication channels, networks, and collaborative alliances. Ashoka provides us with a great model for best practices – The engaged global community of social entrepreneurs that Ashoka has fostered helps each one of them to have more impact than would have been possible individually.” “Ashoka is excellent at plugging social entrepreneurs into a network and getting their ideas to cross borders. They do it better than we can.” “Ashoka has quietly given Philanthropy a new dimension: it has shown how to invest successfully in pattern-breaking, powerful ideas and the people behind them and how to do so early when a little makes an enormous difference – when hope can overcome cynicism, when tenacity can prevail over inertia. It has given us all lessons in how to harness the most powerful energy in the world - human talent - to the task of adapting to the demands of the 21st century.” | Testimonials about Ashoka Ashoka → Charles, His Royal Highness, the Prince of Wales → Jeff Skoll, Founder of the Skoll Foundation and First President of E-bay → Stephan Schmidheiny, President of Avina Foundation and Founder of Gruponueva → Muhammad Yunus, Founder and CEO of the Grameen Bank, Nobel Piece Prize winner → Nr Narayana Murthy, Founder of Infosys at 30 | 09 “I have been greatly impressed by the pioneering work of Ashoka in promoting social entrepreneurship for many years as a pathway to talented individuals. They have done much to spread good practice and role models in many countries.” “Ashoka is a world-class organization, internationally renowned for its pioneering work in the field of social entrepreneurship.” “Our collaboration with Ashoka: Innovators for the Public in Latin America has convinced us of the unparalleled power of the Ashoka Idea. Ashoka and the social entrepreneurs it supports have caused social change in the developing world, helping millions to lead better lives.” “Ashoka is a great global organization, built on a brilliant idea. It picks up social innovators when they themselves don’t know what great changes they can bring. That’s the stage when budding innovators need the support most. Ashoka helps pool local innovations into glob al solutions.” “Ashoka is well placed to create a partnership of the future between business and society. It’s a good idea for all of us to support Ashoka.” Testimonials about Ashoka | 10 | Ashoka at 30 1 2 4 5 6 | Working across silos Ashoka at 30 | W 3 → Paris, Tuesday, 21 June – opening panel Working across silos How to build a global team of teams 7 11 hen it comes to tearing down walls between sectors, Ashoka fellow Caroline Casey could be considered a sledgehammer. The aim of her organization, Kanchi, is to break through the barriers between the disabled community and the rest of society by working with businesses to view the community, which totals 15 percent of the world population, as a valuable and necessary part of their employee and consumer base. “The only way that this will work is a five stakeholder approach: we need the politicians, the business leaders, the disability community, the philanthropists and we need the media,” said Casey, at the Working Across Silos presentation during Ashoka’s Changemakers’ Week in Paris. The presentation, meant to give changemakers tips and ideas for enhancing their impact by working with other sectors, was itself an example of cross-sectoral collaboration with Casey and speakers Bill Drayton, Christian Boehringer of Boehringer Ingelheim, Michael Barnier with the European Commission, Ashoka Youth Venture fellow Sejal Hathi, founder of Girls Helping Girls and journalist David Bornstein. “The great challenge today is to help 1 Interactive drumming figure out how to integrate the world at the tables and solve problems together,” said 2 Caroline Casey, CEO of Bornstein. “This is a challenge because Kanchi Foundation the walls that have been built up be- 3 Christian Boehringer (left), tween these institutions and these sec- Chairman of the Boehringer tors are very strong and very resistant Ingelheim Shareholders’ to change.” The aim of collaborative Committee; Bill Drayton, entrepreneurship is to take the change Ashoka’s founder and CEO social entrepreneurs are making with- 4 Drummers of Johannesburg’s in a society and turn it into an over- Drum Cafe performing on all societal change. This can happen stage by creating teams that include social 5 Michael Barnier, European entrepreneurs, businesses and govern- Commissioner of Internal ments, with each player lending their Market and Services resources and expertise in order to fa- 6 Caroline Casey; Sejal Hathi, cilitate development more quickly and founder of Girls Helping effectively. “We really do want, five Girls; David Bornstein, years from now, anyone who is doing Journalist and Moderator strategy to say ‘There is a wall and very 7 More interactive drumming likely if we tear that wall down we’ll at the opening panel have a huge productivity gain,’” said Drayton. “And for them to ask themselves, ‘how do we do that?’” It is a question Christian Boehringer asked himself when Boehringer Ingelheim was looking to lend its resources and capital to tackle a world problem. “We wanted four things: to have a global topic, to draw on the engagement with the shareholders, our employees and the community, to find a global partner and to ensure that we get control of investment as professional as we would normally do within a company,” said Boehringer. The pharmaceutical company eventually decided that finding solutions in healthcare would fit in best with the its area of expertise. By teaming up with Ashoka, they were able to pinpoint the social entrepreneurs with the most innovative and sustainable ideas for the field. The collaboration led to an multi-million dollar investment that will support 50 social entrepreneurs for three years and ideally find solutions to some of the many health problems the world faces today. It’s another step towards a society in which teams team up for change. Working across silos | 12 | Ashoka at 30 | Rubrik Ashoka at 30 | 13 → Paris, Tuesday, 21 June “We don't have the option of going slowly” The rate of change in the world is going up exponentially. Empathy, leadership and teamwork are the essential skills to shape the future, and with its Youth Venture Programs Ashoka encourages young people to become changemakers before they reach adulthood. Bill Drayton, Ashoka's CEO and founder, explains how a culture of change is created within schools Interview by Jenny Hoff Why is getting the youth to become changemakers so important? young people come into that school they are being recruited by others to join their team and they're encouraged to start their own ideas. There are many schools that do this now, but they typically serve the elite. What we want is for every young person to have If any country is going to make the transition from a few people that experience, for it to be a normal part of growing up. We running everything and everyone else doing repetitive functions want parents to understand that when your 15 year old daughter to a world where everyone is contributing to change, because that says, “you know, this is a mess,” that is your opportunity to say is what required, every young person has to be a changemaker “Well, why don't you get your friends together and fix it?” Parents before they become an adult. They have to actually experience can help their kids understand that this is one of the most critiand practice being a powerful person. That means mastering the cal things they have to do. This is their opportunity to acquire, skills of empathy, so you can work with and understand others, through practice, critical skills that they're going to need by the teamwork and leadership. It also means using all those skills to time they are 25 or 30. cause change, which is very different from leading a repetitive function activity. What Youth Venture is about is to make sure How do Ashoka's Youth Venture that every young person has that experience, which means you have to change how middle and high schools work so the youth programs help facilitate this change? culture in those schools, in the neighborhoods and at home is to We have Youth Venture programs across the world and we are say “take initiative now. ” continually adding more. Each country has a model that works for them. In Germany, Youth Venture has “think and do tanks,” How do we make that happen? which takes young people who are already really good at being That's exactly the question we're asking ourselves. How do we, changemakers to come together and figure out how to make it working together, actually change the system? It turns out that normal, how to change the environment in the schools and the one of the key variables is there has to already be some young neighborhoods and religious institutions, so that we remove the people who have the imagination and courage to say “I have an barriers to change. In Germany, 70 to 80 percent of young people idea. I'm going to get my friends together and we're going to crea- want to be involved in change, but virtually none of them are. So, te a tutoring service. Or, we are going to solve an environmental how do we change this picture? The idea is a very simple one. You problem.” If you get a couple of people in a school to do that, you get the young people who best understand it because they've done can tip the culture of that school so it becomes normal. So, when it. They know what the barriers are and they can figure out how to Youth Changemakers | 14 | Ashoka at 30 Journalist David Bornstein, Michael Barnier with the European commission, Christian Boehringer with Boehringer Ingelheim and Bill Drayton talk about the importance of cross-sectoral collaboration in creating an Everyone a Changemaker world. Bill Drayton speaking about Ashoka after 30 years with David Bornstein (left) and french journalist/ TV host for M6, Bernard de La Villardière (right) remove those barriers. They are then bringing these ideas into the schools and getting teachers, principals and students on board. In Japan, it's different. We are working with a very large Japanese company at the moment and the idea is to find some local branches that want to participate with our Youth Venture initiative. The first thing we do is work with the employees in those local branches and teach the parents in the group what they can do to help their kids master empathy and leadership. Ashoka then provides stipends and resources for youth initiatives. Then the impact spreads. If the employees are helping their children master these skills, then the employees are also getting these skills. The next move is the company bringing that to their customers. It is very good for the company, great for moving these ideas out and it’s | Youth Changemakers helping the company make the change from being a hierarchy to being a team of teams. Japan's model is very different from the German model, but the two fit together. They can help each other as well as Youth Venture programs in other countries. That is one of the great powers of this new stage of Ashoka, that we are a global team of teams. We've got a clear understanding that we are moving to an Everyone a Changemaker world. We are privileged to see that and help others see it. We are a community of entrepreneurs. If there is one thing we should be able to do, it is to use our entrepreneurial ability - individually and as an Ashoka wide team of teams - in helping us get there. Getting there means making sure every young person is a changemaker before they are an adult. Ashoka How can you use the network you already have to spread this idea of youth being changemakers? Its a collaboration of hundreds of fellows across the world, entrepreneuring together to make this change happen, so that every young person is a changemaker. Ashoka fellows have young people they care for and can teach the skills of empathy to and they also know thought leaders in their communities, who they can help teach about the importance of this change. It's about breaking down traditional structures. Take for example the work we are doing to tear down the barrier between business and social initiatives. You can't get to a global team of teams that is fluid if you have a sharp division so that these two halves of society can't work together. We've shown that there is a huge gain of productivity for everyone when you move from a world where you have one set of institutions that are businesses and another that is social and both are trying to serve every need. Its a very inefficient model. When you tear down that wall and take the best parts of business and the best parts of social, you create a new system which is able to provide services that weren't there before, like housing. The business people can't serve informal sector workers' families. The citizen sector is great at understanding, connecting and having trust with the community as well as having an economic structure at lower cost, but they are no good at real estate development so they don't get the houses built. You put the two together, houses can be built and everyone benefits. We can do the same kind of collaboration with schools and influential thought leaders to get the youth involved in an Everyone a Changemaker world. What kind of model do you propose to make this a reality? Right now, many people know that there is something wrong with the schools. But, its only when you see where you have to go, that you see the new paradigm. Its not making sure that more people have access to an obsolete educational model. The old model of 'give them information and get them to follow rules' was fine for a static world. It just doesn't work in a world of very rapid change. Our strategy is a very simple one: in each major country, we want to find the top five percent of the most influential schools, schools that love to lead and have a track record of doing that. We help them see the goal, help them have access to all the helpful and proven ideas that the fellows have of how to teach youth the skills they'll need for the future. Each school will then come up with its own model. They will be a team and part of our global team of teams experimenting and figuring out how to do it better. They'll be on fire in two or three years because it works and they will see how important it is. Then, they'll help lead the other schools. At the same time, we will work with the key influential intermediaries: writers, publishers and some key policy people. We can, in at 30 | 15 each major country, help 30 of these thought leaders understand that we have to get to an Everyone a Changemaker future. Once they understand that, they'll be part of a team to figure out how this generation of young people can become changemakers and how their own town or city can make this transition. You put those two things together, the schools that have figured out how to make it work and the writers, and you can really tip the system. It becomes the new norm and that's what drives a system. It’s a classic example of how entrepreneurs work. You have to know where you are going and then you experiment until you figure out how to do it, how you set in motion the forces that will really tip the world. What kind of time frame do you think is necessary to spread this idea across the world? We don't have the option of going slowly, but we can't set the time because history is moving. The rate of change is continuing to go up exponentially. But, we are clearly getting to an awareness tipping zone in moving to an Everyone a Changemaker future. We need innovation in every aspect of life. We increasingly need our entrepreneurs to be social entrepreneurs as well, so that their core purpose in life is not the pursuit of a narrow objective, but rather for the good of all. The more young people who do that, the more the entrepreneurial forces in the world will in fact be pulling the world to the good of all. Of course we need young people to start businesses, but we also need them to worry about others. Problems are all around young people, just as much as they are for everyone else, and they can see those problems. In fact, its easier for young people to see problems because they haven't learned yet that they can't solve them. When you think that you can't solve a problem, why would you want to see a problem? That's why so many people don't. But, the first step to being a good entrepreneur of any sort is that you have to believe that you can do something. Then, you are looking for opportunities to apply that skill. Within five years, I would like to see the culture changed so that every young person is a changemaker and is on their way to mastering the skills of empathy, leadership and teamwork well before adulthood. In order to do that, every adult needs to start teaching those skills now to the young people they know and love. → Jenny Hoff is an experienced American broadcaster and Ashoka’s first storyteller in Residence Youth Changemakers | 16 | Ashoka at 30 1 2 → Paris, Wednesday, 22 June Empower them to help others Ashoka’s Youth Venture Community 5 7 6 | Empower them to help others Ashoka 3 at 30 | 4 A 15-year-old girl is diagnosed with anorexia and on her road to recovery founds an organization to mentor and unite other girls around the world. A 19-year-old boy goes to Sierra Leon and devises a business plan to boost the local economy and build schools at the same time. Whoever said a barrier such as age could prevent someone from becoming a changemaker was never introduced to Ashoka’s Youth Venture community. An Everyone a Changemaker world can’t become reality until everyone is on board. That is the reason Ashoka is sponsoring youth projects in countries across the globe. With “think and do” tanks, cooperations with businesses, school programs and seed money for social entrepreneurial ideas, Ashoka’s effort to help youth is based on a model that empowers them to help others. “I wanted to prevent girls from going through the same emotional turmoil that I had,” said Sejal Hathi who is now a 19-year-old student at Yale and president of Girls Helping Girls, an organization she founded when she was 15. “I wanted to empower girls to think differently about themselves and catalyze a movement that would enable society to view girls differently as well: as changemakers, as activists and as leaders.” Youth Venture provided her with seed money, guidance for becoming 1 Youth Ventures celebrating a legal non-profit, financial on stage in Paris advice and a support network 2 Ayat Fathy Nmr Hassan that has helped her bring the Sharkawy, helped spread the organization to 20 countries. Facebook message that Ashoka’s Youth Venture can sparked protests in Egypt boast many stories similar 3 Changemakers helping to Sejal’s – young people come up with ideas taking charge of changing 4 Rocco Falconer, Founder of their schools, their commuPlanting Promise nities and even countries on 5 Sejal Hathi, Founder of the other side of the world. Girls Helping Girls By offering guidance and not 6 Felix Oldenburg, Ashoka direction, Youth Venture emDirector Europe powers the new generation to 7 Andreas Dzialocha, come up with their own ideas, Youth Venture Germany develop their own business 8 Arnaud Mourot, Director plans and set their own goals Ashoka France, Belgium, on how to create an Everyone Switzerland a Changemaker world. 8 Empower them to help others | 17 18 | Ashoka at 30 Everyone a Changemaker This article was written by Bill Drayton in 2006 as Ashoka was redefining its mission from selecting and supporting individual social entrepreneurs to finding ways to spread the impact globally and create an Everyone a Changemaker world. It originally appeared in the MIT Innovations Journal R odrigo Baggio grew up in Rio de Janeiro loving computers. As he matured into an extraordinarily tall, thin man with a hugely wide smile, he became a computer consultant. However, from early on, he was one of the few in his generation who noticed—with concern—that the young people growing up in the favelas on the hills overlooking his middle-class neighborhood had no access to this digital world. Because he has the great entrepreneur’s tenacity of observation and thought as well as action, he decided he had to take on the digital divide—well before the phrase came into currency—and he has been pursuing this vision relentlessly ever since. While beginning to work toward this dream as a teenager, he learned just how motivated and capable of learning the young people in the favelas were. And also how competent the favela community was in organizing. This respect underlies the central insight that has allowed Rodrigo to have a growing multi-continental impact. Rodrigo provides only what the community cannot: typically computers, software, and training. The community does the organizing, finding space, recruiting the students and faculty, and providing ongoing administration. The result is a uniquely economical | Everyone a Changemaker model, and also one where, because the investment strengthens the broader community, it is self-sustaining and a foundation for other initiatives long into the future. Rodrigo’s chain of hundreds of community-based computer training schools now serves hundreds of slums across Latin America and Asia. These schools now have 700,000 graduates. I got a sense of Rodrigo’s power when he came to Washington shortly after being elected an Ashoka Fellow. Somehow he convinced the Inter-American Development Bank to give him its used (but highly valuable) computers. Somehow he convinced the Brazilian Air Force first to warehouse and then to fly these computers home. And then he somehow managed to persuade the Brazilian customs authority to allow all these computers in at a time when Brazil was trying to block computer imports. Several years later, I got a further sense of how his mind worked, when I asked him why he was starting his work in Asia in Japan. Japan, he said, was the only large Asian source of computers where he could imagine getting people to give them to him. Therefore, as his first step, he had to demonstrate the value of his program to the Japanese in several of their own slums. Ashoka That is how entrepreneurs work. Having decided that the world must change in some important way, they simply find and build highways that lead inexorably to that result. Where others see barriers, they delight in finding solutions and in turning them into society’s new and concrete patterns. That much is easy to observe. However, there is more to it. Somehow, an unknown, young, lanky Rodrigo, the head of a new and unknown citizen organization, persuaded the managers of one after another of society’s big institutions to do things they never would have imagined. He knew they were the right and logical things to do. Somehow they sensed that inner confidence and found it surprisingly persuasive. What were they sensing? Rodrigo’s words and arguments no doubt helped, but few people are willing to step out beyond the safely conventional merely on the basis of good arguments. Rodrigo was persuasive because his listeners sensed something deeper. What Rodrigo was proposing was not just an idea, but the central logic of his life—as it is for every great entrepreneur. He mastered and came to love the new digital world from the time he was a young boy. More important, his values from early on drove him to care about the poverty and inequality he could see on the hillsides rising behind the middle-class Rio in which he was growing up. His values and his temperament had him taking on the digital divide before the term was invented. As a result, when Rodrigo sat across the table from the much older, powerful officials he needed to move, they were confronting not just a good idea, but deeply rooted and life-defining values: non-egoistic, kindly determination and commitment. This values-based faith is the ultimate power of the first-class entrepreneur. It is a quality others sense and trust, whether or not they really fully grasp the idea intellectually. Even though they would not normally want to step out in front of the crowd, a quiet voice tells them to trust Rodrigo and go with his vision. Any assessment of Rodrigo’s impact that stopped with his idea, let alone his business plan, would not have penetrated to the core of his power. Our field has been impoverished by too many assessments that never get to the essence. Nor is Rodrigo’s most important impact his schools or the lifechanging independence and mastery he provides his students. Consider the impact Rodrigo has on a community when he introduces his program. It is not a school created by the government or outsiders. It is a school created by, funded by, managed by, and staffed by people in the community. The students are responsible for learning and then making their way. Think how many patterns and stereotypes are crumpled by these simple and very obvious facts. The psychological impact is a bit like India emerging from 50 years of falling behind to suddenly being recognized as the new challenger at the cutting edge of the most advanced part of the world’s economy. Accompanying this disruption of old patterns of action and perception is another contribution, and I believe it is the greatest one of Rodrigo and every entrepreneur: the idea of catalyzing new local changemakers into being. Unless the entrepreneur can get someone in one community after another to step forward and seize his at 30 | 19 or her idea, the entrepreneur will never achieve the spread that is essential to his or her life success. Consequently, the entrepreneur presents his or her idea to the local community in the most enticing, safe, understandable, and user-friendly ways possible. Of course, the entrepreneur’s own life story is in itself a beacon encouraging hundreds of others to care and to take initiative. This also increases the number of local changemakers. Moreover, when these local champi→ Ten years ago, the ons then build the teams they need to launch the idea they have adopted, probability of an idea they are providing not only encourfrom Bangladesh affecagement but also training to potential ting a community in Branext-generation local changemakers. As the field of social entrepreneur- zil, Poland, or the U.S. ship has grown and multiplied and was very limited. Now wired itself together across the globe it is common (the bestover the last 25 years, the rate of this plowing and seeding at the local level known example being has accelerated dramatically. Ten Muhammad Yunus’s years ago, the probability of an idea from Bangladesh affecting a commu- impact on the global nity in Brazil, Poland, or the U.S. was spread of microcredit) very limited. Now it is common (the and becoming more combest-known example being Muhammon every year. mad Yunus’s impact on the global spread of microcredit) and becoming more common every year. As the number of leading pattern-changing social entrepreneurs has been increasing everywhere, and as the geographic reach of their ideas has been expanding ever more rapidly, the rate of plowing and seeding therefore has multiplied. As have the number of local changemakers. This whole process is enormously contagious. As the number of large-scale entrepreneurs and local changemakers multiplies, so does the number of support institutions, all of these make the next generation of entrepreneuring and changemaking easier. Not only do people not resist, but in fact, they respond readily to this change. Who wants to be an object when they could