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The CSU College of Business and The Global Social Sustainable Enterprise Program are pleased to present
Paul Polak
"Out of Poverty"
as part of the Sustainable Enterprise Speaker Series
Tuesday, March 4th, 2008
5:30 P.M. - 7:00 P.M.
Clark Building rm: A102
Development guru Paul Polak will be speaking on his hard-hitting,
new book “Out of Poverty, What Works When Traditional Approaches
Fail” as part of the Sustainable Enterprise Speaker Series.
Hear his indictment of traditional aid approaches, and his
suggestions for practical, bottom-up solutions to some of the worlds
most daunting problems.
“...I have no doubt that at least 500 million families now surviving
on less than a dollar a day will find practical ways to end
their poverty within one generation.”
Join us for an invigorating lecture from one of the leading minds in
his field.
About the Speaker:
Paul Polak — founder of Colorado-based non-profit International
Development enterprises (IDE)— is dedicated to developing practical
solutions that attack poverty at its roots. For the past 25 years,
Paul has worked with thousands of farmers in countries around the
world—including Bangladesh, India, Cambodia, Ethiopia, Myanmar,
Nepal, Vietnam, Zambia and Zimbabwe—to help design and produce
low-cost, income-generating products that have already moved 17
million people out of poverty.
Before establishing IDE, Paul practiced psychiatry for 23 years in
Colorado. to better understand the environments influencing his
patients, Paul would visit their homes and workplaces. After a trip
he made to Bangladesh, he was inspired to use the skills he had
honed while working with homeless veterans and mentally ill
patients in Denver to serve the 800 million people living on a
dollar a day
around the world. Employing the same tactics he pioneered as a
psychiatrist, Paul spent time “walking with farmers through their
one-acre farms and enjoying a cup of tea with their families,
sitting on a stool in front of their thatched-roof mud-and-wattle
homes.”
Paul’s ability to respond with innovative solutions—such as the $25
treadle pump and small farm drip-irrigation systems starting at
$3—helped IDE increase poor farmers’ net income by $288 million
annually. Last year, IDE received a $14 million grant from the
Bill & Melinda Gates foundation. In 2004, Paul received Ernst &
Young’s “entrepreneur of the year” award in the social
responsibility category. And,
Paul was named one of the Scientific American “top 50” for his
leadership in agriculture policy in 2003.
In spring 2007, the Smithsonian’s Cooper-Hewitt, National Design
Museum in New York showcased Design for the Other 90%—an exhibition
inspired by Paul—that features affordable and socially responsible
objects, including several IDE water irrigation and storage tools.
Paul poses the same challenge in Out of Poverty that the exhibition
addresses: 90 percent of the world’s designers focus
on solutions for the richest 10 percent of the world’s customers
rather than the other 90 percent who need it most.
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