gg news Gift Cards for any Occasion
And the Marketplace Winners Are...

The funds were limited, the need was overwhelming and the pressure was on. It was the climax of the Global Philanthropy Forum's Conference on Borderless Giving, and a jury of nine philanthropists faced the tough prospect of dividing $100,000 among 16 of the world's leading community-based development projects.

Before a crowd of 200 people, the jury split the funds evenly among five of the contestants. The five projects addressed issues including providing safe drinking water for rural communities, empowering Afghan women, rescuing Nepalese girls from bonded labor, preventing mothers' deaths in childbirth, and building sustainable micro-clinics.

GPF Marketplace
Above, Sakena Yacoobi presents her award-winning project, "Educating and Empowering Afghan Women." 16 finalists from around the globe competed at the 2005 Marketplace, which was the first event of its kind.

The Marketplace marked the final stage of a two-month, $100,000 competition. After receiving over 150 Marketplace nominations in late 2004, GlobalGiving called on the general public to whittle a catalog of 112 projects down to 16 finalists through an innovative online rating system. Within a week, individuals rated projects more than 200,000 times; those projects with the highest average rating were selected to participate in the Marketplace.

Safe Drinking Water for Rural Communities will install safe drinking water systems in 10 villages thoughout India as a pilot for model replication worldwide. Empowering and Educating Afghan Women will provide education, skills training and reproductive health services for women throughout Afghanistan. Rescuing Young Girls from Bonded Labor in Nepal enables parents to keep their daughters at home, while affording families sustainable ways of preventing bonded labor.

Preventing Mother's Deaths in Childbirth makes Misoprostal, a drug that stops postpartum hemorrhaging, available to midwives in developing countries. Sustainable Rural Micro-clinics improves Kenyans' access to essential drugs, thereby reducing needless death and disease.

Congratulations and thank you to all the participants in the 2005 Marketplace. Based upon the success of this inaugural event, we anticipate that this bold experiment in giving will continue well into the future!

Resources

Tech Museum Awards Nomination Deadline: April 4

The Tech Museum Awards, an initiative sponsored by Applied Materials, Inc., is currently seeking nominations for its 2005 awards program. The awards will honor 25 Laureates - innovators - from around the world who use technology to address issues in their communities and the world at large.

Cash prizes of $50,000 will be awarded to one Laureate in each of the following categories: Education, Equality, Environment, Economic Development, and Health. Laureates' projects are featured on GlobalGiving, enabling them to raise additional funds from the general public.

One of last year's Laureates, Ashok Gadgil, is the inventor of UVWaterworks, a device that disinfects drinking water at a cost of $1.50 per person per year. Since receiving the award, Gadgil has worked to provide safe drinking water to tsunami-devastated regions in India and Sri Lanka, and has raised over $200,000 for his projects through GlobalGiving. Dr. Gadgil's project, Safe drinking water in rural communities, is also a 2005 Marketplace award recipient.

Nicaraguan girls use Rope Pump
Nicaraguan girls use a Tech Laureate's invention - the rope pump - to purify the drinking water at their school.

If you or someone you know is seeking to make a difference through technology, submit a nomination today!

Resources

Investing in Women for a More Secure Future

Around the world, March 8 will be commemorated as International Women's Day. This year in particular is noteworthy as it marks the ten-year review of the Beijing Conference and Platform for Action, at which the world acknowledged that gender equality was critical to the development and peace of every nation.

How far have women come? No doubt significant progress has been made over the last decade. Life expectancy has increased. More girls than ever before are able to take advantage of primary education. Many more women are earning incomes.

Nepalese Women
International Women's Day is both a day of celebration and a reminder of the global challenges still facing women.

However, new challenges have emerged: the trafficking of women and children as well as increased targeting of women and children in armed conflicts. Further, the prevalence of HIV/AIDS - especially amongst young women - continues to grow.

But as Kofi Annan, UN Secretary General pointed out in his remarks honoring International Women's Day, the challenges facing women are not problems without solutions. And through the efforts of countless social entrepreneurs across the globe, transformative change is taking place every day. For example, in Nepal, social entrepreneur Sudha Chalise is providing training and capital for women's savings and credit groups; increasing accessibility of pre-natal healthcare and assistance at birth; and improving couples access to family planning and reproductive health services.

On International Women's Day, we recognize those whose economic, political, and social efforts and achievements are benefiting both current and future generations of women. Through GlobalGiving, you can support the work of entrepreneurs such as Sudha Chalise, whose efforts to help low caste women are making a real difference in improving the status of marginalized and poor women in Nepal.

Resources

Get your 2005 GlobalGiving t-shirt for FREE

Sorry, this promotion has expired.

subscribe
3.7.05 CONTENTS
1. And the Marketplace Winners Are...
2. Tech Museum Awards Nomination Deadline: April 4
3. Investing in Women for a More Secure Future
4. Get your 2005 GlobalGiving t-shirt for FREE
TOP TSUNAMI PROJECTS*
1. India Tsunami Rehabilitation Fund
2. Indonesia Tsunami Relief Fund
3. Tsunami Relief - Safe drinking water in India
4. Sri Lanka Tsunami Relief Fund
5. Tsunami Relief - Safe drinking water in Sri Lanka
* This lists tsunami relief projects that are closest to reaching their funding objective.
QUICK RESOURCES
Giving Options
GlobalGiving.com
Gift Cards
Find your Perfect Project
Project Catalog
Matching Fund

Donor Resources
How it Works
Why GlobalGiving
How to Donate
Due Diligence Process
Project Sponsors

The Organization
About GlobalGiving
Press Page
Our Team
Our Partners

Other Links
GlobalGiving Corporate
Project Entry
Newsletter Archive
Funded Project Catalog

Contact Us
Donor Help
(301) 652-8455
help@globalgiving.com

Have something to say about your organization?
If you would like to contribute to the GlobalGiving newsletter, please send requests to help@globalgiving.com. GlobalGiving Friends newsletters are delivered biweekly.

VERSION 2.0, NUMBER 20. To see the online version of this newsletter, visit www.globalgiving.com/news. GlobalGiving is located at 1816 12th Street NW - 3rd Floor, Washington, DC, 20009. You have received this newsletter because you are subscribed to the Friends email list. To unsubscribe, please send a blank email to friends-leave@globalgiving.com. If you were forwarded this email and would like to subscribe to our newsletter, click here and simply hit "send".