be changemakers, when they could live lives far more creative and contributory and therefore respected and valued? → Please continue reading online → Bill Drayton CEO & Founder of Ashoka Everyone a Changemaker | 20 | Ashoka at 30 People like me who don’t take no for an answer Stronger and more effective through Ashoka I am an Ashoka Fellow since 2009, and being part of this great social movement has forced me to expect much more from our results on the field, it helps me focus on the right links and I feel supported by people like me who just don’t take no as an answer. Thanks Ashoka and Happy Birthday! At Ashoka we learned the power of tackling challenges systematically by looking for patterns and unmet needs; we learned to uncover opportunity by uniting constellations of people and communities that conventionally do not consider their integration complementary; and - perhaps most valuable to the start-up phase of any enterprise - the value of flexible iteration (fail often, fail early is an attitude we embrace)! Although both of us have a track record of starting initiatives, there is a distinction of ‘pre’ and ‘post’ Ashoka that we can gratefully acknowledge. With our Ashoka experience, we can say with certainty that Green Loop is a stronger and more effective organization. → Jean-Francois Archambault, La Tablée des Chefs, www.tableedeschefs.org An excellent partnership One year, after a very difficult selection process to become an Ashoka fellow, finally I was elected and was deeply touched by that. I barely knew what that meant at that time. I only knew that I wanted to change the world. And since Ashoka was already changing the world, it was an excellent partnership. This was extremely important for me as a person and for the thousands of families that my organization helps across Brazil. Bill Drayton is the visionary of the visionaries, because he had the power to not only create the concept of social entrepreneur but also to help them realize their own visions ... I see Bill Drayton as I see Mahatma Gandhi. Gandhi promoted the independence of a nation, India. Bill is step by step promoting social justice and the sustainability of the world. → Vera Cordeiro, Associação Saúde Criança www.saudecrianca.org → Courtney Lawrence & Adam Selzer, Green Loop Nashville, www.greenloopnashville.org I know I’m not alone Thanks to Ashoka, I realized that I belong to a large network of people who in their own way, are working to make this world better. Although we do not see each other often, I feel the fraternity between members who are part of this network, and this is very precious to me. I know I am not alone. Ashoka has allowed me to dedicate myself entirely to the development and the growth of Wapikoni Mobile with a free spirit. And Wapikoni is really flying on its own now. Happy anniversary to Ashoka, and all my gratitude. → Manon Barbeau, Wapikoni Mobile, www.wapikoni.tv | Birthday cards The era we live in One of the most important things about Ashoka is the idea of a community, bringing people together. The Ashoka fellowships that provide financial support for people is important but what really important is is meeting other people who are doing similiar things or different things. Both can be very valuable ... A community is very important because people can then fertilize and can come up with new ideas ... Everyone a changemaker – that’s the era we live in. → Jimmy Wales, Wikipedia founder, www.wikipedia.org So many remarkable moments First of all, long live Ashoka, its directors, employers and all social entrepreneurs who may arise. We wish many projects to be accomplished and new entrepreneurs to arise. Second, it was hard to choose what to say because, for us, there are so many facts, activities and moments that have been remarkable: the first interview with Bill Drayton; the Panel in which we were evaluated and selected; the Panels in which we participated evaluating future Fellow candidates and so many other highly interesting projects; a meeting with Ashoka Fellows who were working on racial matters, the gathering of Ashoka and AVINA Fellows to talk about changing public policy in Brazil, and many more. Congratulations ASHOKA! → Normando Batista Santos Ashoka at 30 | 21 30 years of changing the world Our community of friends and entrepreneurs sent us messages from all over the world. Here are some of their stories they want to share Birthday cards | 22 | Ashoka at 30 → Paris, Wednesday, 22 June, closing speech A Europe of changemakers 100 years ago, two ideas launched to change our world: One in Detroit, one in Rome. In Detroit, Henry Ford began to revolutionize the automotive industry with modern assembly technology. Also 100 years ago, in Rome, Maria Montessori started the first modern kindergarten, the casa dei bambini, the first true educational institution for preschool children. By Felix Oldenburg Dear Ashoka Fellows, dear friends, dear fellow entrepreneurs, One business entrepreneur. One social entrepreneur. Both ideas have revolutionized their fields and have become a new standard. Today, 50 million cars are produced every year, and the assembly line has multiplied the productivity of many industries around the world. Within the same time, Montessori’s insight that even small children need specialized education has spawned a whole field, and has spread far beyond the kindergartens bearing her name There is nothing more powerful than a big idea in the hands of an entrepreneur, and here in Paris, over the past days, we have brought together the largest number of social entrepreneurs since we built the field of social entrepreneurship on this basic insight 30 years ago, finding the Montessoris of our time, supporting and celebrating them together with the Fords of our time. All of you are involved in and passionate about transformations as powerful as those of Ford and Montessori. If we tap the collective wisdom of the countless conversations here in Paris, we can see that while this basic mechanism is incredibly | A Europe of changemakers powerful, we have also developed as a field, taking into account how our world is different to the world of past generations of entrepreneurs. And I believe Europe has a key role to play in this transition, and some of the most exciting times for our field right ahead of us. If we draw together all the threads we have connected here in Paris, it becomes clear that we need to open a new chapter for entrepreneurship, and also a new chapter in how we operate as a field (similar to how we have evolved Ashoka from selecting and supporting social entrepreneurs to a much broader range of programs): (1) we need an acceleration of the number of people acting as changemakers, (2) we need a revolution in how we support pattern changing ideas, and (3) we need to tear down the walls between sectors and create large scale collaborations of changemakers. Or, to put these differently: We need a Europe in which people first ask themselves to create change instead of their governments, we need a Europe that achieves a lot with little resources instead of little with a lot of resources, and we need a Europe that repurposes its infrastructures for innovation instead of building another new sector. Ashoka 1.} We need an acceleration of the number of people acting as changemakers Change is accelerating. This has always been true in history. What we witness now, though, is that within one generation, almost everything that was true about the world changes – multiple times. Even 50 years ago, Henry Ford’s home city of Detroit was arguably a world center of innovation and entrepreneurship. Within the last 20 years, it has lost 20 percent of its population. No business entrepreneur today wants to be in Detroit. Changemakers attract changemakers. The question is, which way do we go in Europe – as a continent that has traditionally trusted large governments and welfare systems to solve social problems, rather than entrepreneurs? This is very much what we found when we launched Ashoka not that long ago. 270 Ashoka Fellows later, we know, leading social entrepreneurs are very much the answer to Europe’s future, and they have had a tremendous impact within the very few years of our presence here. An Ashoka Fellow will involve thousands, tens of thousands, sometimes millions of people directly in change. They find new resources to solve a problem, most often by engaging and empowering the beneficiaries, not treating them as recipients of charity or consumers of a service but as co-producers of a solution, an emotionally competent problem solver in the face of accelerating change - directly in opposition to the way most established European welfare systems deliver services to passive recipients. Imagine what happens as the network of Ashoka Fellows grows in a country, creating critical mass and tipping a whole field towards a new standard of active changemaking. Recently, we see patterns across Europe in our search for leading social entrepreneurs, and whenever we see such a pattern anywhere in the world, we know that major change is coming: We see an upsurge of Fellows tackling the negative consequences of lives that fail due to pressures of our atomized societies, that are dysfunctional as they cannot emotionally relate, that are disconnected from community and nature, that are out of balance between the demands of work and life, resulting in mental health problems, destructive behavior, passivity or violence. And these are not marginalized populations but everybody: violent or apathetic kids, mentally ill adults, lonely seniors. These Fellows have something in common: They are uncovering an unhealthy shift in post-welfare societies, and their strategies aim at reconnecting people with their emotional core and with each other in productive ways, often across generations. Whether though re-creating citizen spaces in the heart of cities or re-connecting children to nature - they re-introduce basic skills of empathy, teamwork and leadership and let individuals and groups rediscover that they are not victims of anonymous societies but emotionally competent changemakers. Yet even the power of all these Fellows combined will only be a scratch on the surface compared to the challenge of preventing Europe from becoming Detroit, and enabling it to become a society of changemakers. The biggest barriers: common objections and scepticism at 30 | 23 neurs – a country at the brink of failure trusting the citizen sector, quite remarkable.) We need to transform our standard assumptions about what each of us can do to change the world. This is a set of skills that we know: It requires empathy, teamwork, leadership. Like we have made literacy a global standard from the age of Ford and Montessori, changemaking needs to become a universal skill, and it starts in our schools, our families, our companies. A true network Ashoka Europe plans to expand the work of the Youth Venture program to enable young people to experience for themselves how they can change their world, first in small ways through a startup grant and the in ever bigger ways as they connect to the Ashoka community. Ashoka Europe plans to build a program to help every child to master empathy. And Ashoka Europe, of course, plans to elect and support more Fellows. Today we do this in countries that together account for 72% of Europe’s population. We want to be above 80% by next year, creating a true network effect of all leading social entrepreneurs on our continent, together with a much expanded support community of business entrepreneurs, all adding up to a very powerful alliance to create a Europe of changemakers. > In Europe, the biggest barriers social entrepreneurs face are not a lack of funding but common objections, scepticisms we all know: “That’s just the way it is”, and “surely that must be someone else’s responsibility”, and the terrible “It may not work, you may fail” (And perhaps also my favorite “The old days were better anyway”). And the fact that children do not have any of these objections tells us something very important: We can all be changemakers. And it also tells us where to start: with young people! How do we create a Europe of changemakers – a place that attracts ever more changemakers in a virtuous cycle? Yes, we can and need to cut down the red tape and make it easier for entrepreneurs to start. (Interestingly, Greece has just created landmark legislation for social entrepre- A Europe of changemakers | 24 | Ashoka at 30 2.} We need a revolution in how we support pattern changing ideas We need a revolution in how we support great ideas. Money cannot buy social entrepreneurs but it can make a crucial difference to the path and speed of the development of their ideas. Europe is a wealthy continent. Paradoxically, this has led to a citizen sector that lives on the breadcrumbs of this wealth, with grants from governments, foundations, or CSR programs. All across Europe, governments, foundations and other socially minded investors are doing their best to make smart decisions with the funds that have been entrusted to them. This is hard work. Wherever we look, we see the ruins of pilot projects and the crumbling testimonies of disconnected, failing pet projects. This is what happens when you do not have a great social entrepreneur at the heart of change or when you force a social entrepreneur to follow a roadmap dictated by people who want to build their own legacy. Europe needs to shift from a charitable view of funding social entrepreneurs to an investment approach, yet one that is completely different (and much smarter) than anything we see coming from the financial industry. Give it wings This is hard because the paradigms of the financial world are very established in our minds. They are about growing revenues, increasing profit margins, and exiting at the right moment. An stock investment of $1 in Ford in 1911 would be worth $313,678 today. What is the equivalent for Montessori? And I do not mean: what would an investor have been able to get his money back? I mean: what on earth would she have done with someone who wanted to buy equity? We have learned time and again, and most prominently in the Ashoka Globalizer program, that the fastest way to grow an idea is to give it wings and let it fly, spreading the new insight to as many changemakers as possible. And not to lock it in, maximize | A Europe of changemakers the value capture and increase the margins to pay back an investor. Quite opposite to what the new trend of impact investing suggests, bringing the paradigms from traditional finance to the social sector will only be useful for comparatively conventional ideas with a clear market. For ideas that could spawn a social movement like Montessori’s, we need investors who support the spread of an idea rather than purely the success of an organization. Here, again, as in generating changemakers, there is a special challenge and a special path for Europe in funding changemakers. Not because we have a scarcity of funds but because we have too much of the wrong type of funds in Europe: the unentrepreneurial kind that flows through enormous delivery mechanisms without accountability or the capacity for change. Fortunately, Europe has two solutions to this challenge, and we do not need one new law or regulation for them: Europe’s promotional banks, and a new generation of business entrepreneurs. Europe’s public promotional banks like the KfW or the EIB (each with €400bn assets) have been great success stories in providing entrepreneurial capital to grow entire industries before there was a mature market for them. The renewable energy sector and many others. As one of their executives told me, their job is to lose money in the smartest possible way for the public good. One of them has just decided to invest substantially as a follow-up to one Ashoka’s changemakers’ online competitions, attracting further capital. There is a huge potential that Ashoka Europe is now tapping, connecting the world of social entrepreneurship and government-guaranteed banks, and leveraging their unique risk profile to create a financing ecosystem that helps social entrepreneurs pursue the fastest way to impact. Among business entrepreneurs, there is now a new generation of global wealth that is quite different to the generations before: They have built their fortunes themselves and not on family money. They are globally connected instead of focused on regional charity. They are very young and constantly looking for the next big idea. They are natural partners and partners in spirit for social entrepreneurs, we already attract a lot of them, and Ashoka Europe is planning on building the greatest community of these entrepreneurs. 3.} We need to tear down the walls between sectors and create large scale collaborations of changemakers Finally, we need to break down the boundaries of sectors if we want to scale change quickly enough to solve the accelerating problems of our time. The world of social entrepreneurship has evolved beyond the focus on the individual, yet we are far from realizing the potential of collaboration. Everywhere around the world, we are beginning to witness the impact of social entrepreneurs collaborating with business to build hybrid value chains. This makes a lot of sense, not only to scale social solutions to market size but also for the businesses who gain the ability to solve social problems impending on their markets, and to see where future change will come from. The Ashoka Fellowship is like a radar for social change, for impending shifts in our societies, for changes in the marketplace, for new business models even. Wherever new populations become full economic citizens, social entrepreneurs are the first to involve them. Wherever a society transforms itself to a new level, they play a key role. They push the envelope of what is possible, starting with a crazy idea and establishing a new standard. For any business entrepreneur, watching this process is like a predictor of new markets, customers, and of new ways to be parts of historic transformations. In Europe, we need to learn a new type of collaborations for social entrepreneurs: with the large existing social infrastructures! We have the largest delivery mechanisms in the world for education, health, housing, care, employment and so forth. We see the most successful Ashoka Fellows avoiding to build their own mini-sectors and instead nudge these systems (especially Ashoka when expanding internationally). Why build footpaths when we have the highways already built? This challenges the assumptions of our field: When most people think of social entrepreneurs, they think of the archetype that the field has created and celebrated over 30 years: the founder person of a local economic development innovation that lifts people out of poverty in a developing country or emerging market. In his or her economy, there is no alternative to entrepreneurship and self-financing models if you want to solve a social problem. And the growth of his or her new idea is uninhibited by competition from government, and centuries old welfare organizations, churches, associations and foundations. In Europe, with the blessings of comprehensive education and health systems, state welfare and pensions, social entrepreneurs are rarely completely alone in their fields but often deeply embedded in existing structures. As powerful as social entrepreneurs are, they are deeply embedded in our sophisticated educational, health and other systems. They will scale much faster using them rather than competing against them. We need to build the next generation of collaborations right there, and Ashoka Europe will work through Localizer programs in many regions to build these collaborations. We are advising many of our governments to repurpose existing systems for innovation and create value chains between social entrepreneurs and the entire school system or the entire health system. Let us not create a separate field with social entrepreneurship, one that is in competition with all of them and lives on the breadcrumbs of charity, but one that is at the heart between the sectors! Social entrepreneurship has barely gotten started in Europe yet. This meeting in Paris has come at a special moment. History is accelerating. Everyone can feel it: In the Arab world, history is rewritten within one spring. Africa leapfrogs generations of communication technologies with half a billion mobile phone users within only a few years. Asia creates more entrepreneurs every year than the rest of the world combined. In all of these transformations, Ashoka Fellows play key roles channeling the forces of change for good. It may have taken Montessori’s idea 100 years to get where they are today. We will not have that time. The change we witness is networked, so the solutions will have to be globally connected as well. Europe is late but brings a few interesting ideas My grandfather was born in 1911, the same year Henry Ford and Maria Montessori launched their world-changing innovations. It is only two generations ago that childcare was revolutionized. My daughter is now six months old. What change will she see? Do we have another two generations to solve the problems her generation will face? Who will teach her the life skills of empathy, teamwork, leadership and changemaking that she will need to be a positive force in the world? Ashoka at 30 is not about electing great social entrepreneurs and then letting them succeed or not. It is about history in action, about creating the world’s largest community of entrepreneurial minds to pull the smartest levers we can think of – to ensure that solutions keep outpacing problems in our societies. In Europe, we have come late to the party of social entrepreneurship, historically speaking. But we bring a few interesting ideas – in addition to the best champagne. We have only begun the work of Ashoka in Europe, and are stepping out of national launches as the only organization connecting social innovators across all of Europe. We are just getting started! When I look around me today, I see everything we need for this acceleration, for a step change, not an incremental increase in the size and scope existing solutions but in launching the Maria Montessoris of our time, the bottom-up, local champions of social innovation, who will not rest, who will overcome all barriers, who will accept risk, lead us out of our comfort zone and create a society that empowers people with disabilities to compete in new ways, that produces entrepreneurship rather than at 30 | 25 joblessness, that connects indigenous knowledge to fair world markets, that enable children to be problem solvers, that make our democracies transparent and accountable, that recreate safe and sane relationships to agriculture and food, and that pioneer health care for everyone across distances – in other words, that will achieve as much and more in the next 10 years as the past generations of entrepreneurs have in the past 100 years. Thank you all for this extraordinary gathering: Thank you to the Fellows, thank you to our friends and guests, thank you to the many supporters of this event, and most of all, thank you to the French team for making Paris the center of the world for these days. < → Felix Oldenburg General Manager Ashoka Germany, European Director A Europe of changemakers | 26 | Ashoka at 30 1 | Partners’ dinner Ashoka at 30 | 27 3 2 → Paris, Wednesday, 22 June, evening celebration Partners’ dinner An elegant ending to a weeklong 30th birthday celebration that inspired new ideas and stimulated Ashoka’s vast network of changemakers to continue impacting the world.In a beautiful French setting at the Salle Wagram in Paris, 300 Ashoka Support Network members, fellows and Ashoka staff gathered to discuss their vision of an Everyone a Changemaker world … 4 1Scene of the Gala event on the last night at Salle Wagram 2 Bill Drayton speaking about Ashoka after 30 years with David Bornstein (left) and french journalist/ TV host for M6, Bernard de La Villardière (right) 3 Saïd Hammouche, Ashoka Fellow 2007, France, Founded Mozaïk RH (left), Ignace Schops, Ashoka Fellow 2008, Belgium, Founder of RLKM (right) 4 Rosanne Haggerty, Ashoka Fellow 2007, Founder of Community Solutions 5 Vicky Colbert, Ashoka Fellow 2003, Colombia, founded Escuela Nueva 5 Partners’ dinner | 28 | Ashoka at 30 … Bill Drayton spoke of Ashoka’s evolution over the past three decades and Ashoka allies, including Entreprendre & +, UBS and Deloitte reaffirmed their commitment to promoting social entrepreneurs who are tackling global problems. The evening finale included dancing into the wee hours of the morning, as attendees took a well-deserved break from changing the world Partners’ dinner | Partners’ dinner Ashoka at 30 | Partners’ dinner | 29 30 | Ashoka at 30 It made my dream come true You never retire from Ashoka The best present to Ashoka Although money is not everything, the Ashoka stipend I received for 3 years made my dream to have our own radio station come true. Thanks to the Ashoka network (and especially its Indonesia staff at the time Helen and Marjie), and in partnership with HAPSARI (Himpunan Serikat Perempuan Indonesia – Congregation of Women Union Indonesia), we built the Women Community Radio Station, HAPSARI FM. And we’re very proud of that. Ashoka has became part of my life story, that can never be changed, and I value that very much. Happy birthday Ashoka ... 