Urgent Evoke

A crash course in changing the world.

I am following a person called Iqbal Quadir

With GrameenPhone, he brought the first commercial telecom services to poor areas of Bangladesh. His latest project will help rural entrepreneurs build power plants.

The good work that he does (with his team):

As a kid in rural Bangladesh in 1971, Iqbal Quadir had to walk half a day to another village to find the doctor -- who was not there. Twenty years later he felt the same frustration while working at a New York bank, using diskettes to share information during a computer network breakdown. His epiphany: In both cases, "connectivity is productivity." Had he been able to call the doctor, it would have saved him hours of walking for nothing.

Partnering with microcredit pioneer Grameen Bank, in 1997 Quadir established Grameen Phone, a wireless operator now offering phone services to 80 million rural Bangladeshi. It's become the model for a bottom-up, tech-empowered approach to development. "Phones have a triple impact," Quadir says. "They provide business opportunities; connect the village to the world; and generate over time a culture of entrepreneurship, which is crucial for any economic development."

"GrameenPhone has increased the country’s GDP by a far greater amount than repeated infusions of foreign aid. "
The New Nation
How i plan to keep up with him:
TED constantly post blogs updating what is happening such as the sight below, through this sight you are also able to comunicate and ask questions indirectly. I am also going to follow on both Twitter and Facebook. Also He does a number of talks about the work that he does, hopefully i will be able to attend when the next UK talk is.

Views: 28

Comment by Annika Olofsdotter Bergström on March 7, 2010 at 3:13pm
The world needs more female game developers and social innovators. :)
Comment by MoE on March 9, 2010 at 7:15pm
That sounds interesting, and quite similar to what my "hero" also does (if you didn't already, you might be interested in having a look at my post about Josh Nesbit). I agree with many who commented your post: connectivity and communications are among the most powerful keys for a better development, and links are as much important as the knobs. (+1 knowledge share)
Comment by Brad Lewis on March 10, 2010 at 9:35pm
Hannah, Awesome posts. Nice going with the self-made paper. Who writes anymore, right? And the global perspective is great. Keep up the great work! Brad

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