30 years! In 1994, I was hired to lead Ashoka Poland. At the time, Ashoka had not yet streamlined its global operations so I needed to learn how to identify the characteristics of a social entrepreneur on my own. Quite a challenge in a country where “entrepreneurship” had a negative connotation, especially just after the romantic Solidarity movement - a movement driven by passion and heart (...) After 15 years with Ashoka, I ”retired“ at the age of 65. But did I stop working? No way: I joined academia to research social change as driven by Ashoka Fellows: what makes it unique? How do social entrepreneurs in fact achieve durable and irreversible social change? How do they involve and empower groups and societies, given the words of Peter Drucker: “Social Entrepreneurs change the performance capacity of a society”? My research revealed some insights on the personality traits of Ashoka Fellows, as compared with leading social activists and with a random sample of the society. I also managed to pin down some innovative methods used by social entrepreneurs. And this was real big-bang stuff! Scholarly articles followed, and the university got truly excited. My ‚retirement’ then accelerated even further, into more research and more publications, and even more excitement. Who’s retired? It has been great knowing Ashoka! I never had the slightest idea I would fit into the definition of a social entrepreneur, but I ended being one. Somebody once said that Bill Drayton should be nominated for the Nobel Peace Price. Why don´t we (as fellows or world citizens) get organized to make this nomination come true? I think this could be the best present we could give for the 30th Ashoka anniversary. → Lely Zeilani Keeping alight the flame I write in this birthday card to celebrate the anniversary of Ashoka! Perhaps, I am one of the oldest social entrepreneurs, one of the deans as I like to say. I am keeping alight the flame of social entrepreneurship, as I did in the late 1980’s when I became an Ashoka Fellow in Brazil. The spirit of Ashoka took root in me and never left! I am very grateful for this and wish Bill, the entire direction of Ashoka, and the Fellows throughout the world all the wisdom, courage and determination in order to change the unjust structures in which our societies are installed. → Diva Moreira → Ryszard Praszkier Thank goodness Social entrepreneurs, global strategic knowledge, and networks are an awesome force that Ashoka combines to catalyze global social change. Thank goodness Canada is part of the Ashoka universe! → Tim Draimin, Social Innovation Generation (SiG) National, www.sigeneration.ca | Birthday cards → Laura Lang, Programa de Aliados Cambio Climático, www.programaacc.com Next stop: Ashoka Caribbean Congratulations, Bill Drayton, on your amazing work! You have gifted us with the world’s best tool. Thank you. Long live Ashoka and here is to Ashoka next chapter – Ashoka Caribbean! (We will make it happen)! → Pramilla Ramdahani, The Social Enterprise and Fundraising Group, www.sefadgroup.com The most fortunate person in the world Because of Ashoka I wake up every day feeling like the most fortunate person in the world. With Ashoka’s support and network I walk stronger in dedicating my life’s mission to implement bold and effective systems to eradicate extreme poverty. → Daphne Nederhost, Sawa World, www.sawaworld.org Ashoka at 30 | 31 30 years of changing the world Our community of friends and entrepreneurs sent us messages from all over the world. Here are some of their stories they want to share Birthday cards | 32 | Ashoka at 30 Spotlight: Can entrepreneurs save the world? A new alliance for global change Working together, corporations and social entrepreneurs can reshape industries and solve the world’s toughest problems. This article was first published by Harvard Business Review in 2010 By Bill Drayton and Valeria Budinich Idea in Brief The time is ripe for collaboration between for-profit businesses and mission-driven individuals and organizations. By forming “hybrid value chains” the for-profit and citizen sectors can together remake global economies and create lasting social change. Businesses offer scale, expertise in operations, and financing. Social entrepreneurs offer lower costs, strong social networks, and a deeper understanding of customers and communities. Example: Local citizen groups helped to persuade Amanco, a maker of water-conveyance products, that small farmers in Mexico represented a significant market opportunity. They partnered with the company to organize farmers into loan groups, promote irrigation technologies, and even install systems. The social entrepreneurs are helping the farmers get financing so that they can afford Amanco’s products. This newly created drip irrigation market is worth about $56 million a year – and farmers are enjoying higher yields. | A new alliance for global change WE ARE witnessing a sea change in the way society’s problems are solved, work is performed, and businesses grow. Collaborations between corporations and social entrepreneurs can create and expand markets on a scale not seen since the Industrial Revolution. These markets will reach everyone, but especially the 4 billion people who are not yet part of the world’s formal economy. They will offer new and remarkable products and services in sectors as diverse as education, transportation, and finance. You may be skeptical of this claim, and with good reason. The citizen sector—the term we use to define the millions of groups established and run by mission-minded individuals across the globe who are attempting to address critical social needs—has long been regarded as understaffed and inefficient. But that has changed. We work with some 3,000 social entrepreneurs worldwide, and over the past 30 years we’ve seen the citizen sector catch up with business as it has increased its productivity, size, and reach. Its organizations are attracting talented and creative leaders, and their work is changing the game in critical industries and areas such as energy and health care. For-profit organizations today have an opportunity to collaborate with citizen-sector organizations (CSOs) on large-scale problems that neither group has been able to solve on its own. The power of such partnerships lies in the complementary strengths of the participants: Businesses offer scale, expertise in manufacturing and operations, and financing. Social entrepreneurs and organizations contribute lower costs, strong social networks, and deep insights into customers and communities. Ashoka But to work together effectively, they must focus on creating real economic as well as social value. We believe they can do so by forming what we call hybrid value chains (HVCs), which capitalize on those complementary strengths to increase benefits and lower costs. This trend has been developing for years, and we’ve participated in pilot projects that have delivered impressive results and promise extraordinary growth. HVCs can now be found in many industries all over the world. Collaboration between corporations and CSOs has reached a tipping point: It is becoming standard operating procedure. Indeed, we believe that if you’re not thinking about such collaboration, you’ll soon be guilty of strategy malpractice. The vibrancy of the citizen sector Before we explore the inner workings of hybrid value chains, it may be helpful to look at how we got here. In the 1700s business became entrepreneurial. Upstarts devising faster and more-efficient ways to produce goods ushered in the Industrial Revolution. They introduced innovation after innovation, ultimately changing the world. After remaining flat for a millennium, per capita income in the West rose by an average of 20% in the 1700s, 200% in the 1800s, and 740% in the past century. But while the for-profit sector enjoyed sweeping progress, the citizen sector languished. It faced little outside market pressure and relied heavily on funding from governments that, as monopolies, feared competition. CSOs felt little push to innovate; as a result, they fell far behind in productivity, performance, pay rates, confidence, and reputation. By 1980 the imbalance between the business and social sectors of society had become intolerable. (We had great TVs but lousy education.) New opportunities emerged across the world (except where governments got in the way), and the citizen sector restructured itself to become entrepreneurial and competitive. It rapidly increased productivity and scale, lowering the cost of goods and services it provided relative to business’s offerings. Since then, the citizen sector has been creating jobs about three times as fast as have other employers in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development countries. In Brazil the number of CSOs rose from about 36,000 to nearly a million over the past 20 years. In the United States their number has grown by more than 300% since 1982. Today millions of these groups attract talented individuals who long for challenging and lucrative work that is consistent with their personal values and goals. Take David Green, who helped start Aurolab, an India-based nonprofit that produces intraocular lenses to restore sight to cataract patients. It has managed to reduce the price of lenses from $300 to $10 or less, by using emerging technology and restructuring its manufacturing costs. Aurolab is the manufacturing division of Aravind Eye Hospitals, which charge patients for the lenses on a sliding scale depending on their income. It has captured about 8% of the global intraocular lens market and sells about 1.5 million such lenses each year in 109 countries. Green, working with at 30 | 33 Ashoka, the International Agency for the Prevention of Blindness, and Deutsche Bank, has also launched The Eye Fund, a $15 million loan fund that will enable eye-care groups to grow far faster than they otherwise could, significantly speeding the reduction of blindness. Or consider Rodrigo Baggio, who created a chain of computer schools serving hundreds of slums across Latin America and Asia. He persuaded one organization after another to donate, warehouse, and transport their used computers, and thousands of slum dwellers to set up and run the schools. These schools now boast some 700,000 graduates. We could go on and on. But our point is that many social entrepreneurs are already out there changing the world—and businesses have largely been overlooking them. It was previously safe to ignore the citizen sector, because this segment of the economy was relatively small in scale and low in productivity. That’s no longer true. The companies that work with and learn from the sector and its leaders will reach large new markets. They will also gain competitive advantage from new business models and first-mover benefits. The time is ripe for collaboration because the two sectors are now equally innovative. Together they can promote changes as powerful and widespread as those produced by the Industrial Revolution. Hybrid value chains Hybrid value chains represent a systemic shift in the way businesses and CSOs interact. They are collaborations that redefine value in gamechanging ways, with each side clearly understanding (and willingly accepting) the risks and rewards. → Please continue reading online → Bill Drayton →Valeria Budinich CEO & Founder of Chief Entrepreneur Ashoka of Full Economic Citizenship Initiative A new alliance for global change | 34 | Ashoka at 30 → Paris, 20-22 June Photo highlights It was a busy week in Paris at the gathering of the friends and family members of the Ashoka community. Under the High Patronage of French President Nicolas Sarkozy Social and Youth Entrepreneurs from all over the world shared their views, ideas and experiences and presented innovative solutions … | Highlights Ashoka at 30 | Highlights | 35 36 | Ashoka at 30 … The first Changemaker Week was everything but an academic conference. As workshops were held, new models were founded and co-operations arranged while others worked intimately on their businesses. Here we present some photo highlights of the outstanding event. Photo highlights | Highlights Ashoka at 30 | Highlights | 37 38 | Ashoka at 30 Understanding the impact of social entrepreneurs: Ashoka’s answer to the challenge of Measuring Effectiveness This article from 2007 analyzes how Ashoka has supported leading social entrepreneurs for the first 25 years by investing in them and connecting them to a global community of their peers. Today’s Ashoka Fellowship consists of more than 2,700 social entrepreneurs working in every area of human need – from health care and education, to civil justice and the environment. Ashoka has no religious or political affiliation and receives funding primarily from individuals, volunteer chapters, foundations, and business entrepreneurs. By Noga Leviner, Leslie R. Crutchfield, Diana Wells S ocial entrepreneurs play a unique role in creating world change. They are distinguished from other citizen sector leaders by their long-term focus on creating wide-scale change at the systemic level. This type of change is often difficult to measure. Many of the methodologies designed to assess impact in citizen sector organizations today focus on easily-quantifiable figures such as financial ratios or programmatic outputs. Such metrics emphasize financial stability and other “hard” organizational factors that lend themselves to quantitative measurement. But these measures miss what Ashoka considers to be the most important and meaningful product of a social entrepreneur’s work—systemic social change over time. Ashoka developed the Measuring Effectiveness (ME) program in 1997 to better understand the progress of its social entrepreneurs toward systemic social change. The cornerstone of the program, the Measuring Effectiveness annual survey, is designed to track the progress of cohorts of Ashoka Fellows over time. This self-response survey is distributed among groups of social entrepreneurs | Understanding the impact of social entrepreneurs at the five- and 10-year anniversary of their Ashoka Fellowship. The survey employs a group of proxy indicators which track data that can be aggregated across widely divergent fields of work and organizational strategies; examples of some of the proxy indicators include the frequency with which the Fellows’ work has been replicated by other organizations, and the level of influence that Fellow has had on public policy. To complement the broad strokes painted by the results of these surveys, Ashoka staff carry out case studies with a sub-set of the surveyed Fellows to obtain more indepth, qualitative information. The ME survey’s proxy indicators are closely linked to Ashoka’s Fellow selection process, which enables staff and peers to make qualitative assessments of candidates’ potential by applying five rigorous selection criteria. This front-loaded selection process is the chief mechanism that Ashoka employs to screen social entrepreneurs at the early stages of their work, and is designed to select only those candidates who are highly likely to achieve wide-scale systemic change in the long term. The ME program is thus a tool Ashoka that is useful both for tracking the Fellows’ progress toward systemic change and for measuring Ashoka’s ability to successfully identify leading social entrepreneurs at the launch stage. This article explores in depth the Measuring Effectiveness program, focusing on the annual global Fellowship survey and accompanying case studies. The article begins with an overview of recent trends in social entrepreneurship and select milestones in performance measurement in the U.S. citizen sector. The article then offers definitions of social entrepreneurship and systemic change that have been developed by Ashoka during its 25 years of investing in and supporting the field. It goes on to present the Ashoka Measuring Effectiveness methodology and includes sample results from the first six years of survey implementation. Ashoka continues to refine its ME approach each year, but proposes that its current methodology provides a useful first solution to the challenge of tracking large groups of social entrepreneurs’ progress toward systemic change over time. Context: Trends in citizen sector growth and Performance Measurement The citizen sector, often referred to as the nonprofit sector in the United States, is expanding around the globe. Consider that in the United States alone, it encompasses more than 1.3 million organizations and is growing rapidly; citizen organizations grew faster than the Gross Domestic Product from 1983 –1998, with the equivalent of 30,000 new organizations created each year (Lowell, 2001). Internationally, the rise and growth of citizen organizations reflects a similar trend. In the 22 countries studied by Johns Hopkins University, citizen organizations now employ 19 million workers and engage the equivalent of another 10 million full-time volunteers. As Salamon (2000) observes, “Few developments on the global scene over the past three decades have been as momentous as the recent upsurge in private, nonprofit, voluntary, or civil society organizations. We are in the midst of a ‘global associational revolution,’ a massive expansion of structured citizen activity outside the boundaries of the marke and the state.” With the growth of the citizen sector has come an increased focus on measuring organizational effectiveness and ensuring accountability. In the U.S. context, factors 91 contributing to this trend include increasing pressure on government managers to demonstrate results because of the recent Government Performance and Results Act (Salamon, 2002), and heightened scrutiny in response to visible scandals such as the conviction of United Way’s Bill Aramony in the 1990s. As many established foundations and some high net-worth individuals increasingly emphasize the outcomes of their donations, sub-industries have emerged to support this trend. In the United States, consider the launch in 39 at 30 | 1997 of the foundation affinity group, Grantmakers for Effective Organizations (GEO), and the creation in 2000 of the Center for Effective Philanthropy. New institutions such as these have helped further the development of methodologies to evaluate performance and measure impact, building on earlier contributions by Drucker, the W.K. Kellogg Foundation, and others who built influential frameworks for measurement in the sector (Drucker 1990, Patrizi 1998). The focus of the recently-developed methodologies has moved toward assessment of outcomes (such as the rate by which teenage pregnancy has been reduced) and away from measurement of programmatic outputs (such as number of clients served or number of sites opened). Independent Sector, a nonprofit membership organization, asserts that outcomes assessment was new to most private nonprofit organizations as recently as 2001 (Morely, 2001). The recent rise of venture-style philanthropy has also influenced the outcomesassessment debate. Venture philanthropists adapt commercial venture capital and investment industry techniques to the challenge of supporting and growing nonprofit organizations. The U.S. venture philanthropy wave gained real momentum after Harvard Business Review published in 1997 the article, “Virtuous Capital,” which provided side-by-side comparisons of philanthropic foundation and venture capitalist approaches to funding organizations. In “Virtuous Capital,” Letts et al. suggest that some of the advantages of the for-profit venture capitalists’ approach include longer investment time horizons (typically seven years rather than two to three), closer relationships with “investees,” and a focus on building capacity to deliver goods and services, rather than funding individual programs (Letts, 1997). Subsequent reports published by Venture Philanthropy Partners (2000) have tracked the development of this emerging field. > Table 1. Select venture organizations supporting social entrepreneurs Ashoka Echoing Green Avina Foundation Roberts Enterprise Development Fund Social Venture Partners (Seattle) New Profit, Inc. New Schools Venture Fund Omidyar Network Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship Skoll Foundation Venture Philanthropy Partners Year founded 1980 1987 1994 1997 1997 1998 1998 1998 1998 1999 2000 Understanding the impact of social entrepreneurs | 40 | Ashoka at 30 The trend toward venture-style investing has contributed to heightened interest in social entrepreneurship in the United States, as venture philanthropists seek entrepreneurial nonprofit “investees” who can maximize the value of their donations through increased social change on regional, national, and even international scales. Toward this end, venture philanthropists have employed new sets of tools to track the impact of social entrepreneurs. In one prominent example, Kaplan’s balanced scorecard brings together several performance indicators and consolidates them into a single measurement tool, which is useful in measuring progress towards an organization’s mission. However, the balanced scorecard largely serves as an internal management tool rather than as a mechanism for assessing external impact (Clark, 2003). REDF’s Social Return on Investment (SROI) strategy presents another pioneering approach to the challenge, one that involves assigning quantitative values to qualitative indicators of social change. The application of SROI has many challenges; for instance, REDF includes as inputs to the SROI formula, “social outcomes of ordinarily difficult-to-monetize measures of social value, such as increases in self-esteem and social support systems, or improvements in housing stability” (REDF, 2005). Monetizing intangible factors such as self-esteem is both extremely time- and resourceintensive, and is vulnerable to faulty valuation, among other drawbacks (Clark, 2003). In the more recent Digital Era, a spate of internet-based platforms has provided potential donors with easily-accessible information about tax-exempt groups that they might fund. Examples of such websites include Charity Navigator, GEXSI, Global Giving, and Guidestar. These groups use data gleaned primarily from organizations’ IRS Forms 990 to provide largely quantitative data analyses designed to illustrate the efficiency and effectiveness of charities through financial ratios. They score each charity relative to peer organizations based on these ratios, offering conclusions such as organizations with relatively low administrative-toprogram expense ratios are preferable to donors. Given that the scores are published with limited explanation, “this approach can cause more harm than good” (Lowell, 2005). Websites such as these are not well-suited to address questions of programmatic effectiveness and external societal impact. The difficulty of measuring effectiveness of any citizen organization is welldocumented (Sawhill 1999, Salamon 2002). The field of social entrepreneurship, in particular, presents a specific set of challenges (Kramer 2005). The approaches outlined above offer a helpful array of measurement tools, which have limited usefulness when applied to the challenge of measuring systemic change over time. The following sections explore in greater depth the problems inherent to impact-assessment in the field of social entrepreneurship, and present Ashoka’s solution to the challenge. Social entrepreneurship as systemic change: Ashoka’s definition To fully understand the complexities of evaluating the progress of social entrepreneurs, it is first necessary to understand the complexities of defining the term. ß Ashoka’s founder, William Drayton, first coined the phrase “social entrepreneurship,” a concept for which he later received a MacArthur Foundation Fellowship (commonly known as the “genius” grant). For Drayton and Ashoka, the term social entrepreneur describes an individual who conceives of, and relentlessly pursues, a new idea designed to solve societal problems on a very wide scale by changing the systems that undergird the problems. This definition includes two critical components. First, the entrepreneur must seek to create impact on a wide societal scale; he or she will not rest until the new idea has been broadly adopted at the national and even international level. Second, the entrepreneur must seek systemic change, defined as the fundamental reform of existing societal systems and/or the creation of new ones. The theory of entrepreneurship as systemic change is traced by Dees to Schumpeter, who says the entrepreneur’s main function in society is to, “ ‘…reform or revolutionize the pattern of production…by producing a new commodity or producing an old one in a new way…by reorganizing an industry and so on’” (Dees, 1998). → Please continue reading online →Noga Leviner →Leslie R. Crutchfield → Diana Wells CEO Lumni USA Managing Director Global Ashoka‘s Global Academy | Understanding the impact of social entrepreneurs President Ashoka Ashoka at 30 | 41 Ashoka by the numbers 30 27,247 50 320,627 60 1 3,891 70 0 300 25 366 4.6 55 173 4,000 Years Ashoka has been influencing the field of social entrepreneursh Number of homes improved in two years as a result of the Housing for All initiative launched in Colombia In millions, the amount invested in solutions sourced through Ashoka’s Changemakers, an online collaborative platform for open sourcing social solutions Number of followers on Ashoka’s Twitter account @AshokaTweets (with more each day!) Percentage reduction in the number of days children are hospitalized in Brazil when families engage with Associação Saúde Criança, Ashoka Fellow Vera Cordeiro’s organization Indian Fellow working in collaboration with 11 Nepalese and 1 Brazilian Fellow created a more transparent government by drafting and ensuring the passage of Nepal’s first Right to Information Bill Number of Ashoka Youth Venture teams launched globally Number of countries where Ashoka has staff and Fellows Percentage of Ashoka’s budget from government funds Number of members in the Ashoka Support Network, a community of business people from over 20 nations who commit their time and resources to support the work of social entrepreneurs Number of Ashoka Fellows engaged in the (Dis)Ability initiative collaborating globally in the theme of disabilities Percentage of increase in the number of US Fellows over the past 5 years In millions, the tons of carbon emissions saved globally through Ashoka Fellow Johannes Hengstenberg’s online campaign and energy efficiency consultation services Percentage of Ashoka’s budget from business entrepreneurs and their foundation Number of Ashoka Fellows working in Central and Eastern European countries Number of low cost, high quality, solar powered, hearing aids produced per month for low income people in developing countries through Fellow Howard Weinstein’s efforts Ashoka by the numbers | 42 | Ashoka at 30 Ashoka – global program heads and country representatives Name CountryPosition Contakt Africa Diamond Leader → c.w.carter@valley.net Argentina Social Business Coordinator → pcardenau@ashoka.org Argentina Country Representative → glazzaro@ashoka.org Marie Ringler Austria, CEE County Representative → mringler@ashoka.org 5Kurt Peleman Belgium Program Manager → kurtpel@hotmail.com Brazil Country Representative → mderoure@ashoka.org.br 1 Bill Carter Africa 2 Paula Cardenau 3 Guillermina Lazzaro 4 6 Monica de Roure 7 Celia Cruz Canada Country Representative → ccruz@ashoka.org 8 Claudia De Simone Canada Change Manager → cdesimone@ashoka.org 9 Maria Lucia Roa Country Representative → ashokacol@ashokacolombia.com Diamond Leader - → bibarsaya@adew.org.eg 10 Iman Bibars Colombia Egypt Arab World ( VP) Development Assistant → ljaimes@ashoka.org France Program Manager → smariotte@ashoka.org France Country Representative → amourot@ashoka.org Country Representative → oheister@ashoka.org 12 Dennis Hoenig-Ohnsorg Germany Director Youth Venture → dhoenig-ohnsorg@ashoka.org 16 Felix Oldenburg Europe Diamond Leader → foldenburg@ashoka.org 11 Luzette Jaimes Egypt 13Sarah Mariotte 14 Arnaud Mourot 15Oda Heister Germany Germany & Country Representative 17Konstanze Frischen Global Director Co-Creator Program → kfrischen@ashoka.org 18 Romanus Berg Global Vice President and CIO → rberg@ashoka.org 19 Jason Bernhardt-Lanier Global People Talent Leader → jbernhardt-lanier@ashoka.org Vice President, Full Economic Citizenship 20 Valeria Budinich Global 21 Tina Choi Global Director FrameworkChange → tchoi@ashoka.org 22 Amy Dalebout Global People Team Talent Staff → adalebout@ashoka.org 23 Darlene Damm Global Change Leader → ddamm@ashoka.org 24Hayley Darden Global People Search → hdarden@ashoka.org 25 Bill Drayton Global CEO and Chair → wdrayton@ashoka.org 26 Anne Evans Global Head of Strategic Resources → aevans@ashoka.org 27 Claire Fallender Global Director Venture → cfallender@ashoka.org 28Sushmita Ghosh Global President Emeritus → sghosh@ashoka.org 29 Danielle Goldstone Global Director Empathy Program → dgoldstone@ashoka.org 30 Al Hammond Global Director Health → ahammond@ashoka.org | Staff list → vbudinich@ashoka.org Ashoka Name CountryPosition at 30 | Contakt 31Kate Herrod Global People Team Talent Director → kherrod@ashoka.org 32 Marina Kim Global Venture/Global Academy → mkim@ashoka.org 33 Erin Krampetz Global Changemaker Campus Initiative → ekrampetz@ashoka.org 34 Valeria Merino Global Vice President → vmerino@ashoka.org Venture and Fellowship 35 Beverly Schwartz Global Vice President Marketing → bschwartz@ashoka.org 36 Fabricio Soares Global Chief Financial Officer → fsoares@ashoka.org 37 Benjamin Wald Global Executive Partner → bwald@ashoka.org 38 Diana Wells Global President → dwells@ashoka.org Managing Director, Social Financial Services 39Stuart Yasgur Global 43 → syasgur@ashoka.org 40 Maria Clara Pinheiro India Director Venture → mpinheiro@ashoka.org 41Solomon Prakash India Country Director → sprakash@ashoka.org 42 Mira Kusumarini Indonesia Country Representative → ashokaindonesia@bdg.centrin.net.id Ireland Country Representative → pohara@ashoka.org 43 Paul O'Hara 44 Nir Tsuk - Israel County Representative → ntsuk@ashoka.org 45Kashiwa Maki Japan Country Representative → kmaki@ashoka.org 46Salim MohamedKenya Country Representative → smohamed@ashoka.org 47 Armando Laborde Mexico Country Representative → armandolaborde@prodigy.net.mx 48 Josephine Nzerem Nigeria Country Representative → jnzerem@ashoka.org Pakistan Country Representative → fashn2000@yahoo.com 49 Fazal Noor 50 Nadine Freeman Peru Director Fellowship → nfreeman@ashoka.org 51 Rocio Infante Peru Country Representative → rocio@ashoka.org.pe Country Representative → ewa.konczal@ashoka.pl 52 Ewa Konczal Poland, CEE 53 Coumba ToureSahel Region West Africa Regional Representativ → ectoure@ashoka.org 54 Christopher CusanoSingapore Country Representative → ccusano@ashoka.org 55 Maria ZapataSpain Globalizer Co-Chair → mzapata@ashoka.org 56Susanne WittigSwitzerland Country Director → swittig@ashoka.org 57Sinee Chakthranont Country Representative → schakthranont@ashoka.org Thailand 58 Andres Falconer UK Country Representative → afalconer@ashoka.org 59Silvia Giovannoni UK Director ASN → sgiovannoni@ashoka.org 60 Paula Recart USA Country Representative → precart@ashoka.org 61 Norma Perez Venezuela County Representative → pereznorma@gmail.com Vice President Youth Venture → gzucker@ashoka.org 62 Gretchen Zucker Youth Venture Staff list | 30 1991 1990 years of changing the world 1987 1986 1985 1983 1982 1981 1984 1988 1989 2010 2009 2006 1994 2005 2008 2007 2003 1995 2002 2000 1993 2004 1998 1992 1996 2001 1997 1999 List of fellows → 46 | Ashoka at 30 List of Ashoka Fellows → 2010 H Heather Cameron - 6 | 29 | 10 Education, Germany Heidrun Mayer - 07 | 12 | 10 Education, Germany J Jean-Loup - 8 | 27 | 10 Mouysset - Health France Jorge Alberto - 08 | 04 | 10 Cappato - Environmental, Argentina A Abbass Abbass - 8 | 27 | 10 Human Right, Israel Aditya Natraj - 07 | 08 | 10 K Karin Ressel - 06 | 12 | 10 Education, Germany M Majid El Jarroudi - 8 | 27 | 10 Economic Development, France India Mathieu Ouedraogo - 5 | 31 | 10 Economic Development, Burkina Faso Anil Patel - 7 | 12 | 10 Civic Participation, Canada Antoine Sombie - 5 | 31 | 10 Economic Development, Burkina Faso P Penchom Saetang - 8 | 16 | 10 Environmental, Thailand Prayong Doklamyai - 8 | 30 | 10 Human Rights, Thailand Arnaud Castagnède - 8 | 27 | 10 Economic Development, France Carlos R Raul Krauthausen - 6 | 29 | 10 Alberto (Beto) Ricardo – 01 | 11 | 10 Learning | Education, Brazil Education, United States Education, France Cindy Blackstock - 6 | 29 | 10 Human Rights, Canada Health, Germany Cleodon Silva - 08 | 02 | 10 Civic Participation, Brazil D Dominik Księski - 8 | 26 | 10 Civic Participation, Poland E Eduardo Mallmann - 08 | 02 | 10 Economic Development, Brazil Emilie Messen - 8 | 27 | 10 Health, Belgium Emmanuel Kasperski - 8 | 27 | 10 Economic Development, France Eva Marszewski - 07 | 12 | 10 Human Rights, Canada F Felipe Heusser - 08 | 04 | 10 Chile Frank Hoffmann - 07 | 12 | 10 Health, Germany G Grégory Gendre - 8 | 27 | 10 Environmental, France Guadalupe Ortiz - 04 | 05 | 10 Montasterio Canda - Economic Development, Mexico Gülcan Nitsch - 07 | 12 | 10 Environmental, Germany | List of fellows Ana Lucia Villela - 11 | 09 | 09 Human Rights, Brazil Ana Luisa Arocena - 7 | 20 | 09 Health, Uruguay Anders Wilhemson - 8 | 31 | 09 Health, Sweden Andre Albuquerque - 8 | 27 | 09 Economic Development, Brazil Anjali Sharma - 8 | 27 | 09 Civic Engagement, India Ann Njogu - 7 | 20 | 09 Human Rights, Kenya Anna Alisjahbana - 4 | 20 | 09 Regina Cabral - 08 | 09 | 10 Annette Mbaye Derneville - 8 | 17 | 09 Rikin Gandhi - 05 | 11 | 10 S Sandrine Faust - 6 | 29 | 10 Education, Canada Stuart Cohen - 7 | 16 | 10 Environmental, United States Hildegard Schooß, Civic Engagement, Germany Claudine Labelle - 6 | 29 | 10 Health, Canada Clemens Becker - 07 | 12 | 10 Amory Lovins - 06 | 08 | 09 Environment, United States Health, Indonesia Economic Development, India Chantal Mainguené - 8 | 27 | 10 Alito Alessi - 4 | 20 | 09 Human Rights, Mexico Economic Development, Germany Education, Brazil C Casey Fenton - 8 | 16 | 10 Alicia Cytrynblum - 7 | 17 | 09 Human Rights, Argentina T Tamba Dhar - 6 | 29 | 10 Education, Canada Tobias Leenaert - 01 | 11 | 10 Environmental, Belgium W Wamuyu Mahinda - 5 | 31 | 10 Economic Development, Kenya Wendy Pekeur - 8 | 20 | 10 Human Rights, South Africa Y Yoseph Suyatno Hadiatmadja - 8 | 16 | 10 Human Rights, Indonesia Civic Engagement, Senegal Arnold Noyek - 8 | 31 | 09 Health, Canada Asad Danish - 4 | 20 | 09 Human Rights, Afghanistan Ashley Westaway - 8 | 25 | 09 Civic Engagement, South Africa Ashok Khosla - 8 | 31 | 09 Economic Development, India Ashwin Mahesh - 8 | 31 | 09 Learning | Education, India Azza Kamel - 03 | 09 | 09 Learning / Education, Egypt B Balsam Al-Ayoub - 03 | 09 | 09 Human Rights, Kuwait Belinda Wright - 8 | 31 | 09 Environment, India Ben Powell - 8 | 17 | 09 Economic Development, Nicaragua Bernard Amadei - 12 | 14 | 09 → 2009 Economic Development, United States Bezwada Wilson - 7 | 20 | 09 Human Rights, India Bibhu Kalyan Mohanty - 7 | 13 | 09 Health, India Brendan Martin - 7 | 17 | 09 A Adalberto Verissimo - 4 | 20 | 09 Environment, Brazil Economic Development, Argentina Bruce Bloom - 7 | 20 | 09 Adarsh Kumar - 8 | 27 | 09 Health, United States Ahmed El Maraghy - 03 | 09 | 09 Civic Engagement, Argentina Economic Development, India Human Rights, Egypt Albert Jovell - 4 | 20 | 09 Health, Spain Busso Néstor - 8 | 19 | 09 C Chris Balme - 12 | 14 | 09 Learning / Education, United States Christa Gannon - 12 | 14 | 09 Human Rights, United States Ashoka Christian Hiss - 7 | 17 | 09 Economic Development, Germany Conchy Bretos - 12 | 14 | 09 Civic Engagement, United States Connie Siskowski - 05 | 11 | 09 Learning | Education, United States D Daniel Ben-Horin - 06 | 08 | 09 United States Danielle Desguees - 8 | 31 | 09 Joachim Ezeji - 8 | 19 | 09 Economic Development, Nigeria Joachim Körkel - 7 | 17 | 09 Health, Germany Johann Olav Koss - 07 | 02 | 09 Learning | Education, Canada John Danner - 12 | 14 | 09 Learning / Education, United States Jorge Gronda - 01 | 08 | 09 Economic Development, France Health, Argentina Daphne Nederhorst - 8 | 31 | 09 Jose Raúl Moreno - 8 | 28 | 09 Colombia Juan Rivera - 8 | 17 | 09 Economic Development , Peru Juanita León - 8 | 17 | 09 Economic Development, Canada David Castro - 05 | 11 | 09 Civic Engagement, Learning, Education, United States Dennis Karpes - 05 | 11 | 09 Civic Engagement, Netherlands Devi Shetty - 07 | 08 | 09 Health, India Dialia KEITA - 7 | 13 | 09 Economic Development, Mali E Elizabeth Hausler - 8 | 27 | 09 United States F Fairouz Omar - 03 | 09 | 09 Learning / Education, Egypt Human Rights, Colombia Jyoti Sharma - 8 | 27 | 09 Civic Engagement, India K Katarzyna Batko-Tołuć -7 | 20 | 09 Civic Engagement, Indonesia Katja Urbatsch - 7 | 20 | 09 Learning | Education, Germany Katyna de la Vega - 6 | 24 | 09 Economic Development, Mexico Kaushlendra - 7 | 13 | 09 Farouk Jiwa - 7 | 13 | 09 Economic Development, India Fernando Monckeberg - 8 | 17 | 09 Health, Chile Florence Wambugu - 07 | 02 | 09 Economic Development, Pakistan Economic Development, Kenya Economic Development, Kenya G Gary Slutkin - 8 | 17 | 09 Civic EngagementUnited States Khan Shoaib Sultan - 07 | 02 | 09 Kongkiat Kespechara - 8 | 24 | 09 Thailand L Ladji NIANGANE - 08 | 10 | 09 Economic Development, Mali at 30 | Marcos Flavio Correa Azzi - 11 | 09 | 09 Economic Development, Brazil Marion Steffens - 7 | 17 | 09 Health, Germany Marta Porto - 11 | 09 | 09 Civic Participation, Brazil Mary Nally - 8 | 31 | 09 Ireland Menaha Kandasamy - 8 | 31 | 09 Civic Participation, Sri Lanka Michael Stenger - 7 | 17 | 09 Learning | Education, Germany Michael Turner - 7 | 20 | 09 Economic Development, United States Mohamed El Sawy - 4 | 20 | 09 Civic Engagement, Egypt Moses Kizza Musaazi - 7 | 20 | 09 Economic Development, Kenya Muchlis L. Usman - 08 | 10 | 09 Civic EngagementIndonesia Munyaradzi Saruchera - 8 | 17 | 09 Environment, South Africa N Nawee Nakwatchara - 8 | 24 | 09 Thailand Nicholas Reville - 7 | 20 | 09 Civic EngagementUnited States Nick Sireau -12 | 14 | 09 United Kingdom Nitin More - 8 | 27 | 09 Economic Development; Civic Engagement, India P Paul Rieckhoff - 12 | 14 | 09 Leonora Mol - 8 | 27 | 09 Civic Participation, United States Gijs Spoor - 7 | 13 | 09 Economic Development, Brazil United States Gilles Reydellet - 8 | 31 | 09 Lexy Junior Horo Rambadeta - 08 | 10 | 09 Civic Engagement, Indonesia Lily Lapenna - 12 | 14 | 09 Luh Putu Upadisari - 08 | 10 | 09 Czech Republic Luis Aguilar - 5 | 31 | 09 Czech Republic Lulwa Al-Ayoub - 03 | 09 | 09 Economic Development, France Economic Development, Brazil France H Hasan Arif - 07 | 02 | 09 Pakistan Herb Sturz - 06 | 08 | 09 Learning / Education, United States I Ilona Dougherty - 08 | 11 | 09 Civic EngagementCanada Ingrid Munro - 4 | 20 | 09 Economic Development, Kenya J Janina Mirończuk - 7 | 20 | 09 Health, Poland Jean-Claude Decalonne - 4 | 20 | 09 Learning / Education, France Jean-François Archambault - 08 | 11 | 09 Economic Development, Canada Jennifer Dordor - 7 | 13 | 09 Economic Development, Ghana Jerry White - 08 | 10 | 09 Human Rights, United States United Kingdom Health, Indonesia Civic Engagement, Guatemala Human Rights, Kuwait M M. Syafii Anwar - 08 | 10 | 09 Learning | Education, Indonesia Manoj Bhatt - 8 | 27 | 09 Economic Development; Environment, India Manon Barbeau - 01 | 12 | 09 Civic Engagement, Canada Manuela Richter-Werling - 7 | 17 | 09 Health, Germany Manzoor Mirani - 05 | 11 | 09 Human Rights, Pakistan 47 Paul Riekhoff - 12 | 14 | 09 Paulino Decanini - 8 | 31 | 09 Mexico Pavel Cincera - 8 | 31 | 09 Petra Vrtbovska - 7 | 20 | 09 Pierre Rabhi - 4 | 20 | 09 R Rabee Zureikat - 08 | 10 | 09 Economic Development, Jordan Rachel Lloyd - 7 | 20 | 09 Human Rights, United States Radoslaw Gawlik - 8 | 31 | 09 Environment, Poland Rana Sengupta - 8 | 27 | 09 Economic Development, India Randolph Wang - 08 | 10 | 09 Learning | Education, India Ranil Senanayaka - 8 | 31 | 09 Environmental, Sri Lanka List of fellows | 48 | Ashoka at 30 Raziq Fahim - 05 | 11 | 09 Civic Engagement, Pakistan Reinaldo Pamponet - 8 | 25 | 09 Economic Development, Brazil Robert Karl Henrik - 8 | 19 | 09 Environment, Sweden Roem Topatimasang - 8 | 17 | 09 Civic Participation, Indonesia S Safura Begum - 06 | 10 | 09 Health, Bangladesh Samar Dudin - 03 | 09 | 09 V Valentinus Heri - 08 | 10 | 09 Environment, Indonesia Vera Perino - 11 | 09 | 09 Health, Brazil Vincent Carelli - 8 | 19 | 09 Human Rights, Brazil W Willie Smits - 8 | 30 | 09 Environment, Indonesia Z Zeinab Al-Momany - 03 | 09 | 09 Economic Development, Jordan Sandra Schürmann - 7 | 20 | 09 Sanjeev Arora - 05 | 11 | 09 → 2008 Health, United States Sergio Haddad - 8 | 19 | 09 Learning , Education, Brazil Sergio Oceransky - 05 | 05 | 09 Environment, Mexico Arif Khan - 8 | 29 | 08 Economic Development, Pakistan Auro Lescher - 7 | 22 | 08 Learning , Education, Brazil Bagnomboé Bakiono - 8 | 27 | 08 Health, Burkina Faso Learning , Education, Indonesia Bambang Ismawan - 8 | 25 | 08 Economic Development, Indonesia B Beatriz Fadón Junyent - 05 | 12 | 08 Economic Development, Spain Sergio Aguayo - 8 | 17 | 09 Mexico Aparna Banerjee - 8 | 25 | 08 Economic Development, India Bambang Basuki - 8 | 18 | 08 Civic Engagement, Jordan Civic Engagement, Germany Andy Lipkis - 8 | 27 | 08 Environment, United States Bikash Mahapatra - 8 | 25 | 08 A Abba Mohammed - 4 | 14 | 08 Economic Development, Nigeria Learning , Education, India Bindeshwar Pathak - 8 | 29 | 08 Abdul Qadir - 8 | 29 | 08 Health, Pakistan Adalberto Barreto - 10 | 13 | 08 Health, Brazil Adam Fraser - 8 | 29 | 08 Health Environment, India Adele Douglass - 8 | 18 | 08 Civic Engagement, United States Sonam Jorgyes - 8 | 27 | 09 Economic Development, United States Economic Development, South Africa Srisak Thaiarry - 8 | 27 | 09 Adeolu Adegbola - 01 | 01 | 08 Nigeria Adriana Labardini - 08 | 04 | 08 Aisha Mehnaz - 8 | 29 | 08 Environment, Italy Alan Clutterbuck - 05 | 12 | 08 Civic Engagement, Venezuela Alexandra Close - 8 | 31 | 08 Civic Engagement, Thailand Sharon Terry - 05 | 11 | 09 Health, United States Siddiqui Tasneem - 05 | 11 | 09 Economic Development, Pakistan Economic Development, India Thailand Stefan Kaspar - 08 | 10 | 09 Civic Engagement, Peru Steve Collins - 8 | 31 | 09 Health, Ireland Sunit Shrestha - 8 | 27 | 09 Thailand Suparna Gupta - 08 | 10 | 09 Human Rights, India Susan Pick - 6 | 29 | 09 Human Rights, Mexico Sylwia Chutnik - 7 | 20 | 09 Human Rights, Poland T Tanya Tull - 06 | 08 | 09 Economic Development, United States Thorkil Sonne - 8 | 31 | 09 Human Rights, Denmark Tonya Surman - 08 | 11 | 09 Economic Development, Canada Toto Sugito - 08 | 10 | 09 Environment, Indonesia Tristan Lecomte - 8 | 31 | 09 France U Urvashi Sahni - 08 | 10 | 09 Learning / Education, India Economic Development, South Africa Civic Engagement, Mexico Human Rights, Pakistan Civic Engagement, Argentina Civic Engagement, United States Boubacar Doumbia - 05 | 12 | 08 Economic Development, Mali Brenda Eheart - 8 | 31 | 08 Brian Richardson - 8 | 27 | 08 Bright Simons - 8 | 18 | 08 Health, Ghana Carlo Petrini - 8 | 25 | 08 Carlos Correa - 06 | 09 | 08 Chawanad Luansang - 05 | 12 | 08 C Christiane Daepp - 8 | 18 | 08 Alexandre Martinez - 08 | 04 | 08 Learning / Education, Switzerland Alice Freitas - 7 | 22 | 08 Health, Switzerland Alicia Leal - 8 | 27 | 08 Human Rights, Senegal Allaoui Guenni - 7 | 22 | 08 Environment, Kenya Alvaro Francisco Ugalde Víquez - 8 | 26 | 08 Economic Development, South Africa Environment, Brazil Economic Development, Brazil Human Rights, Mexico Learning / Education, France Environment, Costa Rica Christine Theodoloz-Walker - 08 | 04 | 08 Ciré Kane - 8 | 26 | 08 Collins Apuoyo - 05 | 12 | 08 Craig Slevin - 8 | 27 | 08 D David Anderson - 8 | 18 | 08 Aminata Diallo - 05 | 12 | 08 Civic Engagement, United States Ana Veloso - 03 | 10 | 08 Health, Ireland Andrés Aguiar Larrondo - 03 | 10 | 08 Civic Belgium Andrés Martinez Fernandez - 10 | 13 | 08 Learning / Education, Burkina Faso Learning / Education, Burkina Faso Human Rights, Brazil Engagement, Mexico Health, Spain | List of fellows Bob Munro - 8 | 31 | 08 Civic Engagement, Kenya David Egan - 8 | 18 | 08 Didier Ketels - 08 | 04 | 08 Dieudonne Pare - 05 | 12 | 08 Ashoka Dorothy Akenova - 4 | 14 | 08 Health, Nigeria Dorothy Stoneman - 8 | 29 | 08 Civic Engagement, United States Douglas McMeekin - 6 | 23 | 08 Economic Development, Ecuador E E. S. Shashidharan - 01 | 01 | 08 India Earl Phalen - 06 | 09 | 08 Learning / Education, United States Edgar Cahn - 8 | 18 | 08 Civic Engagement, United States Egemen Yilgur - 7 | 22 | 08 Human Rights, Turkey Eldred Maurice Tellis - 03 | 10 | 08 Health, India Elisabeth Stock - 8 | 27 | 08 Learning | Education, United States Emmanuel Falcão - 01 | 07 | 08 Civic Engagement, Brazil Emmanuel Kallonga - 8 | 29 | 08 Civic Engagement, Tanzania Eric Rosenthal - 8 | 26 | 08 Health, United States F Fabián Sánchez Matus - 08 | 04 | 08 Human Rights, Mexico Fabrice Florin - 8 | 27 | 08 Civic Engagement, Brazil Ferro Pilar Maria - 05 | 12 | 08 Learning / Education, Argentina Hamdadou Tidiane Sy - 8 | 29 | 08 Civic Engagement, Senegal Harish Hande - 8 | 31 | 08 Environment, India H Hilmi Quraishi - 6 | 23 | 08 Health, India at 30 | Jose Maria Perez Gonzalez ”Peridis“ - 8 | 26 | 08 Economic Development, Spain Juan Martín Pérez García - 08 | 04 | 08 Human Rights, Mexico Jude Obodo - 8 | 18 | 08 Howard Weinstein - 01 | 07 | 08 Learning / Education, Nigeria Htoo Chit - 05 | 12 | 08 Health, Mexico Health, Brazil Human Rights, Thailand I I. J. S. Bassi - 01 | 01 | 08 India Ibrahim ag Idbaltanant - 05 | 12 | 08 Human Rights, Mali Ifeoma Okoye - 4 | 14 | 08 Health, Nigeria Julia Borbolla - 8 | 29 | 08 Junior Smart - 12 | 08 | 08 Human Rights , United Kingdom K Kabita Bhattarai -01 | 01 | 08 India Kallol Ghosh - 05 | 12 | 08 Health, India Kardiatou Kabore - 8 | 27 | 08 Ignace Schops - 08 | 04 | 08 Environment, Burkina Faso Ijeoma Ekwempu - 01 | 01 | 08 Nigeria Ishita Khanna - 03 | 10 | 08 Environment, India Izhar Hussain Awan - 8 | 27 | 08 Civic Engagement, Nigeria Environment, Belgium Health, Pakistan J Jaime Ibacache Burgos - 8 | 27 | 08 Health, Chile Janice Webster - 8 | 29 | 08 Health, South Africa Javier Palummo Lantes - 05 | 12 | 08 Human Rights, Uruguay Kingsley Bangwell - 4 | 14 | 08 Kiran Sethi - 6 | 23 | 08 Learning , Education, India Krishna Kumari Pun - 06 | 09 | 08 Health, Nepal L Laddawan Chaininpun - 05 | 12 | 08 Civic Engagement, Thailand Laércio Meirelles - 08 | 04 | 08 Economic Development, Brazil Laura Lang - 08 | 04 | 08 Environment, Costa Rica Lazaro Cunha - 01 | 07 | 08 India Jayasuriya Weliamuna - 6 | 23 | 08 Human Rights, Sri Lanka Learning | Education, Brazil Flavio Pachalski - 8 | 19 | 08 Civic Participation, Brazil Francisco Vio Giacaman - 6 | 23 | 08 Jean-Guy Henckel - 08 | 04 | 08 Economic Development, Brazil Jean-Marc Borello - 8 | 18 | 08 Health, France Jérôme Deconinck - 7 | 22 | 08 Economic Development, South Africa Jimmy Wales - 8 | 31 | 08 Brazil Economic Development, Paraguay Jocelyne Kompaore - 8 | 27 | 08 Economic Development, Burkina Faso Human Rights, Brazil Gbenga Sesan - 08 | 04 | 08 John Badalu - 08 | 04 | 08 Environment, Chile Gilda Henríquez Darlas - 03 | 10 | 08 Economic Development, Egypt Learning | Education, Guatemala John Marks - 8 | 31 | 08 Human Rights, United States Gina Badenoch - 08 | 04 | 08 Jordi Piext i Colom - 05 | 12 | 08 Manoel Arnoud Peixoto (Bael) - 03 | 10 | 08 Flavia D‘Mello - 01 | 01 | 08 Economic Development, Chile François Marty - 7 | 22 | 08 Environment, France G Gabriela Ender - 7 | 22 | 08 Civic Engagement, Germany Gabriela Frers - 03 | 10 | 08 Economic Development, Nigeria Human Rights, Mexico Gregor Hackmack - 7 | 22 | 08 Civic Engagement, Germany Gregory Van Kirk - 03 | 10 | 08 Health, Guatemala Hambali Hambali - 01 | 07 | 08 Health, Indonesia Economic Development, France Economic Development, France Civic Engagement, United States Civic Engagement, Indonesia Environment, Spain Jose Campos - 4 | 22 | 08 Economic Development, Brazil José Dias - 03 | 10 | 08 Economic Development, Brazil José Ernesto Moreno - 01 | 01 | 08 Nicaragua 49 Lílian do Prado Silva - 03 | 10 | 08 Lillian Masebenza - 6 | 23 | 08 Lucia Nader - 8 | 18 | 08 Human Rights, Brazil Luciana Cardoso - 8 | 25 | 08 Luciana Zaffalon - 8 | 25 | 08 Luis Valladares Faúndez - 05 | 12 | 08 M Maged Hosny - 03 | 10 | 08 Economic Development, Brazil Marek Łagodziński - 07 | 11 | 08 Learning , Education, Poland Maria Amélia Leite - 11 | 26 | 08 Civic Engagement, Brazil María de los Angeles Carvajal - 8 | 26 | 08 Mexico List of fellows | 50 | Ashoka at 30 María de los Ángelesl -8 | 26 | 08 O Ousmane Ndongo - 05 | 12 | 08 Maria Leite - 03 | 10 | 08 P P. V. Kausalya - 01 | 01 | 08 Rose Volz-Schmidt - 7 | 22 | 08 India Civic Engagement, Germany Pablos Rubén - 05 | 12 | 08 Roser Batlle Suñer - 05 | 12 | 08 Environment, Argentina Learning / Education, Spain Pamikatsih (Pikat) Pamikatsih - 01 | 07 | 08 Rubem César Fernandes - 01 | 01 | 08 Economic Development, Indonesia Brazil Parag Mankeekar - 8 | 18 | 08 Ruida Rocha - 03 | 10 | 08 Learning / Education, India Environment, Brazil S Sandy Close - 8 | 26 | 08 Patrick Adamson - 01 | 01 | 08 India Civic Engagement, United States Patrick Struebi - 8 | 26 | 08 Sani Kozman - 03 | 10 | 08 Economic Development, Mexico Health, Egypt Paul Okoth - 05 | 12 | 08 Sanjana Hattotuwa - 6 | 23 | 08 Human Rights, Uganda Civic Engagement, Sri Lanka Paulo dos Santos - 01 | 07 | 08 Sasa Vucinic - 8 | 18 | 08 Learning / Education, Brazil Civic Engagement, Singapore Paulo Rogerio - 01 | 07 | 08 Sergio Arango - 06 | 09 | 08 Human Rights, Brazil Economic Development, Colombia Pedro Guimarães - 01 | 07 | 08 Shafqat Munir Ahmad - 05 | 12 | 08 Health, Brazil Civic Engagement, Pakistan Pedro Macedo - 01 | 07 | 08 Shaista Bukhari - 05 | 12 | 08 Health, Brazil Economic Development, Pakistan Preeyanan Lorsermwattana - 05 | 12 | 08 Shaka Robert - 05 | 12 | 08 Health, Thailand Economic Development, Uganda R Raghda Botrous - 08 | 04 | 08 Shale Ahmed - 8 | 27 | 08 Jordan Human Rights, Bangladesh Rajendra Joshi - 6 | 23 | 08 Shila Thapa - 06 | 09 | 08 Economic Development, India Health, Nepal Ramji Raghavan - 8 | 29 | 08 Simon Houriez - 8 | 18 | 08 Learning / Education, India Learning, Education, France Ranwa Yehia - 08 | 04 | 08 Solomon Jaya Prakash - 02 | 03 | 08 Civic Engagement, Sri Lanka Economic Development, India Raúl Contreras - 01 | 01 | 08 Som Nath Aryal - 06 | 09 | 08 Economic Development, Spain Civic Engagement, Nepal Rebecca Onie - 8 | 18 | 08 Soumya Dutta - 01 | 01 | 08 Health, United States Learning / Education, India Reza Deghati - 8 | 25 | 08 Sumaira Abdulali - 8 | 25 | 08 Civic Engagement, Afghanistan Environment, India Rick Aubry - 8 | 29 | 08 Sunderraman Anand - 8 | 25 | 08 Economic Development, United States Human Rights, India T Tamzin Ractliffe - 7 | 22 | 08 Rita Serukenya Nkemba - 8 | 29 | 08 Learning / Education, Uganda Economic Development, South Africa Ritwick Dutta - 7 | 22 | 08 Tarek Ramadan - 08 | 04 | 08 Environment, India Civic Engagement, Egypt Rob Hopkins - 12 | 08 | 08 Tashka (Joaquim) Yawanawa -8 | 18 | 08 Environment, Mexico Civic Engagement, Brazil María Pilar de Abiega Sauto - 03 | 10 | 08 Human Rights, Mexico Maria Xavier - 7 | 22 | 08 Human Rights, Brazil Mark Hanis - 7 | 22 | 08 Human Rights, United States Markus Gander - 8 | 18 | 08 Learning / Education, Switzerland Martine Somda - 10 | 07 | 08 Economic Development, Burkina Faso Mathias Craig - 08 | 04 | 08 Environment, Mexico Matt Flannery - 8 | 25 | 08 Economic Development, United States Meinrad Armbruster - 7 | 22 | 08 Learning / Education, Germany Merula Steagall - 01 | 07 | 08 Health, Brazil Michael Gleich - 7 | 22 | 08 Germany Milly Grace Auma - 8 | 29 | 08 Human Rights, Uganda Minal Kavishwar - 6 | 23 | 08 Health, India Mitchell Besser - 06 | 09 | 08 Health, South Africa Molly Barker - 06 | 09 | 08 Learning / Education, United States Monica Vasconez - 03 | 10 | 08 Learning / Education, Ecuador Moses Robert - 8 | 31 | 08 Learning / Education, United States Muhammad Rahz - 01 | 01 | 08 Bangladesh Munir Hasan - 8 | 18 | 08 Learning / Education, Bangladesh N Narcís Vives Ylla - 05 | 12 | 08 Learning / Education, Spain Nazir Ahmad Ghazi - 8 | 29 | 08 Civic Engagement, Thailand Nnaemeka Ikegwuonu - 08 | 04 | 08 Economic Development, Nigeria Nyaga Stephen - 10 | 07 | 08 Economic Development, Kenya Okere Ken - 4 | 14 | 08 Learning / Education, Nigeria Orazio Belletini - 03 | 10 | 08 Civic Engagement, Ecuador Ouatara Souleymane - 08 | 04 | 08 Economic Development, Burkina Faso | List of fellows Learning | Education, Senegal Environment, United Kingdom Roberto Saba - 8 | 29 | 08 Ronaldo Monteiro - 03 | 10 | 08 Learning / Education, Brazil Brazil Terrie Rose - 8 | 18 | 08 Human Rights, Argentina Learning / Education, United States Rodrigo García Píngaro - 05 | 12 | 08 Tewari Nidhi - 8 | 25 | 08 Roger Bell - 01 | 01 | 08 Till Behnke - 7 | 22 | 08 Environment, Uruguay Brazil Civic Engagement, India Civic Engagement, Germany Ashoka Timothy Carpenter - 06 | 09 | 08 Human Rights, United States Tom Steinberg - 12 | 08 | 08 Civic Engagement, United Kingdom U Umesh Malhotra - 6 | 23 | 08 Learning / Education, India Ursula Sladek - 8 | 28 | 08 Environment, Germany V Vijay Mahajan - 8 | 29 | 08 Economic Development, India Vijay Singh Aditya - 8 | 29 | 08 Economic Development, India Vincent Bagiire - 8 | 27 | 08 Economic Development, Uganda Vivienne Schultz - 7 | 22 | 08 Economic Development, South Africa Vladimiro Valdés Montoya - 03 | 10 | 08 Human Rights, Mexico W Wael Hmaidan - 08 | 04 | 08 Civic Engagement, Lebanon Wael Mohamad - 08 | 04 | 08 Lebanon Wendy Kopp - 8 | 29 | 08 Learning, Education, United States William Bird - 10 | 13 | 08 Human Rights, South Africa Witold Klaus - 6 | 23 | 08 Human Rights, Poland X Ximena Carrera - 03 | 10 | 08 Human Rights, Ecuador Y Yared Fubusa - 8 | 26 | 08 Learning / Education, Tanzania Yohanes Surya - 08 | 04 | 08 Learning / Education, Indonesia Yvonne de Melo - 03 | 10 | 08 Learning / Education, Brazil Amy Bank - 7 | 30 | 07 Civic Engagement, Nicaragua Ana Moser - 02 | 12 | 07 Learning / Education, Brazil Andaloussi Mohammed Abbad - 03 | 12 | 07 Learning / Education, Morocco Andre Sobrinho - 02 | 12 | 07 Civic Engagement, Brazil Andrzej Augustyński - 7 | 29 | 07 Learning / Education, Poland Angkhana Neelapichit - 6 | 18 | 07 Human Rights, Thailand Anita Ahuja - 8 | 16 | 07 Economic Development, India Antonio García Domínguez - 8 | 16 | 07 Civic Engagement, Spain Arbind Singh - 5 | 14 | 07 Economic Development, India Arzum Meleksoy - 07 | 09 | 07 Civic Engagement, Turkey Asim Sarode - 07 | 09 | 07 Human Rights, India Atsumasa Tochisako - 7 | 30 | 07 Economic Development, United States Aureliusz Leżeński - 7 | 30 | 07 Civic Engagement, Poland Aysha Saifuddin - 7 | 30 | 07 Economic Development, Pakistan B Banik Kamal - 8 | 30 | 07 Environment, India Berna Yagci - 07 | 09 | 07 Civic Engagement, Turkey Bernd Gebert - 06 | 11 | 07 Learning / Education, Germany Betty Makoni - 5 | 14 | 07 Learning / Education, Zimbabwe Bibhab Talukdar - 07 | 09 | 07 → 2007 Environment, India Bob Paterson - 12 | 11 | 07 Economic Development, United Kingdom Bruce Cahan - 8 | 16 | 07 Economic Development, United States C Camila Batmanghelidjh - 12 | 11 | 07 A Aamir Sohail Saddozai - 8 | 27 | 07 Human Rights, Pakistan Adriana Castro de Alverde - 2 | 26 | 07 Health, Mexico Ahmad Dakroury - 8 | 13 | 07 Economic Development, Egypt Alasdair Harris - 12 | 11 | 07 Environment, United Kingdom Alex Freyre - 5 | 14 | 07 Health, Argentina Alisa Del Tufo - 8 | 16 | 07 Human Rights, United States Human Rights, United Kingdom Carla Mauch - 8 | 13 | 07 Human Rights, Brazil Carlos Rodrigo Castro - 2 | 13 | 07 Environment, Brazil Carlos Simão - 02 | 12 | 07 Economic Development, Brazil Carrizosa Augustin - 8 | 27 | 07 Civic Engagement, Paraguay Cecilia Zanotti - 02 | 12 | 07 Civic Engagement, Brazil at 30 | 51 Chandra Ghosh - 06 | 11 | 07 Economic Development, India Clare Wawamunno - 07 | 09 | 07 Learning / Education, Uganda Claude Beau - 8 | 20 | 07 Civic Engagement, France Claudia Cabral - 02 | 12 | 07 Human Rights, Brazil D Daniel Ross - 5 | 14 | 07 Civic Engagement, United States Darío Kosovsky - 02 | 12 | 07 Human Rights, Argentina Darío Witt - 02 | 12 | 07 Human Rights, Argentina David Kuria - 5 | 14 | 07 Health, Kenya Dipendra Manocha - 8 | 30 | 07 Civic Engagement, India Dumisani Nyoni - 5 | 14 | 07 Learning / Education, Zimbabwe E Emad Mubarak - 8 | 13 | 07 Egypt Eric Dawson - 5 | 14 | 07 Civic Engagement, United States Essam Ghoneim - 8 | 13 | 07 Health, Egypt Eugen Tóth - 07 | 09 | 07 Environment, Slovakia F Fábio Bibancos - 8 | 13 | 07 Health, Brazil Fabio de Rosa - 8 | 13 | 07 Brazil Faisel Rahman - 12 | 11 | 07 Economic Development, United Kingdom Faustino García Zapico - 7 | 30 | 07 Civic Engagement, Spain Fermín Torrejón -5 | 14 | 07 Peru Flavia Nabugere - 07 | 09 | 07 Human Rights, Uganda G Gary Barker - 2 | 13 | 07→ Human Rights, Brazil Gerald Chertavian - 5 | 14 | 07 Civic Engagement, United States Guacira de Oliveira - 8 | 13 | 07 Civic Engagement, Brazil H Hrubá Kateřina - 07 | 09 | 07 Human Rights, Czech Republic I Ibrahima Sory Diallo - 8 | 20 | 07 Environment, Senegal J Jack Sim - 7 | 30 | 07 Singapore Jacqueline Sfeir - 03 | 12 | 07 Learning / Education, Palestine List of fellows | 52 | Ashoka at 30 Jafar Shah - 8 | 27 | 07 Margarita Barney Almeida de Cruz 2 | 26 | 07 Environment, Mexico Marie-Dominique Genoud-Champeaux 8 | 20 | 07 Health, Switzerland Marwa El Daly - 03 | 12 | 2007 Environment, Pakistan Jagat Basnet - 08 | 07 | 2007 Human Rights, Nepal Jaqueline Moreno Mendoza - 5 | 14 | 07 Economic Development, Colombia Jayne Stoyles - 12 | 11 | 2007 Human Rights, Canada Civic Engagement, Egypt Jerónimo Aguado Martínez - 07 | 09 | 2007 Civic Engagement, Spain Jessica Clogg - 2 | 13 | 07 Environment, Canada Johannes Hengstenberg - 06 | 11 | 2007 Environment, Germany Jonah Edelman - 8 | 16 | 07 Civic Engagement, United States Jorge Eduardo Mori Valenzuela - 8 | 27 | 07 Peru José Manuel Pérez ”Pericles“ - 07 | 09 | 2007 Learning / Education, Spain José Miguel Aguilar - 2 | 26 | 07 Civic Engagement, Brazil José Roberto Silva - 8 | 13 | 07 Economic Development, Brazil N Joseph Adelegan - 8 | 16 | 07 Health, Nigeria Joseph Sekiku - 07 | 09 | 2007 Tanzania Judy Korn - 06 | 11 | 2007 Learning / Education, Germany Jürgen Griesbeck - 06 | 11 | 2007 Civic Engagement, Germany K Kathryn Hall-Trujillo - 5 | 14 | 07 Health, United States Krzysztof Konieczny - 7 | 30 | 07 Environment, Poland L Leonardo Sakamoto - 8 | 13 | 07 Human Rights, Brazil Lita Anggraini - 07 | 09 | 2007 Learning / Education, Indonesia Mary Houghton - 01 | 08 | 2007 United States Maxwell Marshall - 8 | 16 | 07 Economic Development, Nigeria Megh Ale - 07 | 09 | 2007 Environment, Nepal Michel Venne12 | 11 | 2007 Civic Engagement, Canada Mónica Koppmann Morán - 8 | 27 | 07 Chile Monica Kumar - 8 | 30 | 07 Human Rights, India Mónica Litovsky Díaz - 8 | 27 | 07 Economic Development, Uruguay Mukteshwari Kaushik Bosco - 8 | 27 | 07 Health, India Nalinika Obeyesekere - 6 | 18 | 07 Environment, Sri Lanka Nandana Manatunga - 6 | 18 | 07 Human Rights, Sri Lanka Nandasiri Wanninayaka - 6 | 18 | 07 Economic Development, Sri Lanka Nani Zulminarni - 07 | 09 | 2007 Economic Development, Indonesia Naw Paw Ray - 6 | 18 | 07 Learning / Education, Thailand Nejat Unlu - 07 | 09 | 2007 Human Rights, Turkey Norbert Kunz - 06 | 11 | 2007 Economic Development, Germany O Ola Abu Alghaib - 03 | 12 | 2007 Human Rights, Palestine Olivier Gaillard - 8 | 20 | 07 Lucie Chagnon - 12 | 11 | 2007 Civic Engagement, Belgium Lucy Kanu - 7 | 30 | 07 Environment, Costa Rica Economic Development, Canada Civic Engagement, Nigeria M Maha Helaly - 8 | 16 | 07 Civic Engagement, Egypt Manuel Ngury - 8 | 13 | 07 Human Rights, Brazil Marc Chebsun-Sonnino - 8 | 20 | 07 Civic Engagement, France Marek Černocký- 07 | 09 | 2007 Economic Development, Czech Republic Margaret Owen-Smith - 5 | 14 | 07 Learning / Education, South Africa | List of fellows Omar Rodríguez - 7 | 30 | 07 Oona Chatterjee - 8 | 16 | 07 Civic Engagement, United States Opa Cissokho - 8 | 27 | 07 Environment, Senegal P Pablo Romo - 2 | 26 | 07 Peter Nares - 12 | 11 | 2007 Economic Development, Canada Princess Olufemi-Kayode - 7 | 30 | 07 Health, Nigeria Raquel Robles - 5 | 14 | 07 Learning / Education, Argentina Ravindranath - 5 | 14 | 07 Environment, India Roberto Epple - 8 | 27 | 07 Environment, France Rodrigo Brito - 02 | 12 | 2007 Economic Development, Brazil Rodrigo Villar - 07 | 09 | 2007 Environment, Mexico Roma Malik - 07 | 09 | 2007 Human Rights, India Ron Grzywinski - 01 | 08 | 2007 United States Rosalie Ouoba - 8 | 20 | 07 Civic Engagement, Burkina Faso Rosanne Haggerty - 5 | 14 | 07 Civic Engagement, United States S Saadyah El wafi - 03 | 12 | 2007 Economic Development, Saudi Arabia Said Hammouche - 8 | 27 | 07 Civic Engagement, France Samy Gameel - 8 | 16 | 07 Learning / Education, Egypt Selma Demirelli - 07 | 09 | 2007 Economic Development, Turkey Septi Peni Wulandari - 07 | 09 | 2007 Learning / Education, Indonesia Shahid Zia - 8 | 16 | 07 Economic Development, Pakistan Sharafat Azad - 5 | 14 | 07 Health, India Silvia Reyes - 8 | 13 | 07 Human Rights, Ecuador Stanley Zlotkin - 2 | 13 | 07 Health, Canada Stephan De Beer - 5 | 14 | 07 Economic Development, South Africa Sugandha Sukrutaraj - 8 | 27 | 07 Human Rights, India Sukianto Lusli - 8 | 30 | 07 Environment, Indonesia T Tara Cunningham - 7 | 16 | 07 Learning / Education, Ireland Teerawat Sripathomsawad - 6 | 18 | 07 Human Rights, Mexico Human Rights, Thailand Pablo Santiago Capilé Mendes - 8 | 13 | 07 Thaise Guzzatti - 2 | 13 | 07 Economic Development, Brazil Patmanathan Pillai - 6 | 18 | 07 Learning / Education, South Africa Economic Development, Brazil Timothy Jenkin - 6 | 18 | 07 Economic Development, South Africa Ashoka V Ved Arya - 8 | 27 | 07 Economic Development, India Vibha Krishnamurthy - 07 | 09 | 2007 India Victoria Quevedo Méndez - 8 | 20 | 07 Civic Engagement, Chile Volker Baisch - 06 | 11 | 2007 Civic Engagement, Germany W William Parish - 5 | 14 | 07 Environment, United States Willy Foote - 7 | 30 | 07 United States Wilson Passeto - 8 | 13 | 07 Environment, Brazil Y Yayi Bayam Diouf - 8 | 27 | 07 Senegal Yves Lesenfants - 8 | 16 | 07 Economic Development, Venezuela Anjali Gopalan - 8 | 28 | 06 Health, India Antonio García Allut - 08 | 10 | 06 Economic Development, Spain B Bart Weetjens - 08 | 10 | 06 Health, Tanzania Beatriz Costa Barbosa - 07 | 10 | 06 Civic Engagement, Brazil Benki Piyãko - 08 | 10 | 06 Environment, Brazil C C. V. Madhukar - 07 | 06 | 06 Civic Engagement, India Caroline Casey - 8 | 28 | 06 Human Rights, Ireland Catherine Watson - 8 | 28 | 06 Health, Uganda Cecilio Solis - 8 | 28 | 06 Economic Development, Mexico Celso Athayde - 08 | 10 | 06 → 2006 A A. K. M. Maksud - 08 | 07 | 06 Learning / Education, Bangladesh Abdalaziz Moura - 08 | 10 | 06 Learning / Education, Brazil Abdelfattah Abusrour - 8 | 28 | 06 Civic Engagement, Palestine Abdellah Aboulharjan - 8 | 28 | 06 Economic Development, France Abdu Ferraz - 3 | 13 | 06 Human Rights, Brazil Abhishek Ray - 08 | 07 | 06 Human Rights, India Albeiro Vargas - 08 | 07 | 06 Civic Engagement, Colombia Alberto Vázquez - 07 | 10 | 06 Health, Argentina Aler Donadío - 08 | 07 | 06 Environment, Uruguay Ali Hussein - 2 | 13 | 06 Health, Egypt Allan Williams - 07 | 06 | 06 Learning / Education, South Africa Alou Keita - 8 | 28 | 06 Economic Development, Mali Amlan Ganguly - 05 | 08 | 06 Health, India Anaclaudia Rossbach - 04 | 10 | 06 Economic Development, Brazil Andrés Randazzo - 8 | 28 | 06 Economic Development, Mexico Civic Engagement, Brazil Celso Grecco - 07 | 10 | 06 Civic Engagement, Brazil Charles Best - 8 | 28 | 06 Learning / Education, United States Chitral Perera - 8 | 28 | 06 Human Rights, Sri Lanka D Dale Bell - 04 | 10 | 06 Civic Engagement, United States at 30 | 53 Franz Dullinger - 06 | 12 | 06 Economic Development, Germany G Gilberto Dimenstein - 05 | 08 | 06 Learning / Education, Brazil Gilles Julien - 08 | 07 | 06 Health, Canada Guillaume Bapst - 8 | 28 | 06 Human Rights, France H Halime Güner - 8 | 28 | 06 Civic Engagement, Turkey Harry Wiland - 04 | 10 | 06 Civic Engagement, United States Hasina Kharbhih - 8 | 28 | 06 Human Rights, India Hector Flores - 07 | 10 | 06 Argentina Heike Schettler - 06 | 12 | 06 Learning / Education, Germany I I Wayan Patut - 07 | 06 | 06 Environment, Indonesia Inderjeet Khurana - 01 | 06 | 06 Learning / Education, India Isabel Guirao - 08 | 10 | 06 Human Rights, Spain Ivan Veselý - 8 | 28 | 06 Civic Engagement, Czech Republic Izhar Awan - 8 | 28 | 06 Pakistan J Jaílson de Souza e Silva - 04 | 10 | 06 Learning / Education, Brazil Denis Mizne - 3 | 13 | 06 Jaime Delgado Zegarra - 01 | 09 | 06 EconoCivic Engagement, Brazil mic Development, Peru Dr | Gladys Kalema-Zikusoka - 8 | 28 | 06 Jakub Śpiewak - 08 | 10 | 06 Health, Uganda Human Rights, Poland Dune Lankard - 08 | 10 | 06 James Mccorkell - 04 | 10 | 06 Environment, United States Learning / Education, United States Dynand Fariz - 12 | 18 | 06 James Wuye - 8 | 28 | 06 Learning / Education, Indonesia Human Rights, Nigeria Jean Claude Rodríguez-Ferrera E Ebrahim Patel - 07 | 08 | 06 United States 08 | 10 | 06 Economic Development, Spain Edgard Gouveia, Jr. - 3 | 13 | 06 Civic Engagement, Brazil Jean-Michel Ricard - 06 | 12 | 06 Health, France Edith Grynszpancholc - 07 | 10 | 06 Health, Argentina Joênia Wapichana - 07 | 10 | 06 Human Rights, Brazil Emeka Nsofor - 04 | 10 | 06 Civic Engagement, Nigeria John Patrick Ngoyi - 8 | 28 | 06 Civic Engagement, Nigeria Esther Lardent - 11 | 20 | 06 Civic Engagement, United States José Mario Brasiliense - 11 | 20 | 06 Civic Engagement, Brazil F Farha (Ciciek) A | K | Assegaf - 12 | 18 | 06 Human Rights, Indonesia Joseph Williams - 8 | 28 | 06 Human Rights, United States Farhana Huq - 04 | 10 | 06 Learning / Education, United States K Katherine Redford - 01 | 09 | 06 Human Rights, United States Felipe Vergara - 01 | 09 | 06 Learning / Education, Colombia Kousalya Periasamy - 07 | 06 | 06 Health, India De Villiers Noel N. - 8 | 28 | 06 Economic Development, South Africa List of fellows | 54 | Ashoka at 30 Kovin Naidoo - 07 | 06 | 06 Health, South Africa Krystyna Żytecka - 08 | 10 | 06 Human Rights, Poland L Lane Benjamin - 08 | 10 | 06 Civic Engagement, South Africa Luke Dowdney - 04 | 10 | 06 Human Rights, Brazil M M. A. Bari - 08 | 07 | 06 Human Rights, Bangladesh Madan Rai - 08 | 07 | 06 Economic Development, Nepal Man Bahadur Chhetri - 08 | 07 | 06 Human Rights, Nepal Manikkam Shankar - 3 | 13 | 06 Civic Engagement, India Márcia Ventura Dias - 3 | 13 | 06 Learning / Education, Brazil Margarita Griesbach - 8 | 28 | 06 Human Rights, Mexico Maria Baryamujura - 8 | 28 | 06 Economic Development, Uganda Maria José Rosado Nunes - 11 | 20 | 06 Human Rights, Brazil Marian Chwastniewski - 08 | 10 | 06 Learning / Education, Poland Marta Arango - 01 | 09 | 06 Learning / Education, Colombia Marta Echevarria - 01 | 09 | 06 Environment, Ecuador Michal Smetanka - 8 | 28 | 06 Economic Development, Slovakia Mike Batley - 07 | 10 | 06 Human Rights, South Africa Mohamed Shaalan - 8 | 28 | 06 Health, Egypt Mohammad Ali Shah - 8 | 28 | 06 Human Rights, Pakistan Mohammadi Siddiqui - 08 | 07 | 06 Human Rights, Nepal Mohammed Ashafa - 8 | 28 | 06 Human Rights, Nigeria Murat Vural - 06 | 12 | 06 Learning / Education, Germany N Nabil El-Mogi - 2 | 13 | 06 Egypt Nancy Henkin - 04 | 10 | 06 Civic Engagement, United States Naside Buluttekin - 8 | 28 | 06 Nkem Momah - 8 | 28 | 06 Nora Tager - 07 | 06 | 06 | List of fellows Economic Development, Egypt Selim Mawad - 2 | 13 | 06 P Paulo Lima - 8 | 28 | 06 Civic Engagement, Brazil Civic Engagement, Egypt Pedro Chaná - 08 | 07 | 06 Senem Gul - 8 | 28 | 06 Health, Chile Economic Development, Turkey Phairot Pronjongman - 08 | 10 | 06 Shad Begum - 8 | 28 | 06 Human Rights, Thailand Economic Development, Pakistan Pianporn Deetes - 08 | 10 | 06 Sidney Ribaux - 08 | 07 | 06 Environment, Thailand Environment, Canada Prakash Michael - 8 | 28 | 06 Silverius Oscar Unggul - 07 | 06 | 06 Economic Development, India Environment, Indonesia Pratima Joshi - 3 | 13 | 06 Sirajuddin Mohammad - 8 | 28 | 06 Human Rights, India Economic Development, Pakistan Siriwan Vongkietpaisan - 08 | 10 | 06 Hu- R Rafael Alvarez - 08 | 10 | 06 Learning, Education, United States man Rights, Thailand Ramazan Salman - 06 | 12 | 06 Sri Kumar Vishwanathan - 8 | 28 | 06 Health, Germany Human Rights, Czech Republic Raúl Contreras - 8 | 28 | 06 Steve Clift - 8 | 28 | 06 Economía; Inserción, Spain Civic Engagement, United States Raúl Lucero - 07 | 10 | 06 Surachai Trongngam - 08 | 10 | 06 Health, Argentina Environment, Thailand Reda Shoukry - 8 | 28 | 06 Suwimon Piriyathanalai - 08 | 10 | 06 Health, Egypt Environment, Thailand Rehana Adib - 3 | 13 | 06 Suzanne McKechnie Klahr - 04 | 10 | 06 Human Rights, India René Reyes - 08 | 07 | 06 Environment, Chile Ricardo Soto - 08 | 07 | 06 Learning / Education, Peru Learning / Education, United States T Tosca Santoso - 07 | 06 | 06 Human Rights, Indonesia Tri Mumpuni - 07 | 06 | 06 Economic Development, Indonesia Ron Chisom - 8 | 28 | 06 Tyrone Bledsoe - 8 | 28 | 06 Human Rights, United States Learning / Education, United States Ronald Chisom - 8 | 31 | 06 Tzinnia Carranza - 8 | 28 | 06 Human Rights, United States Rupert Voss - 06 | 12 | 06 Learning / Education; Germany Economic Development, Mexico V V. S. Chary - 01 | 09 | 06 Economic Development, India Ryadh Sallem - 8 | 28 | 06 Valdênia Paulino - 3 | 13 | 06 Human Rights, Brazil Vicki Bernadet - 08 | 10 | 06 Human Rights, Spain Victoria Hale - 01 | 09 | 06 Health, United States Human Rights, France S S. Sankara Raman - 8 | 28 | 06 Human Rights, India Sakena Yacoobi - 8 | 28 | 06 Learning / Education; Afghanistan Sameh Ghali - 2 | 13 | 06 Health, Egypt Samsidar Samsidar - 12 | 18 | 06 Sarah Trad - 8 | 28 | 06 Health, Lebanon Saur Marlina (Butet) Manurung 08 | 07 | 06 Learning / Education, Indonesia Seham Ibrahim - 8 | 28 | 06 Environment, Paraguay Nelsa Nespolo - 08 | 07 | 06 Nicolás Hernández - 08 | 07 | 06 Seema Prakash - 8 | 28 | 06 Economic Development, India O Oscar Rivas - 05 | 08 | 06 Human Rights, Indonesia Civic Engagement, Colombia Learning / Education, Germany Economic Development, South Africa Civic Engagement, Turkey Economic Development, Brazil Schreiber Dagmar - 06 | 12 | 06 Nigeria → 2005 A Aaron Hurst - 05 | 09 | 05 Civic Engagement, United States Ashoka Adrian Mukhebi - 8 | 29 | 05 Economic Development, Kenya Agatha Chukwueke-Nnaji - 8 | 30 | 05 Economic Development, Nigeria Ajantha Perera - 8 | 18 | 05 Economic Development, Sri Lanka Alexandre Só de Castro - 1 | 17 | 05 Environment, Brazil Ali Raza Khan - 8 | 29 | 05 Learning / Education, Pakistan Ana Paula Felizardo - 1 | 17 | 05 Human Rights, Brazil Andreas Heinecke - 8 | 29 | 05 Human Rights, Germany Ashok Bharti - 07 | 11 | 05 Economic Development, India Ashru Mandal - 06 | 11 | 05 Economic Development, India Atuki Turner - 8 | 30 | 05 Human Rights, Uganda Augustin Woelz - 8 | 30 | 05 Environment, Brazil B Balaji Sampath - 8 | 18 | 05 Learning / Education, India Basil Fernando - 1 | 17 | 05 Sri Lanka Betsy Krebs - 3 | 21 | 05 Learning / Education, United States Bhargavi Davar - 3 | 21 | 05 Human Rights, India C Carlos Andre Abreu Carneiro - 1 | 17 | 05 Human Rights, Brazil César Alejandro Silveyra - 8 | 18 | 05 Economic Development, Argentina Charlie Murphy - 05 | 09 | 05 Learning / Education, United States Charlotte Frank - 8 | 18 | 05 Civic Engagement, United States Conceição Paganele - 1 | 17 | 05 Human Rights, Brazil Cybele Oliveira Amado - 8 | 30 | 05 Learning / Education, Brazil D Daniel Marguari - 8 | 29 | 05 HealthIndonesia Dariusz Cupiał - 8 | 29 | 05 Civic Engagement, Poland Deep Purokayastha - 3 | 21 | 05 Human Rights, India Dennis Ole Sonkoi - 07 | 11 | 05 Economic Development, Kenya E Edilara Lima Pacheco (Lara Dee) - 07 | 11 | 05 Economic Development, Brazil Emmanuel Nehemiah - 8 | 30 | 05 Economic Development, Nigeria G Geoff Cape - 07 | 11 | 05 Environment, Canada George Askew - 8 | 30 | 05 Health, United States Gerald Gray - 05 | 09 | 05 Human Rights, United States H Hanna Helmy - 02 | 07 | 05 Human Rights, Egypt Hossam Bahgat - 02 | 07 | 05 Egypt I Ibe Karyanto - 05 | 09 | 05 Learning / Education, Indonesia Iheoma Obibi - 8 | 30 | 05 Civic Engagement, Nigeria Indira Ranamagar - 07 | 11 | 05 Human Rights, Nepal Irawati Singarimbun - 2 | 22 | 05 Indonesia Isaac Durojaiye - 11 | 06 | 05 Health, Nigeria J J Sampath - 06 | 11 | 05 Learning, Education, India Jacira Melo - 07 | 11 | 05 Human Rights, Brazil Jane Leu - 3 | 21 | 05 Economic Development, United States Jasmeen Patheja - 8 | 18 | 05 Human Rights, India Jayanthi Dandeniya - 8 | 18 | 05 Human Rights, Sri Lanka Lynn Price - 8 | 18 | 05 M Madan Rao - 05 | 09 | 05 Economic Development, India Magda Sami - 07 | 11 | 05 Human Rights, Egypt Magdy Aziz - 07 | 11 | 05 Human Rights, Egypt Mahadev Dattu Rajmane - 07 | 11 | 05 Civic Engagement, India Marc Freedman - 03 | 05 | 05 Civic Engagement, United States Marc Kielburger - 07 | 11 | 200 5 Civic Engagement, Canada Maria Lúcia da Silva - 1 | 17 | 05 Human Rights, Brazil Mariana Galarza - 8 | 18 | 05 Health, Ecuador Martina Justova - 8 | 29 | 05 Human Rights, Slovakia Meity Mongdong - 05 | 09 | 05 Environment, Indonesia Mohamad Ali - 8 | 29 | 05 Human Rights, Pakistan Mohamed Abou El Naga - 07 | 11 | 05 Economic Development, Egypt Murali Mohan - 8 | 18 | 05 Learning / Education, India Muthu Velayutham - 8 | 29 | 05 Economic Development, India N Nazmi Ilicali - 8 | 30 | 05 John Sage - 05 | 09 | 05 O Onno Purbo - 8 | 18 | 05 Economic Development, United States K Kaká Werá - 1 | 17 | 05 Human Rights, Brazil Katarzyna Oleś - 8 | 30 | 05 Health, Poland Katy Rustom - 05 | 09 | 05 Environment, India Kristin Hayden - 05 | 09 | 05 Learning / Education, United States L Lake Sagaris - 8 | 18 | 05 Civic Engagement, Chile Lalith Seneviratne - 8 | 18 | 05 Economic Development, Sri Lanka Liliana Mayo - 03 | 06 | 05 Learning / Education, Peru Lubna Tayyab - 8 | 29 | 05 Human Rights, Pakistan Luis Alberto Camargo - 8 | 18 | 05 Environment, Colombia Lula Ramires - 1 | 17 | 05 Human Rights, Brazil 55 Human Rights, United States John Richardson - 07 | 11 | 05 Human Rights, Canada at 30 | Economic Development, Turkey Economic Development, Indonesia P Pratibha Shinde - 8 | 29 | 05 Human Rights, India Q Qurban Buriro - 8 | 29 | 05 Pakistan R Rajiv Khandelwal - 07 | 11 | 05 Human Rights, India Rakhshinda Parveen - 8 | 29 | 05 Human Rights, Pakistan Rashneh Pardiwala - 05 | 09 | 05 Environment, India Rebeca Duarte - 07 | 11 | 05 Human Rights, Brazil Rinto Andriono - 8 | 29 | 05 Civic Engagement, Indonesia Rishi Kesh Tiwari - 07 | 11 | 05 Economic Development, Nepal Roberto Gallinal - 8 | 30 | 05 Civic Engagement, Uruguay Roberto Killmeate - 8 | 18 | 05 Economic Development, Argentina List of fellows | 56 | Ashoka at 30 Rodrigo Pascal - 10 | 11 | 05 Health, Chile S Sachin Chitra - 11 | 10 | 05 Learning / Education, India Sagari Ramdas - 06 | 11 | 05 Environment, India Sanjay Bapat - 07 | 04 | 05 Civic Engagement, India Shanti Raghavan - 8 | 18 | 05 Human Rights, India Sharad Sharma - 3 | 21 | 05 Civic Engagement, India Shudarson Subedi - 07 | 11 | 05 Human Rights, Nepal Suprabha Seshan - 3 | 21 | 05 Environment, India Civic Engagement, Turkey 2004 | List of fellows Human Rights, Mexico Arvind Kejriwal - 8 | 24 | 04 Civic Engagement, India Audes Estella Jimenez Gonzalez - 8 | 31 | 04 Civic Engagement, Colombia F Ayyappa Masagi - 8 | 24 | 04 Economic Development, India B Barry Barkan - 8 | 24 | 04 Health, United States G Benjamin Andama Ogunyo - 6 | 21 | 04 Learning / Education, Kenya Bir Bahadur Ghale - 7 | 26 | 04 Economic Development, Nepal H Brij Kothari - 8 | 31 | 04 Learning / Education, India C Carlos A. Cruz Santiago - 8 | 31 | 04 Learning / Education, Mexico Carlos Bareiro - 01 | 12 | 2004 V Valentina Martinez - 8 | 30 | 05 Civic Engagement, Chile Civic Engagement, Paraguay Vineet (Expired) Khanna - 06 | 11 | 05 EcoCarlos Benjamin Bareiro Benitez nomic Development, India 04 | 05 | 2004 Civic Engagement, Paraguay Carolina Nieto Cater - 8 | 31 | 04 Economic Development, Mexico → Catalina Cock Duque - 8 | 31 | 04 Economic Development, Colombia Celia Gonçalves Souza - 7 | 26 | 04 Human Rights, Brazil A Aaron Pereira - 8 | 24 | 04 D Dana Migaliova - 8 | 31 | 04 Economic Development, Canada Human Rights, Lithuania Dario Funes - 6 | 21 | 04 Abdul Waheed - 8 | 24 | 04 Learning / Education, Pakistan Economic Development, Argentina Adam Jagiełło-Rusiłowski - 8 | 31 | 04 David Levin - 8 | 24 | 04 Learning / Education, Poland Learning / Education, United States Den Upa Rombelayuk - 7 | 26 | 04 Adrian Kowalski - 8 | 31 | 04 Economic Development, Poland Civic Engagement, Indonesia Agostinho Mamade - 6 | 30 | 04 Derek Ellerman - 8 | 24 | 04 Learning / Education, Mozambique Human Rights, United States Aleida Calleja Gutierrez - 8 | 31 | 04 Diego Carvajal - 6 | 21 | 04 Civic Engagement, Mexico Civic Engagement, Argentina Aman Singh - 7 | 26 | 04 Dona Geralda Marçal - 7 | 26 | 04 Civic Engagement, India Economic Development, Brazil Ami Dar - 8 | 24 | 04 Douglas Racionzer - 6 | 30 | 04 Civic Engagement, United States Economic Development, South Africa E Eboo Patel - 7 | 26 | 04 Ananya Raihan - 5 | 18 | 04 Economic Development, Bangladesh Civic Engagement, United States Andile Gaelisiwe - 6 | 30 | 04 Ehaab Abdou - 6 | 21 | 04 Human Rights, South Africa Civic Engagement, Egypt Anil Shaligram - 7 | 26 | 04 El Miniawy Hany Hassan Mahmoud Learning / Education, India 6 | 21 | 04 Civic Engagement, Egypt Anshu Gupta - 5 | 18 | 04 Civic Engagement, India Elliott Brown - 3 | 15 | 04 Economic Development, United States Anuja Gupta - 04 | 03 | 2004 Human Rights, India T Tahir Dadak - 07 | 11 | 05 Elsa Alejandra Jiménez Larios - 8 | 31 | 04 Armida Fernandez - 8 | 24 | 04 Health, India Erma Susanti - 7 | 26 | 04 Human Rights, Indonesia Estela Villareal - 12 | 02 | 2004 Learning / Education, Mexico Fareeha Zafar - 8 | 24 | 04 Pakistan Fazle H. Abed - 01 | 12 | 2004 Bangladesh Garth Japhet - 01 | 11 | 2004 Health, South Africa Glory Alexander - 5 | 18 | 04 Health, India Hamzah Harun Al‘Rasyid - 8 | 31 | 04 Health, Indonesia Harlans Fachra - 7 | 26 | 04 Civic Engagement, Indonesia Humberto Prado - 6 | 21 | 04 Human Rights, Venezuela I Ibrahim Betil - 8 | 31 | 04 Civic Engagement, Turkey Ibrahim Makram Ghattas -3 | 15 | 04 Egypt Irene Mutumba - 6 | 21 | 04 Learning / Education, Uganda Isabel Aparecida dos Santos - 7 | 26 | 04 Civic Engagement, Brazil J James Thompson - 3 | 15 | 04 Learning / Education, United States Jill Vialet - 8 | 24 | 04 Learning / Education, United States Joaquim de Melo Neto Segundo 01 | 12 | 2004 Economic Development, Brazil Jose-Pablo Fernandez - 3 | 15 | 04 Learning / Education, Costa Rica Joseph Marshall - 3 | 15 | 04 Health, United States Josilene Brandão da Costa - 7 | 26 | 04 Human Rights, Brazil Juan Carlos Calizaya Luna - 6 | 30 | 04 Environment, Peru K Karen Tse - 2 | 16 | 04 Human Rights, Burkina Faso Karunawathie Menike - 8 | 31 | 04 Economic Development, Bangladesh Kate Currawala - 2 | 16 | 04 Environment, India Korhan Gumus - 2 | 16 | 04 Civic Engagement, Turkey Kritaya Sreesunpagit - 7 | 26 | 04 Civic Engagement, Thailand L Lazaro Moringe Parkipuny - 6 | 21 | 04 Learning / Education, Tanzania Ashoka Lucky Chhetri - 7 | 26 | 04 Economic Development, Nepal Luis Felipe Cesar - 7 | 26 | 04 Environment, Brazil M Małgorzata Klecka - 4 | 03 | 2004 Health, Poland Madhavi Kuckreja - 8 | 31 | 04 Oswaldo Setti De Almeida Filho - 2 | 16 | 04 Othón Cuevas Córdova - 8 | 31 | 04 Mahmoud Mortada - 3 | 15 | 04 Human Rights, Egypt Manoel Andrade - 2 | 16 | 04 Learning / Education, Brazil Manoel Johnson Sales - 1 | 12 | 2004 Learning , Education, Brazil Margarita Ibarra Platt - 8 | 31 | 04 Margrethe Junker - 6 | 21 | 04 Marguiorina Cardozo - 2 | 16 | 04 Civic Engagement, Paraguay Marianne Knuth - 6 | 30 | 04 Economic Development, Zimbabwe Marli Márcia da Silva - 7 | 26 | 04 Human Rights, Brazil Md | Hasan Mahmud Khan - 2 | 16 | 04 Human Rights, Bangladesh Michael Feinberg - 3 | 15 | 04 Learning, Education, United States Michael Mccullough - 8 | 24 | 04 Learning / Education, United States Nasuh Mahruki - 2 | 16 | 04 Civic Engagement, Turkey O Oludare Odumuye - 8 | 31 | 04 Human Rights, Nigeria Ron Layton - 2 | 16 | 04 Rubens Born - 4 | 4 | 04 Environment, Brazil Rudi Syaf - 7 | 26 | 04 Environment, Indonesia S Sabiha Ghani - 8 | 24 | 04 Economic Development, Pakistan T Tahir Khilji - 3 | 15 | 04 Salah Arafa - 7 | 26 | 04 Temp Keller - 7 | 26 | 04 Tulika Das - 8 | 24 | 04 Human Rights, India V Vishal Talreja - 2 | 16 | 04 Civic Engagement, India Z Zeynep Uluer - 2 | 16 | 04 Civic Engagement, Turkey → 2003 A A.K. Susheela - 4 | 9 | 03 Health, India Abdul Baseer Naveed - 3 | 3 | 03 Civic Engagement, Pakistan Abdul Wadood - 3 | 3 | 03 Economic Development, Pakistan Abhijit Bardhan - 3 | 3 | 03 Learning / Education, India Adam Tuller - 6 | 10 | 03 Environment, Kenya Adriana Briozzo Colombo - 1 | 30 | 03 Civic Engagement, Egypt Learning / Education, Uruguay Sandra Aguebor - 8 | 31 | 04 Alejandro Calvillo Unna - 3 | 3 | 03 Omar Azad Chowdhury - 5 | 18 | 04 Learning / Education, Bangladesh Omer Madra - Civic Engagement Turkey 2 | 16 | 04 Orri Vigfusson - 8 | 24 | 04 Economic Development, Nigeria Economic Development, India Environment, Iceland Sushobha Barve - 6 | 21 | 04 Civic Engagement, India Learning / Education, United States Economic Development, United States Civic Engagement, Nigeria Supinya Klangnarong - 7 | 26 | 04 Civic Engagement, Thailand Prigi Arisandi - 8 | 31 | 04 Environment, Indonesia Ra‘ana Mahmood - 3 | 15 | 04 Health, Pakistan Rahul Banerjee - 2 | 16 | 04 Human Rights, India Rajeev (expired) George - 2 | 16 | 04 Human Rights, India Rakesh Jaiswal - 3 | 3 | 2004 Environment, India Ritu Primlani - 8 | 24 | 04 Environment, United States Rodrigo Mendes - 2 | 16 | 04 Learning / Education, Brazil Roma Debabrata - 3 | 3 | 2004 Mohamed Sherif El Ghamrawy - 3 | 15 | 04 Mustafa Sari - 2 | 16 | 04 Environment, Turkey N Nanre Nafziger - 8 | 31 | 04 Supatra Nacapew - 7 | 26 | 04 Health, Thailand HealthPakistan Human Rights, India Environment, Egypt Subroto Das - 5 | 18 | 04 Health, India Pradeep Ghosh - 5 | 18 | 04 Mihir Bhatt - 8 | 24 | 04 Civic Engagement, India Steve Bigari - 7 | 26 | 04 Economic Development, United States Pedro Pablo Ramos Sastoque - 8 | 31 | 04 Civic Engagement, Colombia Peter Sinkamba - 6 | 30 | 04 Civic Engagement, Zambia Petr Bergmann - 4 | 3 | 04 Economic Development, India Health, Uganda Sriram Ayer - 8 | 31 | 04 Learning / Education, India Economic Development, Kenya Civic Engagement, Czech Republic Health, Mexico Civic Engagement, South Africa Pablo Antonio Ordonez - 6 | 30 | 04 Marcos Luis Bitencourt - 2 | 16 | 04 Environment, Brazil Solomon Cedile - 6 | 30 | 04 Human Rights, Sri Lanka Patricia Guadalupe Nava Rodriguez Gil - 12 | 2 | 04 Mexico Patrick Gathitu - 6 | 21 | 04 Maher Bushra - 3 | 15 | 04 Sikha Roy - 5 | 18 | 04 Civic Engagement, India P P. N. Singham - 8 | 24 | 04 Maguiorina Balbuena Cardozo - 4 | 19 | 04 Human Rights, Egypt Economic Development, Bangladesh Civic Engagement, Mexico Economic Development, Argentina Civic Engagement, Paraguay Shaikh Mizan - 01 | 12 | 2004 Civic Engagement, Brazil Human Rights, India at 30 | Sandra Peniche Quintal - 8 | 31 | 04 Health, Brazil Sashikala Ananth - 5 | 10 | 04 Environment, India Satyan Mishra - 8 | 31 | 04 Civic Engagement, Mexico Alexandro Silva Chaves - 1 | 30 | 03 Economic Development, Brazil Amalia Fischer - 1 | 30 | 03 Human Rights, Brazil Amol Goje - 5 | 5 | 03 Economic Development, India List of fellows | 57 58 | Ashoka at 30 Ana Criquillon - 8 | 28 | 03 Human Rights, Nicaragua Ana Maria de Araújo Mello - 12 | 1 | 03 Learning / Education, Brazil Andrew macharia - 6 | 10 | 03 Environment, Kenya Anna Johansson - 1 | 12 | 03 Health, Mexico Antonieta Castro Abaj - 8 | 28 | 03 Human Rights, Guatemala Antonio Jose Motta Bentes - 8 | 25 | 03 Environment, Brazil Apolonio Gomez - 3 | 3 | 03 Health, Mexico Armin Salasa - 6 | 10 | 03 Civic Engagement, Indonesia Arun Shourie - 12 | 1 | 03 India B Benon Sebina - 7 | 22 | 03 Economic Development, Uganda Blanca Villaseñor Roca - 1 | 12 | 03 Human Rights, Mexico Brojo Roy - 6 | 10 | 03 India Bupatip Chamnil - 6 | 2 | 03 Civic Engagement, Thailand C Carlos Eduardo Da Silva Zuma - 8 | 28 | 03 Human Rights, Brazil Carlos Venegas - 1 | 30 | 03 Chile Carmen Yolanda Llanquín - 1 | 30 | 03 Human Rights, Argentina Chandrasekaran Srinivasan - 3 | 3 | 03 Health, India Chantawipa Apisuk - 11 | 30 | 03 Human Rights, Thailand Clara Victoria Colbert - 1 | 13 | 03 Learning | Education, Colombia Claudia Pacheco - 1 | 30 | 03 Paraguay Claudia Werneck - 8 | 25 | 03 Human Rights, Brazil Claudionor Da Silva - 8 | 28 | 03 Economic Development, Brazil Cynthia Figueiredo Camargo - 8 | 25 | 03 Learning | Education, Brazil D Darin Gunesekera - 8 | 25 | 03 Economic Development, Sri Lanka David Chiel - 12 | 1 | 03 Bangladesh Diana Damian - 8 | 28 | 03 Health Mexico Dina Abdel wahab - 8 | 28 | 03 Learning | Education, Egypt | List of fellows E Eglė Pranckūnienė - 3 | 3 | 03 Learning | Education, Lithuania Elżbieta Szwałkiewicz - 1 | 13 | 03 Health, Poland Elie Ghanem - 1 | 30 | 03 Learning | Education, Brazil Enakshi Ganguly - 8 | 25 | 03 Human Rights, India Enrique Gustavo Gennuso - 7 | 8 | 03 Learning | Education, Argentina Ercan Tutal - 1 | 13 | 03 Human Rights Turkey Ester Indahyani Jusuf - 8 | 25 | 03 John Abraham - 8 | 25 | 03 Economic Development, India John Bala - 8 | 28 | 03 Indonesia John Mighton - 6 | 2 | 03 Learning | Education, Canada Jorge Antonio Razeto Migliaro - 1 | 30 | 03 Economic Development, Chile José Ancán - 1 | 12 | 03 Learning | Education, Chile Jose Erneste Bravo - 8 | 28 | 03 Nicaragua Josué De Oliveira Rios - 12 | 1 | 03 Human Rights, Indonesia Human Rights, Brazil Eugene Watrin - 12 | 1 | 03 Judith-Ann Walker - 12 | 3 | 03 Nepal Ewa Romanow - 1 | 13 | 03 Environment, Poland F Fernando Andrade - 1 | 13 | 03 Civic Engagement, Bolivia Fong Ritnetikul - 6 | 2 | 03 Civic Engagement, Thailand G Géza Nagy - 1 | 30 | 03 Human Rights, Hungary Graciela Arriaga - 1 | 12 | 03 Mexico Guillermo Worman - 1 | 30 | 03 Civic Engagement, Argentina Gunesin Aydemir - 1 | 13 | 03 Environment, Turkey H Hafsat Abiola - 4 | 9 | 03 Civic Engagement, Nigeria Hammond Darell - 8 | 28 | 03 Human Rights, United States Harendra De silva - 8 | 25 | 03 Human Rights, Sri Lanka Hasanaen - 8 | 28 | 03 Indonesia Haywood Hall - 8 | 28 | 03 Health, Mexico Henry Osadolor - 4 | 9 | 03 Nigeria Herivelto Silva Teixeira - 1 | 30 | 03 Civic Engagement, Brazil Hisham El Roubi - 8 | 28 | 03 Learning | Education, Egypt I Inmaculada Puente - 6 | 10 | 03 Human Rights, Mexico Isidore Phillips - 8 | 28 | 03 Human Rights, India J Jeannette de Saravia - 1 | 1 | 03 Colombia Joaquín Felipe Leguía Orezzoli - 1 | 13 | 03 Environment, Peru Civic Engagement, Nigeria Judy Frater - 5 | 5 | 03 Economic Development, India Julio Vacaflor - 1 | 30 | 03 Civic Engagement, Argentina Junsuda Suwanchandee - 6 | 2 | 03 Health, Thailand K K.A. Thomas - 8 | 5 | 03 Civic Engagement, India Kamla Chowdhry - 12 | 1 | 03 India Karan Grover - 8 | 25 | 03 Civic Engagement, India Karla Emmanuela Ribeiro Hora - 1 | 30 | 03 Civic Engagement, Brazil Kaustubh Pandharipande - 3 | 3 | 03 Human Rights, India Khatau Jani - 3 | 3 | 03 Environment, Pakistan Kim Feinberg - 8 | 28 | 03 Learning | Education, South Africa Kim Kieser - 6 | 10 | 03 Environment, South Africa Krishna Roy - 4 | 6 | 03 Civic Engagement, India Krzysztof Czyżewski - 7 | 22 | 03 Civic Engagement, Poland L Lais Fleury Cunha - 8 | 25 | 03 Learning | Education, Brazil Lal Jan - 3 | 3 | 03 Economic Development, Pakistan Lendo Novo - 8 | 25 | 03 Indonesia Leobardo Jimenez Sanchez - 1 | 12 | 03 Mexico Liliana Raquel Miranda Sara - 1 | 13 | 03 Environment, Peru Lily Thapa - 8 | 25 | 03 Human Rights, United Kingdom Ashoka Lisa Heydlauff - 8 | 25 | 03 Learning | Education, India Lucy Auwalu - 4 | 9 | 03 Health Nigeria Lynn Freiji - 8 | 28 | 03 Learning | Education, Egypt M Macarena Currin - 1 | 30 | 03 Human Rights, Chile Magda Iskander - 8 | 28 | 03 Health, Egypt Mahabir Pun - 5 | 6 | 03 Learning | Education, Nepal Mandira Kumar - 12 | 1 | 03 Learning | Education, India Mandira Sharma - 8 | 25 | 03 Human Rights, Nepal Manuel Arango Arias - 1 | 12 | 03 Mexico Mara Bergmane - 7 | 22 | 03 Economic Development, Latvia Marcelo Mario Caldano - 1 | 30 | 03 Economic Development Argentina Maria Elisa Villaescuza - 3 | 3 | 03 Human Rights Mexico Maria Schejbal - 7 | 22 | 03 Health Poland Martin Kariongi - 6 | 10 | 03 Human Rights Tanzania Masri Singarimbun - 12 | 1 | 03 Indonesia Masthi Papamma - 4 | 6 | 03 Civic Engagement India Matin Ahmed - 6 | 10 | 03 Learning | Education Bangladesh Meth Kusumahadi - 12 | 1 | 03 Indonesia Miguel Angel de los Santos - 8 | 28 | 03 Human Rights Mexico Minal Doshi - 5 | 5 | 03 Health India Mohamed Nagi - 8 | 28 | 03 Environment Egypt Muhammad Imam Aziz - 6 | 10 | 03 Human Rights Indonesia N N. Krishnaswamy - 12 | 1 | 03 India Nadine Naidoo - 6 | 10 | 03 Civic Engagement South Africa Neusa Das Dores Pereira - 8 | 25 | 03 Human Rights Brazil Nicole Rycroft - 6 | 2 | 03 Environment Canada Nirmala Srinivasan - 6 | 2 | 03 Health India Nirupama Sekhri - 4 | 9 | 03 Economic Development India Ny. Tini Hasan Poerbo - 12 | 1 | 03 Indonesia O Onimim Briggs - 4 | 9 | 03 Civic Engagement Nigeria Oscar Vilhena Vieira - 8 | 25 | 03 Brazil Osman Gani - 12 | 1 | 03 Bangladesh P Padmanabha Rao - 8 | 5 | 03 Learning | Education India Palagummi Sainath - 12 | 1 | 03 Learning | Education India Palmer Jeffrey - 8 | 28 | 03 Health United States Patricia Blanco - 1 | 13 | 03 Health Bolivia Paul Hogan - 8 | 25 | 03 Human Rights Sri Lanka Peter Aina - 6 | 2 | 03 Human Rights Nigeria Peter Ebigbo - 12 | 1 | 03 Gambia, The Pranjal Baruah - 6 | 10 | 03 Economic Development India Prema Gopalan - 5 | 5 | 03 Civic Engagement India R Rafael Kopta - 1 | 30 | 03 Environment Argentina Rajanikant Arole - 12 | 1 | 03 India Rajat Mitra - 8 | 25 | 03 Human Rights India Rajendra Suwal - 5 | 6 | 03 Environment Nepal Rama Rao - 8 | 5 | 03 Learning | Education India Ramon Valencia - 8 | 28 | 03 Civic Engagement El Salvador Rathindranath Roy - 12 | 1 | 03 India Raveendran Kannan - 8 | 28 | 03 Environment India Renae Griggs - 8 | 28 | 03 Human Rights United States Renu Appachu - 3 | 3 | 03 Health India Rita Sembuya - 6 | 10 | 03 Roshnally Hirji - 12 | 1 | 03 Rubens Gomes - 1 | 30 | 03 Environment Brazil S S. Bandopadhyay - 12 | 1 | 03 India S. Pandian - 5 | 5 | 03 Human Rights India S.S. Sivakumar - 12 | 1 | 03 India Sahra Luyt - 6 | 10 | 03 Economic Development, South Africa Sanat Chakraborty - 12 | 1 | 03 India Sandra Berenice Ferrari Turra - 12 | 1 | 03 Brazil Sheilu Srinivasan - 3 | 3 | 03 Human Rights India Shemmy Rory - 8 | 25 | 03 Economic Development, Indonesia Shyam Chainani - 12 | 1 | 03 India Shykh Seraj - 11 | 29 | 03 Learning | Education, Bangladesh Sohini Chakraborty - 6 | 10 | 03 Human Rights, India Sriram Panchu - 12 | 1 | 03 India Stella Amojong Omunga - 6 | 10 | 03 Human Rights, Kenya Steve Binder - 8 | 28 | 03 Human Rights, United States Sudeshna Basu - 12 | 1 | 03 India Sundar Narayan Patro - 12 | 1 | 03 Environment, India Sunita Bagal - 3 | 3 | 03 Economic Development, India Susheela Bhan - 8 | 25 | 03 Learning | Education, India T Tamer Bahaa - 8 | 28 | 03 Human Rights, Egypt Tandiar Mossaad - 8 | 28 | 03 Health, Egypt Teesta Setalvad - 6 | 2 | 03 Human Rights, India Tejbir Singh - 12 | 1 | 03 India Teresa Tomaka - 1 | 13 | 03 Human Rights, Poland Rocío Rubí Roncal Rojas - 1 | 13 | 03 Thope Lekau - 6 | 10 | 03 Rosana Grinberg - 8 | 25 | 03 Human Rights Brazil 59 Bangladesh Health Uganda Health Peru at 30 | Economic Development, South Africa Tina Suprihatin - 5 | 5 | 03 Human Rights, Indonesia List of fellows | 60 | Ashoka at 30 Tosan Oruwariye - 4 | 9 | 03 Health, Nigeria Trailokya Upraity - 12 | 1 | 03 Nepal Trevor Dudley - 6 | 10 | 03 Learning | Education, Uganda V Valdecir Nascimento - 1 | 30 | 03 Human Rights, Brazil Verona Valencia GarcÃa - 3 | 3 | 03 Mexico Vineet Rai - 3 | 3 | 03 Economic Development, India Virginia Varela Dubra - 1 | 30 | 03 Human Rights, Uruguay W Weera Suwannachote - 6 | 2 | 03 Learning | Education, Thailand Willy Pessoa - 8 | 25 | 03 Economic Development, Brazil Wole Daini - 4 | 9 | 03 Human Rights, Nigeria Yahaya Hashim - 4 | 9 | 03 Nigeria Y Yasmeen Lari - 5 | 5 | 03 Pakistan Zackie Achmat - 6 | 10 | 03 Health South, Africa Z Zsuzsa Csató - 1 | 30 | 03 Health, Hungary Amy Barzach - 9 | 9 | 02 Human Rights, United States Amy Lemley - 3 | 18 | 02 Economic Development, United States André Viana Custódio - 4 | 1 | 02 Human Rights,Brazil Anna Penido - 2 | 4 | 02 Civic Engagement, Brazil Arief W. Djati - 5 | 6 | 02 Human Rights, Indonesia Ashok Rau - 2 | 4 | 02 Health, India B Bernardo Rojas Montoya - 2 | 4 | 02 Economic Development, Costa Rica Bola Fajemirokun - 4 | 8 | 02 Civic Engagement, Nigeria C Catalina Ruiz - 2 | 4 | 02 Environment, Nicaragua Chingmak Kejong - 5 | 6 | 02 Civic Engagement, India Chris Giles - 8 | 19 | 02 Civic Engagement, South Africa Claudia Cova -1 | 7 | 02 Learning | Education, Venezuela Craig Esbeck - 9 | 9 | 02 Learning | Education, Uganda D Dallas Wilson Jr. Thd - 3 | 18 | 02 Economic Development, United States Daniel Becker - 4 | 8 | 02 → 2002 Health, Brazil David Domenici - 3 | 18 | 02 Learning | Education, United States Dilip Banerjee - 5 | 6 | 02 Environment, India A Abdoulaye Diaw - 5 | 6 | 02 Health, Senegal Abdul Kader - 10 | 11 | 02 Bangladesh Adela Esther Castellanos de Merino - 2 | 4 | 02 El Salvador Feliciano Reyna - 1 | 7 | 02 Health, Venezuela Francisco Javier Duque Villegas - 12 | 2 | 02 Economic Development, Colombia G Ganesh Pangare - 5 | 6 | 02 Economic Development, India George Obichukwu - 4 | 8 | 02 Economic Development, Nigeria Gerrit Hendriks - 8 | 19 | 02 Economic Development, South Africa Girvydas Doublys - 2 | 4 | 02 Civic Engagement, Lithuania Guilherme Souza - 10 | 11 | 02 Environment, Brazil Gulbaz Khan Afaqi - 5 | 6 | 02 Environment ,Pakistan Gustavo Alanis - 1 | 6 | 02 Environment, Mexico H Haidar El ali - 5 | 6 | 02 Environment ,Senegal Hamzah M. - 5 | 6 | 02 Economic Development, Indonesia Helena Todd - 1 | 7 | 02 Learning | Education, Chile Hernani Francisco Da Silva - 3 | 25 | 02 Human Rights, Brazil Hudson McComb - 7 | 8 | 02 Economic Development, Thailand Hugo Medina Huerta - 2 | 4 | 02 Economic Development, Paraguay I I Gusti Ketut (Gus Krobo) Puriartha 5 | 6 | 02 Don Shalvey - 3 | 18 | 02 Civic Engagement, Indonesia Donat Kuczewski - 1 | 1 | 02 Civic Engagement, India Donna Morton - 5 | 6 | 02 Economic Development, Indonesia Learning | Education, United States Health, Poland Economic Development, Canada Duke Kaufman - 8 | 19 | 02 Health, South Africa Ajmal Kamal - 5 | 6 | 02 E Ebunola Anozie - 4 | 8 | 02 Al Etmanski - 5 | 6 | 02 Edit Györik - 2 | 4 | 02 Civic Engagement, Pakistan Farouk Mohammed - 4 | 8 | 02 Health, Nigeria Health, Nigeria Ilango Rangaswamy - 5 | 6 | 02 Iwan Saktiawan - 10 | 11 | 02 J Jacek Jakubiec - 10 | 2 | 02 Civic Engagement, Poland Jackie Branfield - 8 | 19 | 02 Human Rights, South Africa Jaime Alberto Carril Rojas - 2 | 4 | 02 Civic Engagement, Chile Human Rights, Canada Health, Hungary Alberto Ruz - 8 | 19 | 02 Civic Engagement, Peru Environment, Mexico Emperatriz Cahuache Casado -12 | 2 | 02 Civic Engagement, Colombia Alemberg De Souza Lima - 2 | 4 | 02 Esther Cossie - 8 | 19 | 02 Economic Development, Poland Learning | Education, Brazil Alfredo Mariano Olivera - 3 | 10 | 02 Health, Argentina Aminata Dieye - 5 | 6 | 02 Economic Development, Senegal Health, South Africa F Fachrurrazi Ch. Malley - 10 | 11 | 02 Environment, Indonesia Falgun Sheth - 2 | 4 | 02 Learning | Education, United Kingdom Jaime Ulloa Vara - 1 | 7 | 02 Jarek Dominiak - 10 | 2 | 02 Jorge Lyra - 2 | 4 | 02 Health, Brazil Josephine Effah-Chukwuma - 4 | 8 | 02 Human Rights, Nigeria Josephine Nzerem - 4 | 8 | 02 Human Rights, Nigeria | List of fellows Ashoka Joshua Sampson - 4 | 8 | 02 Nigeria Joyce Djaelani Gordon - 10 | 11 | 02 Health, Indonesia K Kamardi Kamardi - 11 | 25 | 02 Civic Engagement, Indonesia Kapil Mondal - 8 | 19 | 02 Economic Development, India Miguel Larguia - 1 | 8 | 02 Health, Argentina Mirian Assumpcao e Lima - 10 | 11 | 02 Human Rights, Brazil Monsur Choudhuri - 1 | 11 | 02 Bangladesh Mylakanahalli Parshuram - 8 | 19 | 02 Human Rights, India Kennedy Wafula - 9 | 9 | 02 N Ndeye Dague Gueye - 1 | 1 | 02 Kevin Long - 7 | 31 | 02 O Osmond Mugweni - 8 | 19 | 02 Khemporn Wiroonrapan - 1 | 7 | 02 P Parul Sheth - 2 | 4 | 02 Human Rights, Kenya Human Rights, United States Learning | Education, Thailand Health, Senegal Environment, Zimbabwe Learning | Education, India Kiattisak Kittibhaddo muangmit 10 | 11 | 02 Economic Development, India Krisada Boonchai - 10 | 11 | 02 Environment, Brazil Kristina Ona Polukordiene - 11 | 2 | 02 Health, Nigeria Kuba Marchewicz - 8 | 19 | 02 South Africa Civic Engagement, Thailand Learning | Education, Thailand Health, Lithuania Health, Poland L Laila Arzumand Banu - 5 | 17 | 02 Health, Brazil Paul Basil - 9 | 9 | 02 Paulo Célio Figueiredo - 12 | 1 | 02 Peter Azolibe - 4 | 8 | 02 Peter van Alphen - 7 | 8 | 02 Peter Wahome - 9 | 9 | 02 Economic Development, Kenya Piroska D. Horváth - 7 | 8 | 02 Lajos Orosz - 2 | 4 | 02 Health, Hungary Lakshmi Ramappa - 1 | 8 | 02 Learning | Education, Thailand Learning | Education Hungary India Larry Rosenstock - 9 | 9 | 02 Learning | Education United States Pradit Prasartthong - 10 | 11 | 02 Q Quazi Iqbal Sabery - 6 | 17 | 02 Learning | Education, Bangladesh R Rakawin Leechanavanichpan - 10 | 11 | 02 at 30 | Shamsul Palash - 6 | 17 | 02 Learning | Education, Bangladesh Shree Padre - 4 | 8 | 02 Civic Engagement, India Silvana Veinberg - 1 | 7 | 02 Human Rights, Argentina Silvia R. Ziller - 2 | 4 | 02 Environment, Brazil Socorro Guterres - 10 | 11 | 02 Human Rights, Brazil Sofia Sarasti - 12 | 2 | 02 Health, Colombia Soledad Martinez Stark - 2 | 4 | 02 Health Paraguay Sonam Wangchuk - 8 | 19 | 02 Learning | Education, India Souadou diabaté Koné - 5 | 6 | 02 Human Rights, Mali Stanisław Duszyński - 5 | 6 | 02 Health, Poland Stella Iwuagwu - 4 | 8 | 02 Human Rights, Nigeria Sunil Khairnar - 5 | 6 | 02 Economic Development, India Sunitha Krishnan - 2 | 4 | 02 Human Rights, India Suresh Kushtagi - 8 | 19 | 02 Human Rights, India Susan Steinman - 8 | 19 | 02 Human Rights, South Africa T Tadeusz Zapadka - 8 | 19 | 02 Laury Cullen - 9 | 9 | 02 Economic Development, Thailand Lillian Keene-Mugerwa - 9 | 9 | 02 Economic Development, India Louis Onyia Uche - 4 | 8 | 02 Learning | Education, India Human Rights, United States Ravichandra Raju - 5 | 6 | 02 Thomas Bill - 9 | 9 | 02 Rebeca Villalobos Vargas - 10 | 7 | 02 Thomas Kumolu-Johnson -4 | 8 | 02 Environment Brazil Human Rights ,Uganda Civic Engagement, Nigeria M M. Yamin - 5 | 6 | 02 Civic Engagement, Indonesia Rakhee Choudhury - 8 | 19 | 02 Ramchandra Gunari - 8 | 19 | 02 Human Rights, India Madhav Chavan - 8 | 19 | 02 Health, Costa Rica Maharukh Adenwalla - 8 | 19 | 02 Health Bolivia Mandla Mentoor - 8 | 19 | 02 Civic Engagement, South Africa Marcelina Bautista - 1 | 6 | 02 Pakistan Marianne Sidibe N‘Diaye - 5 | 6 | 02 Economic Development, Indonesia Martin Prokop - 8 | 19 | 02 Civic Engagement, Brazil Mary Gordon - 5 | 6 | 02 Economic Development, Indonesia Learning | Education, India Human Rights, India Environment South, Africa Human Rights, Mexico Health, Senegal Civic Engagement, Czech Republic Learning | Education, Canada Matthew Spacie - 8 | 19 | 02 Ricardo López de la Vega - 1 | 7 | 02 Rob Small - 8 | 19 | 02 Economic Development, Poland Tamás Liling - 2 | 4 | 02 Civic Engagement, Hungary Tammy Krause - 3 | 18 | 02 Health, United States Economic Development, Nigeria Tunde Fabunmi - 4 | 8 | 02 Economic Development, Nigeria V Vaidotas Ilgius - 8 | 19 | 02 Civic Engagement, Lithuania Roland D‘Souza- 5 | 6 | 02 Veronica Khosa - 7 | 8 | 02 Ronny Dimara - 5 | 6 | 02 Vibha Gupta - 8 | 19 | 02 Rosina Duarte De Duarte - 4 | 1 | 02 Vibha Marfatia - 2 | 4 | 02 Rossana Dewi - 10 | 11 | 02 S Shakil Ahmed - 1 | 7 | 02 Human Rights, India Health, South Africa Learning | Education, India Health, India W Wacław Czakon - 8 | 19 | 02 Learning | Education, Poland Wacław Idziak - 8 | 19 | 02 Economic Development, Poland Health, India List of fellows | 61 62 | Ashoka at 30 Winnie María Lira Letelier - 2 | 4 | 02 Economic Development, Chile Y Yuyun Yunia Ismawati - 10 | 11 | 02 Environment, Indonesia Chibuzo Ekwekwuo - 4 | 2 | 01 Civic Engagement, Nigeria Christina Jordan - 12 | 3 | 01 Economic Development, Uganda Comfort Maduakoh - 4 | 2 | 01 → 2001 Learning | Education, Nigeria D Daniel Suárez Zúñiga - 8 | 27 | 01 Environment, Bangladesh David Green - 1 | 8 | 01 John Samuel - 8 | 6 | 01 Health United, States David Sutasurya - 8 | 27 | 01 Human Rights, United States Ako Amadi - 4 | 2 | 01 Economic Development, United States Dianna Ortiz - 6 | 4 | 01 DJ Powers - 1 | 8 | 01 E Edinéa Alcântara - 1 | 1 | 01 Aku Christy Orduh - 4 | 2 | 01 Economic Development, Brazil Aleta Margolis - 1 | 8 | 01 Economic Development, Brazil András Szabó - 6 | 4 | 01 Economic Development, Paraguay André Fernando Baniwa - 9 | 10 | 01 Human Rights, Indonesia Angela Coleman - 6 | 4 | 01 Human Rights, Indonesia Anna Gajewska - 6 | 4 | 01 Civic Engagement, Hungary Ausra Kuriene - 7 | 2 | 01 Economic Development, Zimbabwe Human Rights, Nigeria Learning | Education, United States Civic Engagement, Hungary Human Rights, Brazil Learning | Education, United States Learning | Education, Poland Health, Lithuania Austin Onuoha - 4 | 2 | 01 Civic Engagement, Nigeria B Babu Raja Shrestha - 8 | 6 | 01 Environment, Nepal Egídio Guerra De Freitas - 9 | 10 | 01 Elsa María Zaldívar Rolón - 1 | 8 | 01 Emmy Lucy Smith - 5 | 17 | 01 Endang Susilowati - 4 | 2 | 01 Endre Bíró - 6 | 4 | 01 Esinet Mapondera - 7 | 8 | 01 F Fabián Medina Cabrera - 8 | 27 | 01 Health, Colombia Flick Asvat - 3 | 8 | 01 Learning | Education, Brazil G Gábor Fekete - 2 | 5 | 01 Bahruddin Bahruddin - 10 | 2 | 01 Learning | Education, Hungary Barbara Sadowska - 6 | 4 | 01 Health, Hungary Beatriz Rojas - 8 | 6 | 01 Health, India Beena Sheth Lashkari - 5 | 17 | 01 Environment, Paraguay Civic Engagement, Indonesia Economic Development, Poland Economic Development, Peru Learning | Education, India Gábor Gombos - 2 | 5 | 01 George Abraham - 2 | 5 | 01 Gustavo Candia - 1 | 1 | 01 H Heladio Reyes Cruz - 1 | 8 | 01 Benjamin Chigozie Mbakwem - 4 | 2 | 01 Environment, Mexico Betty Agujobi - 4 | 2 | 01 Herlambang Perdana Wiratraman 8 | 27 | 01 Health, Nigeria Learning | Education, Nigeria Human Rights, Indonesia Beulah Thumbadoo - 4 | 10 | 01 Hidayat Palaloi - 8 | 27 | 01 Learning | Education, South Africa C Carol Shapiro - 1 | 8 | 01 Human Rights, United States Charles Maisel - 8 | 8 | 01 Human Rights, South Africa | List of fellows Jeanne Devos - 10 | 2 | 01 Joakin Mayorga - 8 | 27 | 01 Abul Haseeb Khan - 5 | 17 | 01 Environment, Nigeria Civic Engagement, South Africa David Erickson - 6 | 4 | 01 Environment, Indonesia Bangladesh I Jackqueline Maarohanye - 8 | 6 | 01 Human Rights, India Abu Naser Khan - 5 | 17 | 01 Environment, Bangladesh Innocent Uworibhor - 14 | 2 | 01 Human Rights, Nigeria Civic Engagement, Colombia Health, United States A A. H. Md. Maqsood Sinha - 5 | 18 | 01 Iftekhar Enayetullah - 5 | 16 | 01 Environment, Bangladesh Environment, Indonesia I I Gusti Ketut (Agung Alit) Alit - 8 | 27 | 01 Economic Development, Indonesia Ibiyemi Fakande - 4 | 2 | 01 Human Rights, Nigeria Civic Engagement, Colombia South Africa Jorge Adolfo Strada - 2 | 5 | 01 Human Rights, Argentina José David Toro - 8 | 27 | 01 Civic Engagement, Colombia José María Campaña Perez - 10 | 12 | 01 Learning | Education, Uruguay Juan Guillermo Ocampo - 8 | 27 | 01 Colombia Juan Reátegui Silva - 8 | 6 | 01 Health, Peru Jurairat Swatdiparp - 9 | 10 | 01 Health, Thailand Jyoti Mhapsekar - 2 | 5 | 01 Economic Development, India K Kasmiati - 1 | 1 | 01 Economic Development, Indonesia Kishor Rithe - 2 | 5 | 01 Environment, India Krzysztof Wietrzny - 2 | 23 | 01 Poland Kwesi Prah - 8 | 6 | 01 Learning | Education, South Africa L Ladislav Hegyi - 7 | 2 | 01 Slovakia Lenin Raghuvanshi - 5 | 17 | 01 Human Rights, India Lesley Ann Van Selm - 8 | 27 | 01 Learning | Education, South Africa Limota Giwa - 4 | 2 | 01 Nigeria Linzi Smith - 8 | 6 | 01 Health South, Africa Luis Orlando Castro - 8 | 27 | 01 Environment, Colombia M Made Indrawati - 5 | 17 | 01 Environment, Indonesia Marcus Solomon - 8 | 6 | 01 Civic Engagement, South Africa María Augusta Calle Andrade - 5 | 11 | 01 Civic Engagement, Ecuador Mário Gurjão Filho - 1 | 1 | 01 Economic Development, Brazil Ashoka Markéta Královcová - 1 | 8 | 01 Shivaram Pailoor - 10 | 2 | 01 Health Czech, Republic Economic Development, India Martha Patricia Pimentel García - 1 | 8 | 01 Silvia Diez Urdanivia - 1 | 8 | 01 Economic Development, Mexico Health, Mexico Matthew Johnson - 6 | 4 | 01 Sirikit Syah - 10 | 2 | 01 Learning | Education, United States Civic Engagement, Indonesia Matthew Lee - 6 | 4 | 01 Stanislaus ( Sanny) Jebamalai - 5 | 17 | 01 Economic Development, United States Human Rights, India Moral Noor Mohammad - 5 | 17 | 01 Stella Cárdenas Ovalle - 8 | 27 | 01 Bangladesh Mulaudzi Fhauwni Trevor - 8 | 6 | 01 Civic Engagement, South Africa Mwalimu Musheshe - 12 | 4 | 01 Myrna Wajsman-Lewis - 8 | 27 | 01 Suman Lahiry - 5 | 18 | 01 Bangladesh T Trevor Muluadzi - 8 | 20 | Sahel, West O Omololu Falobi - 4 | 2 | 01 V Vinaya Kasajoo - 8 | 6 | 01 Health, Nigeria Africa Civic Engagement, Nepal P Paromita Goswami - 5 | 17 | 01 Vira Bechyoova - 7 | 2 | 01 Human Rights, India Paul Rice - 1 | 8 | 01 Economic Development, United States Czech Republic Y Yasemin Kilic - 7 | 2 | 01 Economic Development, Turkey Pradip Sarmah - 5 | 17 | 01 Yusuf Kulca - 7 | 2 | 01 Economic Development, India Pralhad Malvadkar - 8 | 27 | 01 Health, India Civic Engagement ,Turkey Z Zahed Md. Masud - 9 | 10 | 01 Bangladesh R Rajiv Vinnakota - 1 | 8 | 01 Zdzisław Nitak - 7 | 12 | 01 Learning | Education, United States Environment, Poland Ravindra Shetye - 10 | 2 | 01 Zubaedah (Zubie) Zubaedah - 5 | 17 | 01 Economic Development, India Human Rights, Indonesia Regina dos Santos - 1 | 1 | 01 Zuzana Stromerová - 7 | 2 | 01 Human Rights, Brazil Health, Czech Republic Renê Patriota - 9 | 10 | 01 René Schärer - 9 | 10 | 01 Renuka Sharma - 7 | 8 | 01 → 2000 Human Rights, Nepal Saree Aongsomwang - 9 | 10 | 01 Health, Thailand Shadrack Tshivhase - 8 | 6 | 01 Learning | Education, South Africa Shaheen Mistri - 5 | 17 | 01 Learning | Education, India Shahidul Islam Chowdhury - 9 | 10 | 01 Bangladesh Shane Petzer - 8 | 6 | 01 Civic Engagement, South Africa Sharad Parajuli - 8 | 6 | 01 Health, Nepal Human Rights, India Badara Jobe - 12 | 12 | 00 Health, Uruguay Carlos Vargas García - 4 | 12 | 00 Health, Mexico Carmen Magallón - 8 | 9 | 00 Human Rights, Mexico Carolyn Laub - 8 | 15 | 00 Human Rights, United States Cecilia Margarita Suárez Trueba 1 | 10 | 00 Civic Engagement, Mexico Chatchawan Thongdeelert - 7 | 6 | 00 Civic Engagement, Thailand Christina Joseph - 8 | 23 | 00 Human Rights, Indonesia Claudia Epelman - 12 | 31 | 00 Health, Brazil Cynthia Dukhomad - 12 | 12 | 00 Learning | Education, Chile D Daniel Alberto Vartanián Alarcón 12 | 12 | 00 Environment, Costa Rica Daniel Tawrycky - 12 | 12 | 00 Civic Engagement, Chile Civic Engagement, South Africa Delia Villalobos Arciga - 12 | 12 | 00 Health, Mexico Dorota Komornicka - 1 | 1 | 00 Civic Engagement, Poland S Samart Sakawee - 9 | 10 | 01 Economic Development, Thailand B Babloo Loitongbam - 4 | 16 | 00 David Liknaitzky - 10 | 12 | 00 Health, Brazil Economic Development, Brazil Anthony Jones - 8 | 15 | 00 Human Rights, United States C Carlos Guida Leskevicius - 12 | 12 | 00 N Nevin Eracar - 7 | 2 | 01 Health, Turkey Anna Zuchhetti - 12 | 12 | 00 Environment, Peru Steve Rothschild - 6 | 4 | 01 Suchada Chakpisute - 9 | 10 | 01 Civic Engagement, South Africa Alpha Fall - 12 | 12 | 00 Learning | Education, The Gambia Civic Engagement, Thailand 63 Human Rights, The Gambia, Human Rights, Colombia Economic Development, United States Learning | Education, Uganda at 30 | E Ebrahim Rass - 3 | 4 | 00 A Abdourahmane Mbengue - 8 | 31 | 00 Civic Engagement, Senegal Economic Development, South Africa Eko Teguh Paripurno - 8 | 23 | 00 Adela Muñiz Guadarrama - 1 | 30 | 00 Environment, Indonesia Akcar Sengul - 12 | 12 | 00 Learning | Education, Poland Human Rights, Mexico Human Rights, Turkey Ewa Smuk-Stratenwerth - 7 | 12 | 00 F Fabián Ferraro - 12 | 12 | 00 Alejandro Martinez Rodriguez - 10 | 26 | 00 Civic Engagement, Argentina Ali Hasan - 4 | 20 | 00 Learning | Education, Brazil Alicja Derkowska - 7 | 12 | 00 Francisco De Oliveira Rebouças Neto 8 | 31 | 00 Human Rights, Colombia Economic Development, Indonesia Learning | Education, Poland Allan Schwarz - 8 | 10 | 00 Economic Development, Mozambique Feizi Milani - 8 | 31 | 00 Economic Development, Brazil G Garba Cissé - 10 | 26 | 00 Health, Mali List of fellows | 64 | Ashoka at 30 Geeta Ramanujam - 4 | 16 | 00 Learning | Education, India Georgette Koala - 12 | 12 | 00 Civic Engagement, Burkina Faso Gerarda Fraga Suescum - 5 | 11 | 00 Civic Engagement, Venezuela H Hasina Khan - 8 | 31 | 00 Human Rights, India Héctor Jorquera Escares - 12 | 12 | 00 Civic Engagement, Argentina I Issoufou Tiendrebeogo - 12 | 12 | 00 Health, Burkina Faso István Aba-Horváth - 7 | 6 | 00 Economic Development, Hungary J J.B. Schramm - 8 | 15 | 00 Learning | Education, United States Magdalena María Palau Fernández 12 | 31 | 00 Learning | Education, India Marcia Siguenza Crespo - 5 | 11 | 00 Learning | Education, India María Cristina Zepeda Porras - 12 | 12 | 00 Learning | Education, Indonesia María Elena Foronda Farro - 10 | 26 | 00 Economic Development, Thailand María Elena Ordoñez Legarda - 10 | 26 | 00 Health, Thailand María Eugenia Aguilar Castro - 12 | 12 | 00 Health, Indonesia Human Rights, Paraguay Human Rights, El Salvador Jorni Odochow - 7 | 6 | 00 Josefina Condori - 10 | 26 | 00 Human Rights, Brazil Juan Carlos Aguilar Macizo - 10 | 26 | 00 Economic Development, Peru Juan Padilla - 12 | 12 | 00 Economic Development, Argentina Julia Harrington - 12 | 12 | 00 Human Rights, The Gambia Juliana Bacis Ceddia - 8 | 31 | 00 Health Brazil Jumadi Jumadi - 8 | 22 | 00 Economic Development, Indonesia K K.A.V.R (expired) Krishnamachari 11 | 12 | 00 Health, India L Laura Valdés Kuri - 12 | 12 | 00 Mexico Lely Zailani - 4 | 20 | 00 Civic Engagement, Indonesia T Tania Vasquez Vargas - 10 | 26 | 00 Mercedes De Freitas - 12 | 12 | 00 Economic Development, Bolivia Miguel Rosales - 1 | 30 | 00 Health, Colombia Jorge Hurtado - 10 | 26 | 00 Learning | Education, Peru Suzana Murni - 8 | 31 | 00 Civic Engagement, Sri Lanka Learning | Education, Slovakia Learning | Education, Guatemala Suwannee Juboonsong - 7 | 6 | 00 Learning | Education, Ecuador Jean Elaine Burns Stuck - 12 | 12 | 00 Jorge Marciano Chojolán Pacajoj 12 | 12 | 00 Surang Janyam - 7 | 6 | 00 Environment, Brazil Human Rights, India Health, Bolivia Sudarno Sudarno - 4 | 18 | 00 Economic Development, Mexico Economic Development, Venezuela Environment, Mexico Suchitra Sheth - 10 | 26 | 00 Civic Engagement, Ecuador Jaime mauricio Gaitán gómez - 10 | 26 | 00 Health, Colombia Sonali Ojha - 8 | 31 | 00 Tatiana Gómez durán - 12 | 12 | 00 U Victor Ananias - 7 | 6 | 00 Environment,Turkey Milind Ranade - 8 | 15 | 00 V Weerapong Kangwarnnawakul - 7 | 6 | 00 Civic Engagement, Thailand Monika Grochova - 3 | 10 | 00 W Wynona Ward - 8 | 15 | 00 Human Rights, United States N Naginbhai Shah - 01 | 01 | 2000 Learning / Education Nandeesha - 1 | 1 | 00 Civic Engagment, India Nebahat Akkoc - 12 | 12 | 00 Human Rights, Senegal → 1999 Neichute Doulo - 8 | 31 | 00 Economic Development, India Nijole Arbaciauskiene - 7 | 6 | 00 Civic Engagement, Lithuania O Olga Silvia Teran Contreras - 1 | 30 | 00 Economic Development, Mexico Oscar Arruda - 8 | 31 | 00 Brazil Oswaldo Granda Páez - 10 | 26 | 00 Environment, Ecuador P Pavel Krizek - 1 | 1 | 00 Environment, Czech Republic Payong Srithong - 7 | 6 | 00 Economic Development, Thailand R Ricardas Liskauskas - 7 | 6 | 00 Civic Engagement, Lithuania A Abdul Majeed Mangrio - 8 | 31 | 99 Learning | Education, Pakistan Achmad (Eko) Yani - 8 | 31 | 99 Indonesia Adelaida Trujillo - 8 | 23 | 99 Learning | Education, Colombia Alberto Croce - 12 | 28 | 99 Learning | Education, Argentina Alberto Fergusson - 8 | 19 | 99 Colombia Allah Warayo Bozdar - 8 | 31 | 99 Human Rights, Pakistan América Joaquina Romualdo Carcamo - 12 | 28 | 99 Ricardo Hernández Arellano - 12 | 12 | 00 Human Rights, El Salvador Roberto Da Silva - 12 | 31 | 00 Health Peru Civic Engagement, Mexico Ana Bertha Quiroz Ballón - 10 | 12 | 99 Luiz Geraldo De Oliveira Moura 8 | 31 | 00 Human Rights, Brazil Human Rights, Colombia Environment, Brazil Roberto Lamego - 8 | 31 | 00 Environment, Brazil Luz Dary Chavez - 12 | 12 | 00 Rohit Baluja - 8 | 15 | 00 Learning | Education, Hungary Roland Martins - 8 | 15 | 00 Learning | Education, Poland Health, Colombia M M. V. Mathew - 8 | 31 | 00 Human Rights, India Learning | Education, India Economic Development, India S Salomón Raydán - 12 | 12 | 00 Economic Development, Venezuela | List of fellows Ana Teresa Bernal Montañés - 9 | 20 | 99 Andrea Dávid - 10 | 12 | 99 Andrzej Juros - 12 | 26 | 99 Anna Machalica-Pułtorak - 8 | 1 | 99 Economic Development, Poland Ashoka Antonio Paz Martinez - 3 | 12 | 99 Helen Samuels - 8 | 31 | 99 Economic Development, Mexico Learning | Education, Mexico Ashok Kadam - 8 | 31 | 99 I Iraê Cardoso - 12 | 28 | 99 Environment, India Human Rights, Brazil B Beatriz Pellizzari - 12 | 28 | 99 Iván Sanjines - 8 | 31 | 99 Economic Development, Argentina Learning | Education, Bolivia Berenice Assumpção Kikuchi - 9 | 20 | 99 J Jan Korytar - 8 | 1 | 99 Health, Brazil Environment, Czech Republic Betty Chishava - 9 | 20 | 99 John Makumbe - 9 | 20 | 99 Human Rights, Zimbabwe Zimbabwe C Cadudzzi Salas - 12 | 28 | 99 Juan Infante Alosilla - 11 | 17 | 99 Economic Development, Chile Economic Development, Peru Carmen Cisternas - 12 | 28 | 99 Julio Canizales - 10 | 12 | 99 Learning | Education, Chile Human Rights, El Salvador Cecilia Maria Bouças Coimbra - 12 | 28 | 99 Justin Kennedy - 8 | 1 | 99 Human Rights, Brazil Chamnong Jitnirat - 12 | 7 | 99 Civic Engagement, Thailand Christian Gruenberg - 8 | 1 | 99 Civic Engagement, Argentina Colin Gonsalves - 8 | 31 | 99 Human Rights, India Csaba Kovács - 12 | 26 | 99 Health, Hungary Csaba Mihaldinecz - 8 | 1 | 99 Health, Hungary D Dani Munggoro - 8 | 31 | 99 Environment, Indonesia Dener Giovanini - 9 | 20 | 99 Environment, Brazil Denise Robles - 12 | 28 | 99 Health ,Brazil Dhrubajyoti Ghosh - 11 | 12 | 99 Economic Development, India Dinesh Mishra - 8 | 31 | 99 Environment,India Drahoslava Kabátová - 8 | 1 | 99 Economic Development, Czech Republic E Eliana Elías - 3 | 12 | 99 Health, Peru Eliana Sousa Silva - 12 | 28 | 99 Learning | Education, Brazil F Francisco Soberón - 3 | 12 | 99 Peru G Gabriela Ejea Mendoza - 8 | 31 | 99 Economic Development, Mexico Gilberto De Palma Augusto - 12 | 28 | 99 Civic Engagement, Brazil Gregory Smith - 9 | 20 | 99 Brazil H Haidy Duque Cuesta - 8 | 31 | 99 Human Rights, Colombia Héctor Marcelli Esquivel - 9 | 20 | 99 Economic Development, Mexico South Africa K Karen Worcman - 9 | 20 | 99 Civic Engagement, Brazil Kiran Kulkarni - 8 | 23 | 99 Economic Development, India Krisztina Morvai - 12 | 26 | 99 Human Rights, Hungary Krzysztof Margol - 1 | 1 | 99 Economic Development, Poland at 30 | Mary Anne Müller - 8 | 1 | 99 Learning | Education, Chile Miklós Persány - 12 | 26 | 99 Hungary N Nair Carrasco - 11 | 17 | 99 Health, Peru Nancy Kgengwenyane - 8 | 1 | 99 Environment, Botswana Nazir Ujjan - 8 | 23 | 99 Economic Development, Pakistan Nelsa Curbelo - 11 | 17 | 99 Civic Engagement, Ecuador Nora Liliana Franco - 12 | 28 | 99 El Salvador O Octavio Duque López - 8 | 23 | 99 Economic Development, Colombia Oscar Arruda D´Avila - 9 | 20 | 99 Brazil P Pál Gera - 8 | 1 | 99 Environment, Hungary Patrícia Chalaça Moreira - 12 | 28 | 99 Civic Engagement, Brazil Péter Lázár - 7 | 12 | 99 Learning | Education, Hungary Krzysztof Stanowski - 12 | 26 | 99 Q Quratul ul Ain Bakhteari - 8 | 31 | 99 Kumrab Phanthong - 8 | 31 | 99 R Ratnaboli Ray - 8 | 31 | 99 Civic Engagement, Poland Environment, Thailand L Leena Joshi - 8 | 31 | 99 Health, India Leila Novak - 12 | 28 | 99 Environment, Brazil Lidiethe Madden - 10 | 12 | 99 Economic Development, Costa Rica Liliana Ortega - 11 | 17 | 99 Human Rights, Venezuela Lillian Liberman Shkolnikoff - 9 | 20 | 99 Human Rights, Mexico Lola Samaniego - 3 | 12 | 99 Economic Development, Ecuador Luciana Martinelli - 12 | 28 | 99 Brazil M Magdaleno Rose Avila - 2 | 8 | 99 Civic Engagement, El Salvador Marcela Zubieta - 12 | 28 | 99 Health, Chile Maria Carmen Schulze - 9 | 29 | 99 Learning | Education, Bolivia Pakistan Health, India Remigio Muñoz - 12 | 28 | 99 Health, Chile Ricardo Bertolino - 10 | 12 | 99 Environment, Argentina Rosario García y Santos - 12 | 28 | 99 Human Rights, Uruguay S Sabina Pierużek-Nowak - 12 | 26 | 99 Environment, Poland Sachidulal Banerjee - 11 | 12 | 99 India Shamsun Nahar - 8 | 31 | 99 Economic Development, Bangladesh Sombat Boonngamanong - 8 | 31 | 99 Learning | Education ,Thailand Sonia Andrade Tafur - 11 | 17 | 99 Human Rights, Ecuador Sunil Abraham - 8 | 31 | 99 Learning | Education, India Suraiya Haque - 8 | 31 | 99 Human Rights, Bangladesh María Marta Camacho Alvarez - 11 | 17 | 99 T Tetê (Maria Teresa) Leal - 9 | 20 | 99 Learning | Education, Costa Rica Maria Pakpahan - 8 | 31 | 99 Human Rights, Indonesia Marta Elisa Codas - 12 | 28 | 99 Human Rights, Paraguay Economic Development, Brazil W Wisnu Wardana - 8 | 31 | 99 Environment, Indonesia Y Yongyut Treenutkorn - 8 | 31 | 99 Health, Thailand List of fellows | 65 66 → | Ashoka at 30 1998 F Fabio Vaz - 12 | 28 | 98 Brazil Fatima Khanam - 12 | 28 | 98 Learning | Education, Bangladesh A Abadio Green Stocel - 1 | 1 | 98 Learning | Education, Colombia Abdul Hakim Khoso - 1 | 11 | 98 Environment, Pakistan Afsan Chowdhury - 1 | 11 | 98 Learning | Education, Bangladesh Agus Gunarto - 1 | 11 | 98 Environment ,Indonesia Alexis Ponce - 12 | 11 | 98 Human Rights, Ecuador Aniceto Guterres Lopes - 12 | 28 | 98 Human Rights, East Timor Antonio Luiz De Paula E Silva - 12 | 11 | 98 Civic Engagement, Brazil Arturo Muñoz - 1 | 1 | 98 Learning | Education, Colombia Avinash Shirke - 12 | 28 | 98 Learning | Education, India B Beatriz Alcaine - 10 | 6 | 98 El Salvador Beatriz Berro Marins - 12 | 11 | 98 Brazil Boonreung Phupanna/Nantaporn Exaver - 12 | 21 | 98 Health, Thailand C Carlos Vargas Gómez - 12 | 28 | 98 Mexico Fatou Bin Jobe - 12 | 28 | 98 Learning | Education, The Gambia Francesco Cammarano - 12 | 11 | 98 Health, Venezuela Francisco Cervantes Islas - 12 | 28 | 98 Learning | Education, Mexico Francisco Chávez Delgado - 12 | 28 | 98 Civic Engagement, Mexico G G.L. Janardhan - 12 | 28 | 98 Economic Development, India Georgina Gutiérrez alvarado - 1 | 11 | 98 Health, Mexico Ghulam Sughra Solangi - 12 | 28 | 98 Human Rights, Pakistan Glen Steyn - 12 | 30 | 98 Civic Engagement, South Africa Jeroo Billimoria - 12 | 28 | 98 Human Rights, India Jeruse Maria Romão - 1 | 11 | 98 Human Rights, Brazil Jorge Ramirez - 10 | 6 | 98 Peru Jose Carlos Brasilero - 1 | 11 | 98 Brazil José Carvajal - 6 | 12 | 98 Economic Development, Brazil Juan Basurto Romero - 1 | 11 | 98 Human Rights, Mexico Juan Carlos Pinto Quintanilla - 10 | 6 | 98 Human Rights, Bolivia Juan José Consejo - 1 | 11 | 98 Environment, Mexico Goya Lamartine Da Costa E Silva - 1 | 11 | 98 L Ladislav Briestensky - 1 | 6 | 98 Human Rights, Brazil Human Rights, Bangladesh Civic Engagement, Slovakia Laxman Singh - 1 | 11 | 98 Graça Pizá de Menezes - 12 | 11 | 98 Environment, India Guillermo Monteforte Bazzarello 5 | 12 | 98 Civic Engagement, El Salvador Brazil Civic Engagement, Mexico H Hasanain Juaini - 12 | 31 | 98 Constance Yaï - 12 | 28 | 98 Mali Constanza Ardila Galvis - 1 | 1 | 98 Human Rights, Bangladesh Human Rights, Colombia Javed Abidi - 12 | 28 | 98 Human Rights, India K Karuna Moy Chakma - 12 | 28 | 98 Indonesia Human Rights, Côte d‘Ivoire Civic Engagement, Slovakia Gonzalo Osio - 10 | 6 | 98 Economic Development, Bolivia Claudia Colimoro Sarellano - 12 | 28 | 98 Human Rights, Mexico Ján Vitko - 1 | 11 | 98 Hadja assa Diallo-Soumare - 12 | 30 | 98 Hanif Mahmoud - 12 | 28 | 98 Harini Kakkeri - 1 | 11 | 98 Lorena Cuerno Clavel - 12 | 28 | 98 Luiz Ferri De Barros - 1 | 11 | 98 Health, Brazil Lusi Margiyani - 12 | 28 | 98 Human Rights, Indonesia M M.S. Zulfikar - 12 | 28 | 98 Human Rights, Indonesia Maria Clete - 1 | 11 | 98 India Maria de Lourdes Braz - 12 | 28 | 98 Health, India Human Rights, Brazil Learning | Education, Paraguay Economic Development, India Harley Henriques Do Nascimento 12 | 28 | 98 Health, Brazil Dan Satriana - 1 | 11 | 98 Health, Mexico Health Indonesia Harry Andrews - 1 | 11 | 98 Environment, India Denise Dourado Dora - 12 | 28 | 98 Helena Balabánová - 9 | 17 | 98 Civic Engagement, Paraguay D Dagmara Bieńkowska - 10 | 6 | 98 Economic Development, Poland Damodar Acharya - 1 | 11 | 98 Human Rights, Brazil Diego Carrasco Espinoza - 12 | 28 | 98 Learning | Education, Ecuador E Eduardo Cômodo Valarelli - 12 | 11 | 98 Health Brazil Learning | Education, Czech Republic Maria Del Carmen Arriola - 1 | 11 | 98 Maria Teresa Almada - 1 | 11 | 98 Mariano Rámon Bareiro Soria - 12 | 28 | 98 Marie Haisová - 9 | 17 | 98 I Iván Nogales - 10 | 6 | 98 Environment, Czech Republic J Jacek Strzemieczny - 1 | 11 | 98 Human Rights, Costa Rica Learning | Education, Bolivia Learning | Education, Poland Marieta Quesada - 3 | 12 | 98 Mary Gloria Olivo - 3 | 12 | 98 Epifanio Pacheco - 10 | 6 | 98 Jacob Moatshe - 12 | 30 | 98 Civic Engagement, Venezuela Erzsébet Szekeres - 1 | 1 | 98 Jacqueline Goita Modibo Dembélé 12 | 30 | 98 Health India Civic Engagement, Bolivia Human Rights, Hungary Eva Sopková - 1 | 11 | 98 Learning | Education, Slovakia | List of fellows Civic Engagement, South Africa Health, Mali Merry Barua - 1 | 11 | 98 Mireya Vargas - 1 | 11 | 98 Civic Engagement, Venezuela Ashoka Mostafa Shiblee - 1 | 11 | 98 Learning | Education, Bangladesh Moussa Kane - 12 | 30 | 98 Economic Development, Mali N Nikom Putta - 12 | 21 | 98 Environment, Thailand O Onécimo Hidalgo Domínguez - 12 | 28 | 98 Human Rights, Mexico P Patricia Palacios de Nava - 1 | 11 | 98 Health, Mexico Paweł Jordan - 1 | 11 | 98 Civic Engagement, Poland Paweł Łukasiak - 10 | 6 | 98 Civic Engagement, Poland Pedro Susz - 3 | 1 | 98 Learning | Education, Bolivia Petrus Sarija - 12 | 28 | 98 Economic Development, Indonesia Piotr Janaszek - 1 | 11 | 98 Human Rights, Poland Porn Panosot - 9 | 11 | 98 Learning | Education, Thailand R Raghunath Manvar - 12 | 28 | 98 Health, India Ratna Refida - 1 | 11 | 98 Economic Development, Indonesia Stella Tamang - 12 | 28 | 98 Learning | Education, Nepal → Sueli Camargo De Mattos - 1 | 11 | 98 Economic Development, Brazil Suwarni (Yayuk) Rahayu - 1 | 11 | 98 Human Rights, Indonesia Suzana Machado Pádua - 1 | 11 | 98 Environment, Brazil Sylvia Mejía Piñeros - 12 | 28 | 98 Civic Engagement, Colombia T Teresa de Jesus Costa d Amaral 12 | 28 | 98 Brazil A Ágnes Geréb - 1 | 12 | 97 Health, Hungary Alejandro Camino - 11 | 3 | 97 Economic Development, Peru Awa Fall Diop - 11 | 3 | 97 Learning | Education, Senegal B Badruddaja Khan - 3 | 1 | 97 Nepal Beverly Moodie - 9 | 9 | 97 Terezie Hradilková - 1 | 11 | 98 Civic Engagement, South Africa Tibério Alloggio - 12 | 28 | 98 Civic Engagement, South Africa Tomás Mamani - 3 | 12 | 98 Civic Engagement, Peru Health, Czech Republic Environment, Brazil Learning | Education, Bolivia V Vandana Gupta - 1 | 11 | 98 Health, India Bongani Linda - 7 | 12 | 97 Brendan Tobin - 11 | 12 | 97 C Carolina Biquard - 8 | 6 | 97 Civic Engagement, Argentina Claude Ariste - 11 | 3 | 97 Víctor Rodríguez Ugalde - 1 | 1 | 98 Economic Development ,Burkina Faso Vijay Uttarwar - 7 | 3 | 98 Learning | Education, Argentina Learning | Education, Mexico Environment, India W Wachidus (We Es) Sururi - 12 | 28 | 98 Corina Lang - 9 | 9 | 97 D David Fortune - 3 | 1 | 97 Civic Engagement, South Africa Ravi Agarwal - 1 | 11 | 98 Renu Sharma - 12 | 28 | 98 Wellington Nogueira Santos Júnior 1 | 11 | 98 E Elna Kotze - 3 | 1 | 97 Rita Thapa - 1 | 11 | 98 William Solomon - 12 | 30 | 98 F Fatoumata Sow - 11 | 3 | 97 Rommel Roberts - 12 | 30 | 98 Winnie Kubayi - 12 | 30 | 98 India Civic Engagement, Nepal South Africa Ryszard Golec - 1 | 11 | 98 Health, Poland S Sachidanand Bharati - 1 | 11 | 98 Environment, India Health, Brazil Learning | Education, South Africa Human Rights, South Africa Y Y.J. Rajendra - 1 | 11 | 98 Civic Engagement, India Yani Sagoroa - 1 | 11 | 98 Economic Development, Indonesia Santiago Andrade Pinto - 12 | 11 | 98 Yogendra Singh - 1 | 11 | 98 Sathorn Sompong - 1 | 11 | 98 Yusupha Kujabi - 12 | 28 | 98 Learning | Education, Ecuador Environment, Thailand Saumyadeep Dutta - 12 | 28 | 98 Civic Engagement, India Shaukat Ali Sharar - 1 | 11 | 98 Pakistan Silvio Ruíz Grisales - 1 | 1 | 98 Economic Development, Colombia Siti Aminah - 1 | 11 | 98 Environment, Indonesia Soma Sengupta - 1 | 11 | 98 Learning | Education, India Environment, The Gambia Z Zahid Elahi - 12 | 28 | 98 Pakistan Zia Awan - 12 | 28 | 98 Pakistan Dayse Maria Valença Ferreira - 9 | 9 | 97 Economic Development, Brazil Environment, South Africa Civic Engagement, Senegal Francisco Remolina - 10 | 7 | 97 Economic Development, Mexico G Grzegorz Tabasz - 6 | 12 | 97 Learning | Education, Poland Guillermo Revalo - 11 | 3 | 97 Peru H Héctor Castillo Berthier - 10 | 7 | 97 Civic Engagement, Mexico Héctor López - 8 | 6 | 97 Civic Engagement, Chile I Imre Furmann - 7 | 12 | 97 Human Rights, Hungary Ini Inkouraba Youl Damien - 11 | 3 | 97 Human Rights, Burkina Faso J Jacek Bożek - 8 | 6 | 97 Environment, Poland Jairo Luna - 11 | 12 | 97 Civic Engagement, Colombia Javier González - 1 | 1 | 97 Civic Engagement, India Learning | Education, Colombia Sridevi Rao - 12 | 31 | 1998 José de Ribamar Rodrigues Lopes 12 | 31 | 97 Health 67 1997 Learning | Education, Indonesia Environment, India at 30 | Health, Brazil List of fellows | 68 | Ashoka at 30 José Luis Nuñez - 8 | 6 | 97 Learning | Education, Bolivia → 1996 József Rácz - 7 | 12 | 97 Eva Mydlíková - 6 | 25 | 96 Health, Hungary Juan Carlos Antezana - 6 | 12 | 97 Environment, Bolivia Juan Carr - 8 | 6 | 97 Civic Engagement, Argentina Juana Loayza - 11 | 12 | 97 Learning | Education, Peru L Libardo Ariza - 1 | 1 | 97 Economic Development, Colombia Lourdes Brenda Araque - 3 | 1 | 97 Economic Development, Chile Emmanuel Ache - 3 | 24 | 96 Human Rights, Nigeria Economic Development, Slovakia A Abhay Shukla - 12 | 12 | 96 Health India Adair Antonio de Freitas Meira - 12 | 8 | 96 Environment, Brazil Adriana Abraham Perez - 10 | 24 | 96 F Fatima Shoriwa - 12 | 31 | 96 Economic Development, Zimbabwe Fausto López - 12 | 31 | 96 Environment, Ecuador Ferenc Orsós - 12 | 31 | 96 Human Rights, Uruguay Learning | Education, Hungary Albina Ruiz - 1 | 1 | 96 Francisco Javier Arroyo y Galván Duque - 12 | 31 | 96 Environment, Peru Alexander Chisango - 3 | 24 | 96 Economic Development, Zimbabwe Economic Development, Mexico G Gabriel Coddou - 10 | 24 | 96 Learning | Education, Chile Learning | Education, Slovakia Andres Wehrle Rivarola - 1 | 1 | 96 Education, Paraguay Maria Mbengasha - 12 | 3 | 97 Human Rights, Argentina South Africa Andrzej Janusz Korbel - 6 | 25 | 96 Environment, Poland Martín Domenech - 9 | 9 | 97 Civic Engagement, Mexico Health, Argentina Angelo Paccelli Rabelo - 12 | 8 | 96 Environment, Brazil Melitta Ferkovics - 1 | 12 | 97 Anil Singh - 12 | 31 | 96 Economic Development, Indonesia M Marek Rohácek - 7 | 12 | 97 Economic Development, Hungary Economic Development, India Germán Pollitzer - 10 | 24 | 96 Guillermo Alonso - 6 | 25 | 96 Gunardo Gunardo - 12 | 31 | 96 H Hernán Dinamarca - 1 | 1 | 96 Annibal Coelho do Amorim - 12 | 31 | 96 Civic Engagement, Chile Economic Development, Czech Republic Brazil Milan Chab - 7 | 12 | 97 Anuradha Kapoor - 12 | 31 | 96 Civic Engagement, Colombia Michaela Svobodova - 8 | 6 | 97 Human Rights, Czech Republic Mouni Ouédraogo - 11 | 3 | 97 Civic Engagement, Burkina Faso N Néstor Mendieta - 1 | 1 | 97 Health, Colombia Norman Reynolds - 9 | 9 | 97 South Africa P Patricia Ariza - 11 | 12 | 97 Civic Engagement, Colombia Paul Cohen - 9 | 9 | 97 Economic Development, South Africa Human Rights, India Ashundep Ateba Ettanki - 12 | 31 | 96 Economic Development, Cameroon B Barbara Baran - 12 | 31 | 96 Economic Development, Poland Hernando Roldán - 12 | 8 | 96 I Ildikó Szigeti - 6 | 25 | 96 Learning | Education, Hungary Itamar Silva - 5 | 1 | 96 Economic Development, Brazil J Jadwiga Łopata - 12 | 31 | 96 Betty Pérez - 6 | 25 | 96 Environment, Poland Blanca Rosa Castañón - 10 | 24 | 96 Economic Development, Ecuador Bolivia Civic Engagement, Mexico C Camilo Soares - 10 | 24 | 96 Learning | Education, Paraguay Jaime Idrovo - 12 | 31 | 96 Jati Kuswardono - 12 | 31 | 96 Learning | Education, Indonesia Jeanne Kouamé - 12 | 31 | 96 Health, Côte d‘Ivoire Economic Development, Ecuador Carmenza Morales - 1 | 1 | 96 Economic Development, Colombia Ricardo Cobo díaz - 12 | 31 | 97 Human Rights, Costa Rica Learning | Education, Colombia César Cardenas - 12 | 8 | 96 Civic Engagement, Ecuador Rodney Walker - 8 | 6 | 97 Chetna Sinha - 12 | 31 | 96 Health, Brazil Clive Nicholson - 4 | 1 | 96 Human Rights, Ecuador R Raúl Cabrera - 11 | 12 | 97 Environment, Chile S Slavomír Krupa - 7 | 12 | 97 Economic Development, India Health, Slovakia Economic Development, South Africa Teresa C. Ulloa Ziaurriz - 2 | 17 | 97 Cristina Bubba - 6 | 25 | 96 Human Rights, Mexico V Virginia Mupandunki - 9 | 9 | 97 Learning | Education, Zimbabwe W Walter Varanda - 9 | 9 | 97 Human Rights, Brazil Z Zepheniah Maseko - 9 | 9 | 97 Economic Development, Zimbabwe Zoltán Nagy - 7 | 12 | 97 Human Rights, Hungary Civic Engagement, Bolivia D Dipankar Sarkar - 12 | 31 | 96 India Dodo Juliman Widianto - 12 | 31 | 96 Economic Development, Indonesia E Elías Santana - 12 | 31 | 96 Civic Engagement, Venezuela Elvira Alvarez - 6 | 25 | 96 Human Rights, Bolivia José Dualok Rojas Ortiz - 12 | 31 | 96 José Marmo Da Silva - 12 | 31 | 96 Juan Andrade - 12 | 8 | 96 K Kriangsak Klomsakul - 12 | 31 | 96 Environment, Thailand Krzysztof Liszcz - 6 | 25 | 96 Health, Poland L Lesley Ann Foster - 12 | 31 | 96 South Africa Lucas Chiappe - 10 | 24 | 96 Environment, Argentina Lumerman Jose - 10 | 24 | 96 Health, Argentina Luz Beatriz Rosales Esteva - 12 | 31 | 96 Civic Engagement, Mexico | List of fellows Ashoka M Mahabub Zamal Shamim - 12 | 31 | 96 Learning | Education, Bangladesh Marcelline Ouédraogo - 12 | 31 | 96 Peter Hartmann - 12 | 7 | 96 V Verónica Ohlsson - 10 | 24 | 96 Peter Volmink - 12 | 31 | 96 Victor Fodeke - 12 | 31 | 96 Piotr Pawłowski - 6 | 25 | 96 Victor Hugo Cerna - 6 | 25 | 96 Piotr Topiński- 12 | 31 | 96 Victor Suàrez Carrera - 12 | 31 | 96 Precious Emelue - 12 | 31 | 96 Víctor Zambrano - 1 | 1 | 96 Prosper Kompaoré - 12 | 31 | 96 Viszlo Levente - 12 | 31 | 96 Environment, Chile Economic Development, Burkina Faso Human Rights, South Africa Maria (Nina) Do Socorro De Magalhães - 5 | 1 | 96 Human Rights, Poland Maria Cristina Sosa Schneider - 10 | 24 | 96 Economic Development, Poland Maria Eugenia Choque - 6 | 25 | 96 Economic Development, Nigeria Maria Eugenia Linares - 10 | 24 | 96 Civic Engagement, Burkina Faso Human Rights, Brazil Human Rights, Uruguay Civic Engagement, Bolivia Human Rights, Mexico R Raul Collazos - 12 | 8 | 96 Maria Jussara Gomes Gruber - 1 | 5 | 96 Learning | Education, Colombia Mario Mejía - 12 | 8 | 96 Pakistan Mario Miguel Costa Grecco - 12 | 31 | 96 Learning | Education, Brazil Mario Tapia - 6 | 25 | 96 Human Rights, Mexico Martín Abregú - 1 | 1 | 96 Learning | Education, Bolivia Human Rights, Brazil Colombia Economic Development, Uruguay Health, Peru Human Rights, Argentina Mauricio Canedo - 6 | 25 | 96 Environment, Bolivia Máximo Cuji - 12 | 8 | 96 Learning | Education, Ecuador Miguel Angel Sanchez de Armas - 1 | 1 | 96 Human Rights, Mexico Miguel GarcÃa - 8 | 12 | 96 Economic Development, Chile Mina Das Das - 11 | 5 | 96 Human Rights, India Miroslav Janík - 6 | 25 | 96 Environment Czech, Republic Mizanur Rahman - 1 | 14 | 96 Health, Bangladesh Mohammad Amin - 4 | 2 | 96 Economic Development, India N Nargis Latif - 12 | 31 | 96 Environment, Pakistan Natacha Reyes - 12 | 31 | 96 Human Rights, Ecuador Ngozi Iwere - 3 | 24 | 96 Health, Nigeria O Oumar Sarr - 6 | 30 | 96 Civic Engagement, Burkina Faso P Paweł Urbanowicz - 12 | 31 | 96 Economic Development, Mexico Environment, Peru Hungary W Wojciech Onyszkiewicz - 1 | 1 | 96 Civic Engagement, Poland Z Zoica Bakirtzief - 12 | 31 | 96 Human Rights, Ecuador Human Rights, Brazil Rogelio Padilla Díaz - 1 | 1 | 96 Rolando Encinas - 6 | 25 | 96 Rosa María Ruiz - 1 | 1 | 96 Thailand Mashood Erubami - 12 | 31 | 96 Peru Rodrigo Baggio Barreto - 12 | 31 | 96 Martina Richterová Temínová - 6 | 25 | 96 Nigeria Environment, Nigeria X Ximena Costales - 12 | 8 | 96 Economic Development, Bolivia Health Czech, Republic 69 Learning | Education, Argentina Reaz Ahmed - 12 | 31 | 96 Martin Kovác - 6 | 25 | 96 Environment, Slovakia at 30 | → 1995 Rosana Tositrakul - 1 | 1 | 96 A Abel Albino - 2 | 6 | 95 Roshaneh Zafar - 12 | 31 | 96 Health, Argentina Ryszard Michalski - 6 | 25 | 96 Learning | Education, Thailand Economic Development, Pakistan Learning | Education Poland S S.L.N. Swamy - 1 | 14 | 96 Environment, India Abhisree Jaranchawanapate - 10 | 8 | 95 Adriana Teixeira Da Costa - 12 | 31 | 95 Learning | Education, Brazil Ana Johanson - 10 | 8 | 95 Samuel Ngnitedem - 3 | 24 | 96 Argentina Sanjoy (expired) Ghosh - 4 | 1 | 96 Health, Brazil Sara Diestro - 6 | 25 | 96 Environment, India Learning | Education Cameroon Learning | Education, India Learning | Education, Peru Ana Maria Teles De Norões - 11 | 1 | 95 Anil Joshi - 3 | 9 | 95 B Bernadett Eigner - 7 | 31 | 95 Sarat Babu Vasireddy - 12 | 31 | 96 Learning | Education, Hungary Shantharam Umanath Shenai - 12 | 31 | 96 Peru Sherifat Omolola Quadri - 3 | 24 | 96 Economic Development, Poland Simón Parisca - 12 | 31 | 96 Civic Engagement, Czech Republic Learning | Education, Chile Environment, India Health, Nigeria Learning | Education, Venezuela Bernardo Wagner - 2 | 6 | 95 Bohdan Skrzypczak - 2 | 6 | 95 Bohuslav Blazek - 1 | 1 | 95 C Carlos Chávez - 3 | 28 | 95 Somboon Srikhamdokkae - 12 | 31 | 96 Human Rights, Mexico Sompop Jantraka - 6 | 3 | 96 Carlos Eduardo (Larry) Silberman 1 | 1 | 95 Human Rights, Thailand Human Rights, Thailand Suthasinee Noi-in - 12 | 31 | 96 Health, Thailand T Tomasz Sadowski - 1 | 1 | 96 Civic Engagement, Poland Civic Engagement, Mexico Carlos Mamani - 1 | 12 | 95 Civic Engagement, Bolivia Carmen Valadez - 11 | 5 | 95 Human Rights, Mexico Human Rights, Poland List of fellows | 70 | Ashoka at 30 Cecilia Dockendorff - 2 | 6 | 95 Civic Engagement, Chile D Dante Pesce - 10 | 8 | 95 Civic Engagement, Chile Diana Pombo - 1 | 1 | 95 Environment, Colombia Domingo Guzman Rolón Centurión - 1 | 1 | 95 Economic Development, Paraguay Dora Isabel do Araújo Andrade - 11 | 1 | 95 Learning | Education, Brazil E Edgar Ardila - 2 | 6 | 95 Civic Engagement, Colombia Juan Jacobo Hernández - 10 | 8 | 95 Health, Mexico Juraj Lukác - 10 | 8 | 95 Juraj Zamkovský - 10 | 8 | 95 Kazimierz Jaworski - 10 | 8 | 95 Marcelo Viale - 10 | 8 | 95 Gustavo Gindre Monteiro Soares 11 | 1 | 95 Environment, Mexico Human Rights, Ecuador Iliana Raquel Pereyra Sarti - 11 | 1 | 95 Economic Development, Uruguay Isabel Coral - 2 | 6 | 95 Human Rights, Peru J Jacek Alaba - 10 | 8 | 95 Health, Poland Jacek Jakubowski - 10 | 8 | 95 Civic Engagement, Poland Jacek Schindler - 10 | 8 | 95 Environment, Poland Jacques Mabit - 2 | 6 | 95 Health, Peru Jaya Prakash Rao - 1 | 1 | 95 Environment, India José Reyes - 2 | 6 | 95 Learning | Education, Chile Joseph Désiré Zingui - 12 | 31 | 95 Learning | Education, Burkina Faso Salma Awwal Shafi - 10 | 8 | 95 Economic Development, Bangladesh Sara Larrain - 2 | 6 | 95 Chile Martín Böhmer - 10 | 8 | 95 Simón Farith - 2 | 6 | 95 Human Rights, Argentina Human Rights, Ecuador Martín Camacho morales - 1 | 1 | 95 Sumruay Phadpol - 3 | 28 | 95 Environment, Mexico Mauricio Wild - 1 | 12 | 95 Learning | Education, Ecuador Environment, Thailand T Tarak Kate - 7 | 12 | 95 Environment, India Mia Siscawati - 12 | 31 | 95 Teresa Shamah - 2 | 6 | 95 Environment, Indonesia Mexico Michał Wroniszewski - 1 | 1 | 95 Trebi Kuma Ollennu - 12 | 31 | 95 Human Rights Poland Michal Kravcík - 10 | 8 | 95 Environment, Slovakia Ghana V Vanderlei Paiva Gonçalves - 3 | 28 | 95 Learning | Education, Brazil Montri Sintawichai - 12 | 29 | 95 Victor Hugo Palliaroli Dietrich - 1 | 27 | 95 Mora Ines Podestá Baratta - 3 | 28 | 95 Victoria Shocrón - 2 | 6 | 95 Human Rights, Bangladesh Mexico Human Rights, Uruguay P Patricia Goulart Bustamante - 3 | 28 | 95 Environment, Brazil Pedro García - 2 | 6 | 95 Human Rights, Peru Human Rights, Argentina W Wigold Bertoldo Schaffer - 11 | 1 | 95 Brazil X Ximena Abogabir - 2 | 6 | 95 Environment, Chile Pedro Serrano - 10 | 31 | 95 Environment, Chile Péter Orbán - 10 | 1 | 95 Juan Areli Bernal - 3 | 28 | 95 Petra Vitoušová - 10 | 8 | 95 Juan García - 2 | 6 | 95 S Saidou Ouédraogo - 12 | 31 | 95 Martha Isabel (Pati) Ruíz Corzo - 1 | 9 | 95 Health, Hungary Ecuador Ruben Ernesto Alfonso Rosas - 3 | 28 | 95 Health, Uruguay Marie Léa Zongo - 12 | 1 | 95 Cameroon Learning | Education, Mexico Ronaldo Lima De Oliveira - 2 | 6 | 95 Environment, United States Maria del Carmen Tene - 1 | 12 | 95 Human Rights, Burkina Faso I Igor Guaysamín - 2 | 6 | 95 Rodrigo Calcagni - 2 | 6 | 95 Economic Development, Chile Health, Argentina Gonzalo Falabella - 10 | 8 | 95 Health Czech, Republic Rita Panicker - 6 | 12 | 95 Economic Development, India Mahmood Fadal - 12 | 1 | 95 German Sarmiento - 2 | 6 | 95 H Hana Malinová - 10 | 8 | 95 Brazil M Małgorzata Chmielewska - 2 | 6 | 95 María Isabel Santillana - 6 | 25 | 95 Civic Engagement, Brazil Ricardo Rezende Figueira - 11 | 1 | 95 Civic Engagement, Mexico Learning | Education, Peru Colombia Rezaul Haq - 10 | 8 | 95 Environment, Bangladesh L Longoria Emilio Alvarez Icaza - 1 | 9 | 95 Human Rights, Ecuador Environment, Colombia Learning | Education, Brazil Economic Development, Poland Gananath Karnataka - 7 | 12 | 95 India Renata arantes Vilella - 3 | 28 | 95 Human Rights, India Civic Engagement, South Africa Environment, Bolivia Ramiro Rojas - 2 | 6 | 95 Health Ecuador K Kailash Satyarthi - 6 | 7 | 95 Esther Sánchez - 2 | 6 | 95 G Gabriel Baracatt - 12 | 31 | 95 Raja Menon - 7 | 12 | 95 Economic Development, India Environment, Slovakia Economic Development, Poland Human Rights, Colombia Learning | Education, Argentina Environment, Slovakia Elżbieta Pomaska-Skrzypczak - 10 | 8 | 95 Health, Poland R Rafael Kohanoff - 2 | 6 | 95 → 1994 Human Rights ,Czech Republic Phiroj Polphet - 10 | 8 | 95 Civic Engagement, Thailand A Abu Taleb Talukder - 9 | 14 | 94 Economic Development, Bangladesh | List of fellows Ashoka Andre Proctor - 5 | 8 | 94 José Artur De Barros Padilha - 9 | 14 | 94 South Africa Environment, Brazil André-Eugène Ilboudo - 11 | 20 | 94 José Pereira De Oliveira Júnior - 9 | 14 | 94 Civic Engagement, Burkina Faso Andrew Lindsay - 2 | 12 | 94 South Africa Ashok Row Kavi - 3 | 6 | 94 Human Rights, India Ashraf Patel - 11 | 20 | 94 Learning | Education, India Ashwell Zwane - 11 | 20 | 94 Human Rights, South Africa B B.G. Gokulan - 7 | 14 | 94 Health, India Ben Lekalakala - 11 | 20 | 94 Human Rights, South Africa C Celerino Almeida Carriconde - 11 | 1 | 94 Health, Brazil César Meyer Musso - 11 | 1 | 94 Brazil Chaiwat Thirapantu - 11 | 20 | 94 Civic Engagement, Thailand Chaiyong Phumphabu - 11 | 20 | 94 Environment, Thailand Cheick Amala Tabouré - 11 | 20 | 94 Environment, Mali Coco Mousa - 7 | 14 | 94 Cameroon D D. Rangaraj - 9 | 12 | 94 India Dilma Felizardo Ferreira - 9 | 14 | 94 Human Rights, Brazil Dulcinea De Oliveira Xavier - 9 | 14 | 94 Human Rights, Brazil E Edvalda Pereira Torres - 9 | 14 | 94 Learning | Education, Brazil Gavin Pieterse - 7 | 14 | 94 South Africa H Halidou Ouédraogo - 8 | 13 | 94 Human Rights, Burkina Faso Haushala Prasad Mishra - 11 | 20 | 94 Health, India Hossain Shahriar - 7 | 14 | 94 Environment, Bangladesh I Iain Morton - 11 | 20 | 94 Human Rights, South Africa Isabel Cruz Hernández - 11 | 20 | 94 Juan Carlos Hernández - 1 | 1 | 94 Learning | Education, Mexico Juan José Merê - 7 | 14 | 94 Health, Uruguay Juan José Oña - 8 | 12 | 94 Environment, Uruguay Judith Santos - 11 | 20 | 94 Human Rights, Mexico M Maria José Jaime - 7 | 14 | 94 Human Rights, Brazil Mmatshilo Motsei - 2 | 12 | 94 Human Rights, South Africa N Ninom Rouze Moreira - 1 | 11 | 94 Health, Brazil P Parwez Salman Chowdhury - 9 | 14 | 94 Health, Bangladesh Peter Tiamiyu - 7 | 14 | 94 Learning | Education, Nigeria Prasad Rasal - 11 | 20 | 94 Environment, India Pritham Chakravarty - 11 | 20 | 94 Learning | Education, India Purobie Bose - 1 | 12 | 94 Human Rights, India Q Quarraisha Karim - 2 | 12 | 94 Health South, Africa R Rajeev Khedkar - 7 | 14 | 94 Environment, India Rajendra Dahal - 1 | 1 | 94 Environment, Nepal Rajiv Vartak - 5 | 12 | 94 Health, Senegal Bangladesh Ambar Barros - 1 | 1 | 93 Human Rights, Brazil Ana Filgueras - 2 | 9 | 93 Brazil Anu Wakhlu - 10 | 11 | 93 Economic Development, India Atala Ruíz Manzur - 7 | 28 | 93 Human Rights, Mexico B Bamrung Kayotha - 12 | 20 | 93 Civic Engagement, Thailand Benjamín Berlanga - 5 | 5 | 93 Learning | Education, Mexico C Carlos Mendoza - 5 | 5 | 93 Civic Engagement ,Mexico Célia Marina Destri Dos Santos - 4 | 1 | 93 Health, Brazil Chantasit Boonyasaranai - 12 | 20 | 93 Environment, Thailand Charit Meesit - 10 | 12 | 93 Human Rights, Thailand Choitresh Ganguly - 7 | 28 | 93 Environment, India D Dina Lumbantobing - 2 | 17 | 93 Learning | Education, Indonesia Dorelle Sapere - 2 | 12 | 93 Civic Engagement, South Africa E Eduardo Alva Quintero - 1 | 1 | 93 Mexico Elva Alicia Gómez Mendoza - 5 | 5 | 93 Robert Simmons - 2 | 12 | 94 F Fidela Ebuk - 7 | 28 | 93 Learning | Education, South Africa Runa doja Khan - 9 | 14 | 94 Learning | Education, Brazil S S.N. Gananath - 4 | 12 | 94 Learning | Education, India Santhanagopalan Rajagopalan - 8 | 12 | 94 Economic Development, India Shahidul Islam - 7 | 14 | 94 Bangladesh Sharon Levy - 1 | 2 | 94 Learning | Education, Brazil Jean-Philippe Mandiamé - 11 | 20 | 94 A Abu Fattah Chowdhury - 8 | 25 | 93 Human Rights, Mexico Isabel Maria Garcia De Almeida 11 | 20 | 94 Learning | Education, India 1993 Learning | Education, India Learning | Education, South Africa J Janaki Rajan - 5 | 12 | 94 71 Civic Engagement, Brazil Economic Development, Mexico Health, Guinea-Bissau → at 30 | Sonia Coutinho - 9 | 14 | 94 V Victor Palliaroli - 11 | 20 | 94 Human Rights, Mexico Health, Nigeria Foluke Idowu - 7 | 28 | 93 Human Rights, Nigeria G Godfrey Mureriwa - 7 | 28 | 93 Economic Development, Zimbabwe J Jagdish Pradhan - 1 | 1 | 93 Economic Development, India Jasmine Aguilar - 5 | 5 | 93 Civic Engagement, Mexico John de Wit - 2 | 11 | 93 Economic Development, South Africa John Thébault - 7 | 28 | 93 Human Rights, Ghana Jonny Gevisser - 5 | 1 | 93 Learning | Education, South Africa José Francisco Bernades Milanez 7 | 28 | 93 Environment, Brazil List of fellows | 72 | Ashoka at 30 José Mauro dos Santos Farias - 2 | 28 | 93 Saidul Haque Chunnu - 11 | 3 | 93 Brazil Human Rights, Bangladesh Joseph N‘Gata - 6 | 30 | 93 Samantha B. Barua - 6 | 30 | 93 Environment, Côte d‘Ivoire Bangladesh Juan Gerardo Domínguez - 1 | 2 | 93 Sanku Molaoli - 9 | 1 | 93 Economic Development, Mexico Health South, Africa Juan José Meré Rouco - 1 | 11 | 93 Sneh Kumar - 1 | 10 | 93 Civic Engagement, Uruguay Human Rights, India L Liane Maria Ribeiro Marcondes 12 | 31 | 93 Learning | Education, Brazil Stepanus Djuweng - 9 | 15 | 93 Economic Development, Indonesia T Thierno Seydou Sall - 7 | 28 | Civic Engagement, Senegal Lilia Ana Cisneros Luján - 5 | 5 | 93 Health, Mexico V Valdecir Benedito Valdo França - 7 | 28 | 93 Health, Brazil Lucia Quachey - 12 | 31 | 93 Economic Development, Brazil Environment, Zimbabwe Health, Indonesia → 1992 Environment, Thailand Environment, Brazil Maria Aparecida Silva Bento - 12 | 31 | 93 Civic Engagement, Brazil Maria Eliza Jardim Barbosa - 7 | 28 | 93 Economic Development, Brazil Environment, Bangladesh Ana Maria Oliveira Filgueiras Soares 12 | 30 | 92 Brazil Andreas D‘Souza - 4 | 12 | 92 Civic Engagement, India Mauricio Ramos - 5 | 5 | 93 Health, India Health, Mexico N Naiyana Supapung - 11 | 10 | 93 Human Rights, Thailand Anil Pilgadkar - 1 | 11 | 92 B Bagus Pursena - 9 | 15 | 92 Civic Engagement, Indonesia Bhadra Man Tuladhar - 9 | 7 | 92 Nasreen Sultana - 12 | 31 | 93 Learning | Education, Nepal Nimisha Desai - 10 | 11 | 93 Human Rights, Senegal Bangladesh Economic Development, India Binta Sarr - 12 | 16 | 92 C Carlos Hoyos Tello - 12 | 30 | 92 O Oded Grajew - 7 | 28 | 93 Mexico P Phanthip Buttad - 12 | 30 | 93 Human Rights, Nigeria Brazil Economic Development, Thailand Chris Omusi - 12 | 30 | 92 Environment, Brazil Pitak Nantakun - 1 | 1 | 93 Learning | Education, South Africa Civic Engagement, Thailand Cynthia Mpati - 3 | 11 | 92 D Dilli Chaudhary - 2 | 29 | 92 Pregaluxmi Govender - 8 | 1 | 93 Learning | Education, Nepal Purnawati Sherchan - 12 | 10 | 93 Indonesia Civic Engagement, Thailand Nepal R Ranjan Karmaker - 12 | 30 | 93 Bangladesh Rezaul Karim Siddique - 11 | 11 | 93 Economic Development ,Bangladesh S Saha Sukanta - 12 | 21 | 93 Health, Bangladesh | List of fellows Civic Engagement, South Africa George Mathew Molakal - 1 | 1 | 92 India Gerardo Sauri suárez - 2 | 7 | 92 Learning | Education, Mexico Gita Ramaswamy - 2 | 8 | 92 Human Rights, India Health, Mexico H Hernán García - 1 | 1 | 92 Health, Mexico Hilaire Gnohité Gomé - 12 | 26 | 92 Indonesia Indu Capoor - 12 | 26 | 92 Health India Iqbal Mohamed - 1 | 5 | 92 Human Rights, South Africa J Jamil Ahmed - 12 | 26 | 92 Bangladesh Jane Olatunji Hughes - 12 | 30 | 92 Learning | Education, Nigeria Joel Bolnick - 8 | 4 | 92 Burkina Faso José Américo Silva Fontes - 12 | 31 | 92 Health, Brazil José Augusto Saraiva Peixoto - 12 | 31 | 92 Environment, Brazil Jose Farias - 12 | 30 | 92 Brazil K Kalyan Paul - 12 | 30 | 92 Environment, India Cláudio Vinicius Trigueiro Vidal - 9 | 21 | 92 L Luiz Tadeu Damaschi - 12 | 31 | 92 Phra Kru Pitak Nantakun - 9 | 27 | 93 Thailand G Gcina Mhlope - 3 | 3 | 92 I Idham Ibty - 10 | 13 | 92 A Aminul Karim Dulal - 12 | 16 | 92 Maria Keita - 12 | 30 | 93 Learning | Education, Mali Felipe José Porciuncula Lins - 9 | 21 | 92 Civic Engagement, Brazil Environment, Côte d‘Ivoire Manop Pratoomthong - 12 | 30 | 93 Marcos Aurélio Da-Ré - 12 | 31 | 93 Everardo Van Zoeler - 1 | 1 | 92 Economic Development, Mexico Guadalupe Alejandre - 1 | 1 | 92 Lydia Chabata - 6 | 11 | 93 M Made Efo Suarmiartha - 9 | 15 | 93 Emami Murmu - 9 | 21 | 92 India Djabar Lahadji - 12 | 30 | 92 E Edison Durval Ramos Carvalho - 9 | 21 | 92 Learning | Education, Brazil Eko SB Hariyanto - 12 | 31 | 92 Brazil Lydia Ngwenya - 8 | 4 | 92 Civic Engagement ,South Africa Lynne Brown - 1 | 11 | 92 Civic Engagement, South Africa M Mahbuba Leena - 12 | 30 | 92 Learning | Education, Bangladesh María Anzures - 1 | 11 | 92 Human Rights, Mexico Mark Swilling - 8 | 4 | 92 Civic Engagement ,Indonesia Civic Engagement, South Africa Eliane Lima Dos Santos (Eliane Potiguara) - 1 | 1 | 92 Health, India Human Rights, Brazil Mira Sadgopal - 1 | 11 | 92 Ashoka Mohammad Bari - 1 | 12 | 92 Souleymane Sarr - 12 | 1 | 92 Health, Bangladesh Economic Development, Mali Mohammad M.D. Sirajul Islam - 11 | 2 | 92 Sourirajan Srinivasan - 9 | 21 | 92 Bangladesh Health, India Muslich Ismail - 9 | 21 | 92 Surya Gurung - 3 | 11 | 92 Civic Engagement, Indonesia Human Rights, Nepal N Ndiogou Fall - 12 | 30 | 92 Sylvio José De Oliveira - 9 | 21 | 92 Senegal Nelson Agyemang - 12 | 30 | 92 Ghana Health, Brazil Brazil Nike Esiet - 12 | 16 | 92 Normando Batista Santos - 12 | 31 | 92 Thongbai Thongpao - 1 | 1 | 92 Brazil Human Rights, Thailand P Parshu Ram Tamang - 2 | 11 | 92 Traore Ismaïla Samba - 12 | 16 | 92 Human Rights, Nepal Learning | Education, Mali Paul Pretorius - 9 | 5 | 92 Tripura Kashyap - 9 | 21 | 92 Civic Engagement Brazil India Peem Pakamaetawee - 12 | 29 | 92 U Utis Buddhasud Somjai - 1 | 1 | 92 Pisit Chansanoh - 7 | 12 | 92 V Vera Cordeiro - 11 | 1 | 92 Poonsap Suanmuang - 12 | 29 | 92 Economic Development Thailand Prativa Subedi - 1 | 1 | 92 Human Rights, Nepal Learning | Education, Thailand Health, Brazil W Wirajit Lianchamroon - 6 | 12 | 92 Environment, Thailand Y Yongchai Jerdampai - 12 | 30 | 92 Learning | Education, Thailand Prem Victor - 1 | 1 | 92 Yubaraj Sangroula - 3 | 11 | 92 Health, India Human Rights, Nepal Prima Wira Putra - 12 | 31 | 92 Promchote Traiwate - 11 | 1 | 92 Punya Chaiyakum - 11 | 1 | 92 → 1991 Environment ,Thailand Renu Rajbhandari - 1 | 26 | 92 Health, Nepal S S.K.L. Mohammad Lalon - 11 | 2 | 92 Bangladesh Salima Sarwar - 10 | 13 | 92 Economic Development, Bangladesh Salma Ali - 12 | 26 | 92 Human Rights, Bangladesh Sam Muofhe - 2 | 5 | 92 Economic Development, South Africa Sashi Kala Singh - 1 | 1 | 92 Economic Development, Nepal Sebastião Rocha - 9 | 21 | 92 Brazil Shahidul Haque - 12 | 30 | 92 Human Rights, Bangladesh Sofyan Tan - 1 | 16 | 92 Civic Engagement, Indonesia Dede Oetomo - 1 | 1 | 91 Indonesia E Eduardo Valle - 1 | 1 | 91 Mexico Civic Engagement East Timor Civic Engagement South Africa Hyronimus A Fernandez - 12 | 31 | 91 Health Indonesia I Indrani Chakravarty - 7 | 8 | 91 Human Rights India Irma Rosado - 1 | 1 | 91 Health Mexico J Jesús Michel Cuen - 1 | 1 | 91 Human Rights Mexico Jesús Salinas - 1 | 1 | 91 Human Rights Mexico José Antonio Bacchin - 11 | 1 | 91 Environment Brazil José Ignacio Pérez Palma - 1 | 1 | 91 Economic Development Mexico Jurema Pinto Werneck - 12 | 31 | 91 Health Brazil Health India Kelson Vieira - 8 | 1 | 91 Economic Development Brazil L Larry Castañares - 1 | 1 | 91 Environment Mexico R Ramón Vera Herrera - 1 | 1 | 92 Civic Engagement, Mexico Learning | Education Brazil K Kedar Banerjee - 12 | 7 | 91 Civic Engagement, Indonesia Economic Development, Thailand D Daniel Gerardo Raviolo - 11 | 1 | 91 Telma Sueli Ferraccioli Marques - 11 | 1 | 92 H Hannes Siebert - 5 | 6 | 91 Health, Brazil Economic Development Thailand Cosmas Okoli - 1 | 1 | 91 Human Rights Nigeria T Telma Sueli Ferraccioli Marques - 11 | 1 | 92 F Florentino d Sarmento - 1 | 1 | 91 Health, Nigeria Economic Development, Thailand at 30 | Laurie Nathan - 1 | 1 | 91 A A.R. Palaniswamy - 7 | 12 | 91 Learning | Education, India Adalberto Sigismundo Eberhard - 8 | 1 | 91 Environment, Brazil Civic Engagement South Africa Lorenzo Pérez Alvarez - 1 | 12 | 91 Civic Engagement Mexico M Mangal Singh - 1 | 1 | 91 Ajaya Dixit - 8 | 4 | 91 Environment India Alzira Dos Santos Rufino - 11 | 1 | 91 Health Brazil Aparecida Suely Carneiro - 11 | 1 | 91 Brazil Environment, Nepal Human Rights, Brazil Human Rights, Brazil Maria José De Farias - 8 | 1 | 91 Maria Merlo - 1 | 1 | 91 Mario Ottoboni - 8 | 1 | 91 B Benno De Keijzer - 1 | 1 | 91 Brazil C Canon David Ogbonna - 7 | 1 | 91 Economic Development Mexico Health, Mexico Nigeria Mark Callaghan - 1 | 1 | 91 Martha Heredia - 1 | 1 | 91 Carlos Roberto dos Santos - 8 | 1 | 91 Health, Slovenia Carmen Granados - 1 | 1 | 91 Learning | Education, Bangladesh Clement Nwankwo - 12 | 31 | 91 Civic Engagement, Bangladesh Brazil Mexico Mashuda Khatun Shefali - 1 | 1 | 91 Monajat Uddin - 12 | 5 | 91 Nigeria List of fellows | 73 74 | Ashoka at 30 Monirul Kader Mirza - 1 | 1 | 91 Environment, Bangladesh W Wallop Tangkanurak - 1 | 1 | 91 Learning | Education, Thailand N Nílvia Terezinha da Silva Pantaleoni 11 | 1 | 91 → O Olatokunbo Ige - 1 | 1 | 91 Human Rights, Palestine Omolara Otujo - 1 | 1 | 91 Learning | Education, Nigeria A P Pandurang Hegde - 7 | 12 | 91 Environment, India Patricia Bidinger - 1 | 1 | 91 Health, India Paulo Henrique Pinheiro Longo - 12 | 31 | 91 Health, Brazil Pearl Nwashili - 1 | 1 | 91 Health Nigeria Pedro Gabriel Godinho Delgado - 8 | 1 | 91 Human Rights, Brazil Pilar Muriedas - 1 | 4 | 91 Health Mexico Purnendu Chakraborty - 1 | 1 | 91 India R Rabi Wali - 12 | 31 | 91 Learning | Education, Nigeria Rajesh Shrestha - 7 | 12 | 91 Nepal Rogelio Cova - 9 | 16 | 91 Mexico Romulus Whitaker - 6 | 6 | 91 Environment, India Ruth Gelehrter Da Costa Lopes - 1 | 1 | 91 B S Santosh Gondhalekar - 1 | 1 | 91 Environment India Seakson Dhammawong - 1 | 1 | 91 Human Rights ,Thailand C Setia Adipurwanta - 1 | 1 | 91 Learning | Education, Indonesia Shanta Thapalia - 1 | 1 | 91 Learning | Education, Nepal Shyamala Natarajan - 1 | 1 | 91 Health, India D Somsook Boonyabancha - 7 | 29 | 91 Economic Development, Thailand Sri Wahyaningsih - 9 | 15 | 91 Learning | Education, Indonesia Suely Carvalho Neves - 1 | 1 | 91 Health, Brazil H Sunita Satyarthia - 1 | 1 | 91 Human Rights, India T Teresa Daisi Furtado - 3 | 1 | 91 Brazil V Victoria Dunmade - 1 | 1 | 91 Economic Development, Nigeria | List of fellows Learning / Education, India Jittaree Wanapong - 01 | 01 | 90 Brazil Health, Brazil J J. C. Soni - 08 | 05 | 90 I 1990 Thailand John Wilson - 5 | 22 | 90 Economic Development, Zimbabwe L Lourdes Angulo Salazar - 01 | 01 | 90 Health, Mexico M M. B. Nirmal - 09 | 05 | 90 Environment, India Aldanio Roberto Oliveira De Carvalho 08 | 01 | 90 Mara Ferreira - 9 | 30 | 90 Economic Development, Brazil Economic Development, Brazil Alicia Molina Argudin - 05 | 08 | 90 Maria Antonia C. C. Magalhães Mexico 04 | 01 | 90 Learning, Education, Brazil Anant Sharma - 01 | 01 | 90 Economic Development, India Maria Da Graça Mendes De Abreu Andrew Nyathi - 5 | 22 | 90 04 | 01 | 90 Civic Engagement, South Africa Learning / Education, Brazil Anil Chitrakar - 03 | 11 | 90 Marilena Igreja Lazzarini - 5 | 22 | 90 Environment, Nepal Economic Development, Brazil Anisuzzaman Khan - 03 | 05 | 90 Mauricio Correia Leite - 08 | 01 | 90 Environment, Bangladesh Brazil Merlong Solano Nogueira - 11 | 01 | 90 Anjana Batra - 01 | 01 | 90 Learning / Education, India Economic Development, Brazil Antonio Luiz Batista De Macêdo N Nalini Nayak - 07 | 02 | 90 Environment, India 01 | 01 | 90 Environment, Brazil Nasser Youssef Nasr - 5 | 22 | 90 Environment, Brazil Ari Sunarijati - 12 | 15 | 90 Human Rights, Indonesia Natee Teerarojjanapongs - 7 | 29 | 90 Health, Thailand Aromar Revi - 01 | 01 | 90 Human Rights, India O Oscar Moctezuma - 01 | 01 | 90 Environment, Brazil Badri Dahal - 11 | 15 | 90 Economic Development, Nepal P P. Muthu - 08 | 02 | 90 Health, India Boonsong Panyawuttho - 12 | 31 | 90 Environment, Thailand Preeti Mongia - 02 | 09 | 90 India Carlos Antonio Bezerra Da Silva 5 | 22 | 90 R Raul Belens Jungmann Pinto - 11 | 01 | 90 Health, Brazil Civic Engagement, Brazil Rodolfo López - 01 | 01 | 90 Chaiwat Yaowapongsiri - 12 | 31 | 90 Economic Development, Thailand Environment, Mexico Cyril Mooney - 07 | 02 | 90 S Saleem Samad - 01 | 01 | 90 Learning / Education, India Human Rights, Bangladesh Daycha Siripatra - 12 | 31 | 90 Suman Sahai - 01 | 01 | 90 Economic Development, Thailand Health, India Debashish Nayak - 02 | 05 | 90 Sun Rupsung - 02 | 08 | 90 Civic Engagement, India Civic Engagement, Thailand Deborah Robles Gil - 05 | 08 | 90 Suryo Wardoyo Prawiroatmodjo - 7 | 13 | 90 Mexico Environment, Indonesia Humaira Islam - 01 | 01 | 90 T T. J. David - 01 | 01 | 90 Economic Development, Bangladesh Economic Development, India Ismael Ferreira De Oliveira - 12 | 31 | 90 Teresa Zorrilla Palomar - 01 | 01 | 90 Economic Development, Brazi l Health, Mexico Iwan Mucipto Moeliono - 7 | 15 | 90 Tuenjai Deetes - 02 | 08 | 90 Economic Development, Indonesia Economic Development, Thailand Ashoka V Vikram Parchure - 01 | 01 | 90 Z → A B C D E F J Jane Chiang Sieh - 12 | 31 | 89 75 R Raimunda Célia Torres - 11 | 01 | 1989 Learning / Education, Brazil Witoon Permpongsacharoen - 12 | 31 | 90 Javier Sánchez Díaz - 01 | 01 | 1989 Regina Helena de Oliveira Pedroso Environment, Thailand Human Rights, Mexico 6 | 26 | 89 Learning / Education, Brazil Zadrak Wamebu - 01 | 01 | 90 João Jorge Santos Rodrigues - 12 | 31 | 89 Civic Engagement, Indonesia Civic Engagement, Brazil Roberto Siqueira Carneiro - 6 | 26 | 89 Environment, Brazil João Roberto Ripper Barbosa Cordeiro Rosângela Berman Bieler - 10 | 01 | 1989 04 | 04 | 1989 Human Rights, Brazil Human Rights, Thailand José Roberto Escórcio - 05 | 01 | 1989 Rosario Valdez - 01 | 01 | 1989 Economic Development, Brazil Human Rights, Mexico Julio Moure - 01 | 06 | 1989 Ruang Sooksawasdi - 12 | 31 | 89 Learning, Education, Mexico Economic Development, Thailand Agatha Thapa - 01 | 01 | 1989 Sachidulal Bandhopadhyaya - 10 | 01 | 1989 L Luiz Baggio Neto - 5 | 22 | 89 Learning / Education, Nepal Human Rights, Brazil India Agustín Sangines García - 01 | 01 | 1989 S Sangkom Thongmee - 12 | 31 | 89 M M. Umar Husein - 12 | 31 | 89 Health, Mexico Civic Engagement, Indonesia Learning / Education, Thailand Alicia Arguelles - 01 | 08 | 1989 Madhavi Suneel Tambay - 10 | 24 | 89 Sérgio Roberto Marques Santana Mexico Health, India 11 | 01 | 1989 Economic Development, Brazil Amir Panzuri - 7 | 30 | 89 Manoel Eduardo Alves Indonesia Shanti Choudhary - 10 | 24 | 89 Camargo e Gomes - 11 | 01 | 1989 Civic Engagement, Brazil Nepal Anselm Rosario - 01 | 09 | 1989 Human Rights, India Manuel García Espinoza - 01 | 01 | 1989 Shridevi Rao - 10 | 24 | 89 Human Rights, Mexico India Arturo Caballero Barrón - 01 | 05 | 1989 Economic Development, Mexico Manuel González Mújica - 03 | 06 | 1989 Sujit Sinha - 10 | 24 | 89 Human Rights, Mexico Learning / Education, India Asok Prasanson - 12 | 31 | 89 Economic Development, Thailand Manuel Guerra - 01 | 01 | 1989 T Tânia Mascarenhas Tavares - 11 | 01 | 1989 Environment, Mexico Brazil Beatriz Avila - 10 | 24 | 89 Health, Mexico Márcio José Brando Santilli - 11 | 01 | 1989 Tânia Mascarenhas Tavares - 11 | 01 | 1989 Human Rights, Brazil Environment, Brazil Chhanda Bose - 10 | 24 | 89 Learning / Education, India Maria Lucia Carr Gulassa - 10 | 01 | 1989 Tata (Indra) Purwita - 10 | 24 | 89 Learning / Education, Brazil Indonesia Diva Moreira - 10 | 01 | 1989 Human Rights, Brazil Terri Valle Aquino - 10 | 24 | 89 Mario Rocha - 01 | 01 | 1989 Learning / Education, Mexico Economic Development, Brazil Domingos Francisco Dutra Filho Marta Esteves De Almeida Gil - 6 | 26 | 89 U Urmila Upadhaya Garg - 12 | 01 | 1989 01 | 01 | 1989 Brazil Health, Brazil Economic Development, Nepal Emilio González - 07 | 08 | 1989 Meera Bhattarai - 01 | 09 | 1989 Y Yubaraj, Surya Kirang Sangroula, Environment, Mexico Economic Development, Nepal Gurung - 8 | 15 | 89 Nepal Enrique Velázquez - 01 | 01 | 1989 Muhammad Ibrahim - 10 | 24 | 89 Environment, Mexico Education, Bangladesh Eugênio Scanavino Netto - 11 | 01 | 1989 N Nanjundan Chitra - 10 | 24 | 89 Health, Brazil India Fábio Luiz de Oliveira Rosa - 11 | 01 | 1989 Narong Patibatsarakich - 10 | 24 | 89 → Economic Development, India W at 30 | Economic Development, Brazil 1989 Economic Development, Brazil Francisco Chávez Guzmán - 01 | 01 | 1989 Civic Engagement, Mexico G Gautam - 10 | 24 | 89 India Gilda Maria Pompéia - 12 | 31 | 89 Health, Brazil H Hosne Ara Begum - 10 | 24 | 89 Human Rights, Bangladesh Hosne Ara Khan -10 | 02 | 1989 Bangladesh Human Rights, Pakistan P P. Gain - 10 | 24 | 89 Bangladesh Patricia Cabrera - 01 | 07 | 1989 Human Rights, Mexico Philip Gain - 10 | 23 | 89 Human Rights, Bangladesh Priscilla Nirmalakumari Daniel 10 | 24 | 89 Civic Engagement, India Priti Patkar - 01 | 09 | 1989 Human Rights, India 1988 A Alfonso Sitorus - 6 | 30 | 88 Ana Maria Pacheco De Vasconcelos 12 | 30 | 88 Human Rights, Brazil Arturo García - 12 | 30 | 88 Economic Development, Mexico B Beatriz Solis Leree - 12 | 30 | 88 Learning / Education, Mexico List of fellows | 76 | Ashoka at 30 Binod Palikhe - 12 | 30 | 88 M Marco Antonio López Córdova 01 | 07 | 1988 Mexico Brian Hoeve - 4 | 16 | 88 Civic Engagement, Brazil Maria do Carmo de Souza Marti Candida Maria Bittencourt 8 | 22 | 88 Learning / Education, Brazil Carvalheira - 03 | 01 | 1988 Human Rights, Brazil Maxine Bernstein - 12 | 30 | 88 Learning / Education, India Chamsiah Djamal Tristian - 6 | 30 | 88 Indonesia Mireya Toto - 12 | 30 | 88 Christopher Robert Peterson - 11 | 01 | 1988 Human Rights, Mexico Brazil Mohammad Zakaria - 12 | 30 | 88 Bangladesh Christopher Robert Peterson - 12 | 30 | 88 Health, Brazil Moneeza Hashmi - 12 | 30 | 88 Pakistan Clóvis Borges - 12 | 30 | 88 Environment, Brazil Muhammad Nasir Gazdar - 12 | 30 | 88 Pakistan Concepción Hernandez - 12 | 30 | 88 Mexico Muslikhin Kusma - 12 | 30 | 88 Indonesia Didid Adidananta - 12 | 30 | 88 Human Rights, Indonesia N Nurochman Nurochman - 6 | 30 | 88 Indonesia Edson Hiroshi Séo - 12 | 30 | 88 Economic Development, Brazil R Ricardo Oliveira Neves - 12 | 30 | 88 Environment, Brazil Elcylene De Araújo Leocádio - 8 | 22 | 88 Health, Brazil S Sita Aripurnami - 12 | 30 | 88 Civic Engagement, Indonesia Fazlul Huq - 12 | 30 | 88 Human Rights, Bangladesh Sonia Hirsch - 01 | 01 | 1988 Brazil Flavia Agnes - 06 | 09 | 1988 Human Rights, India Sunil Pokharel - 12 | 30 | 88 Civic Engagement, Nepal Francisco (Chico) Mendes - 12 | 30 | 88 Environment, Brazil Susiawan Susiawan - 6 | 30 | 88 Indonesia Frederico Fullgraf - 8 | 15 | 88 Environment, Brazil T Thomas Miguel Pressburger - 8 | 15 | 88 Brazil Giancarlo Oliveri - 4 | 16 | 88 Brazil W Wanda Engel Aduan - 12 | 30 | 88 Human Rights, Brazil Ibrahim Sobhan - 1 | 18 | 88 Learning / Education, Bangladesh Jayro Pereira De Jesus - 12 | 30 | 88 Human Rights, Brazil João Cláudio Lara Fernandes - 8 | 22 | 88 → Health, Brazil João Marcos Aurore Romão - 8 | 22 | 88 Human Rights, Brazil João Roberto Cilento Winther - 8 | 22 | 88 A Abdullah Suad Lubis - 12 | 30 | 87 Economic Development, Brazil Indonesia Joaquín López Roselio - 12 | 30 | 88 Adil Amrullah - 6 | 30 | 87 Mexico Indonesia José Carlos Aguiar de Brito - 8 | 22 | 88 Ailton Alves Lacerda - 10 | 01 | 1987 Economic Development, Brazil Brazil José Luis Pérez Canchola - 12 | 30 | 88 B Bharat Dutta Koirala - 12 | 30 | 87 Human Rights, Mexico Civic Engagement, Nepal Josephina Bacariça - 11 | 01 | 1988 C Carlos Alberto Ivanir dos Santos Economic Development, Brazil 12 | 30 | 87 Human Rights, Brazil Leonardo Roque Pessina Bernini - 4 | 16 | 88 D Deepti Shah - 12 | 30 | 87 Economic Development, Brazil Health, India Nepal C D E F G I J L 1987 | List of fellows E Eugênio de Alvarenga Ferrari - 4 | 28 | 87 Economic Development, Brazil G Gabriela - 12 | 30 | 87 Brazil Gabriela Silva Leite (Otília) - 01 | 11 | 1987 Human Rights, Brazil Geraldo Santos Marinho - 12 | 30 | 87 Economic Development, Brazil J Joel Rufino dos Santos - 4 | 28 | 87 Brazil Joel Rufino dos Santos - 4 | 28 | 87 Human Rights, Brazil Johanna Pattiasina - 12 | 30 | 87 Indonesia Jude Henriques - 07 | 12 | 1987 Learning / Education, India K Kanak Dixit - 7 | 28 | 87 Nepal L Lia Zatz - 5 | 30 | 87 Learning / Education, Brazil M Mara Regina Tagliari Calliare - 9 | 30 | 87 Brazil Maria José Bocchese Guazzelli 05 | 01 | 1987 Human Rights, Brazil Maria José Oliveira Araújo - 08 | 01 | 1987 Health, Brazil Maria Lucia - 12 | 30 | 87 Brazil Maria Lucia Gomes dos Prazeres Farias 11 | 01 | 1987 Learning / Education, Brazil Marina Quintanilha Martinez - 12 | 30 | 87 Brazil Marlene Morgado Segundo Dos Santos 08 | 01 | 1987 Health, Switzerland Mary Allegretti - 4 | 28 | 87 Environment, Brazil Maurice Bazin - 4 | 28 | 87 Learning / Education, Brazil Moelyono Moelyono - 12 | 30 | 87 Indonesia N Nely de Souza Cappuzzo - 12 | 30 | 87 Brazil R Raju Purohit - 12 | 30 | 87 Learning / Education, India Ravindra Chauhan - 12 | 30 | 87 India Roberto José dos Santos - 09 | 01 | 1987 Brazil S Sukwan Handali - 6 | 30 | 87 Indonesia Surya Dhungel - 7 | 28 | 87 Nepal Ashoka T Telma Weisz - 10 | 01 | 1987 Sudhirendar Sharma - 01 | 01 | 1986 Learning / Education, Brazil Environment, India U Ummu Salamah - 6 | 30 | 87 Sudi Subianto - 10 | 31 | 86 Learning / Education, Indonesia V Valdemar de Oliveira Neto (Maneto) 06 | 01 | 1987 Civic Engagement, Brazil W Wilma Corrêa da Silva - 12 | 30 | 87 Brazil Y Yambem Laba - 12 | 30 | 87 Environment, India Indonesia T Thara Srinivasan - 01 | 01 | 1986 Health, India Z Zukri Saad - 01 | 01 | 1986 → 1986 A Alba Lucy Giraldo Figueroa - 10 | 31 | 86 Health, Brazil Alphonse Jemonie - 01 | 01 | 1986 Economic Development, India B Balkrishna Renake - 01 | 01 | 1986 Human Rights, India E Eka Budianta - 10 | 31 | 86 Indonesia Emílio Maciel Eigenheer - 11 | 01 | 1986 Environment, Brazil Enny Soekoer - 10 | 31 | 86 Economic Development, Indonesia H Heera Lal Sharma - 01 | 01 | 1986 Economic Development, India I Itja Frans - 10 | 31 | 86 Indonesia L Lenira Haddad -12 | 01 | 1986 Brazil Lenira Haddad - 12 | 01 | 1986 Education, Brazil M Mary Allegretti Zanoni - 12 | 31 | 86 Brazil N Nandini Mundkur - 01 | 01 | 1986 Health, India Renato Rodrigues Tucunduva Júnior 01 | 01 | 1986 Brazil R Rina Bahri - 10 | 31 | 86 Indonesia Rupen Das - 01 | 01 | 1986 Human Rights, India S Silvia Maria Pereira de Carvalho 11 | 01 | 1986 Brazil Sri Kusyuniati - 1 | 15 | 86 Indonesia 1985 77 M Mohan Hiralal - 01 | 01 | 1984 Economic Development, India S Syamsuddin Nainggolan -10 | 31 | 84 Indonesia V Vasant Savangikar - 01 | 01 | 1984 Economic Development, India Learning / Education, Indonesia → at 30 | → 1983 S S. Santhi - 01 | 01 | 1983 Environment, India A Abhay Bang - 01 | 01 | 1985 Health, India Arvind Pitre - 01 | 01 | 1985 Civic Participation, India Ashok Salvi - 01 | 01 | 1985 → 1982 Economic Development, India D Dadasaheb More - 01 | 01 | 1985 Civic Engagement, India H Hanif Lakdawala - 01 | 01 | 1985 Learning / Education, India M Martand Singh - 01 | 01 | 1985 Economic Development, India N Ned Poerba - 6 | 30 | 85 Indonesia P Prabhat Kumar - 01 | 01 | 1985 Civic Engagement, India R Rani Bang - 01 | 01 | 1985 Health, India S Soekirman Soekirman - 6 | 30 | 85 Indonesia Syafei Anshari - 6 | 30 | 85 Indonesia V Vasant Gangavane - 01 | 01 | 1985 Economic Development, India Vivek Pandit - 01 | 01 | 1985 Human Rights, India W Widjanarka E. Saksana - 6 | 30 | 85 Indonesia → 1984 A Aditya Patnaik - 8 | 22 | 82 Economic Development, India Anand Kothadia - 8 | 20 | 82 Civic Engagement, India Anil Agarwal - 8 | 20 | 82 Environment, India D Dhirananda Mandal - 8 | 22 | 82 Health, India G Gloria De Souza - 04 | 03 | 1982 Learning / Education, India H Hanumappa Sudarshan - 01 | 01 | 1982 Health, India K Karsanbhai Koyabhai Parmar - 8 | 22 | 82 India R Ramesh Nandwana - 8 | 22 | 82 Civic Engagement, India Rashida Begum - 04 | 03 | 1982 Economic Development, India Ravi Kumar - 8 | 22 | 82 India V Vasudha Dhagamwar - 8 | 20 | 82 Human Rights, India I Iwan Nursirwan - 10 | 31 | 84 Indonesia J Jo Indharjo - 10 | 31 | 84 Indonesia List of fellows |