MIT Legatum Center announces inaugural class of Legatum FellowsEntrepreneurs aim to scale up enterprise solutions in developing marketsThe Legatum Center for Development and Entrepreneurship at MIT announced May 20 that it has selected its first class of Legatum Fellows for the 2008-2009 academic year. "The Legatum Fellowships bring extraordinary men and women to MIT to pursue enterprise solutions to some of the most difficult challenges facing low-income countries," noted Iqbal Z. Quadir, director of the center. "By empowering entrepreneurs, the business plans created by Legatum Fellows will serve to catalyze organic, bottom-up development." The 12 students who form the inaugural class hail from across the globe, from Rwanda and Nigeria to Colombia and the United States. Their projects cover a range of endeavors--from generating clean, low-cost energy and increasing market access to food producers to developing mobile medical diagnostic devices and water treatment solutions. Founded in September 2007, the MIT Legatum Center serves as a launching pad for a new generation of entrepreneurs who want to develop the technologies and skills necessary to launch innovative businesses in developing markets. The competitive fellowship is aimed at incoming and current MIT graduate students and provides funding and exclusive opportunities to engage with world-renowned entrepreneurs, thought-leaders and investors. The application for the 2009-2010 Legatum Fellowship will be posted online in September. The 2008-2009 Legatum Fellows are: Amy Banzaert, a PhD candidate in mechanical engineering and design, is developing an alternative form of charcoal--made from sugar cane waste products--that can provide affordable clean cooking fuel in underserved regions. Robin Bartling's previous work in Indonesia employed market-based solutions to promote microinsurance policies for microborrowers. He is focused on building a business that provides small and medium producers from lesser-developed countries access to the U.S. market. Nicola "Niki" Gomez will explore two enterprise solutions with a focus on promoting sustainability in her native Sri Lanka: increasing the recycling of technology products in low-income countries and investigating the viability of a cultural organization that promotes art and artists in South Asia. Murali Govindaswamy developed the WiMAX Common Software Platform while an engineer at Ericsson. He aspires to bring WiMAX-based Internet connectivity throughout rural India and, in so doing, to increase access to education, medical care, improved agricultural techniques, cottage industry markets and e-governance in rural communities. |
TOOLSCONTACTPatti Richards RELATEDNew center to support aspiring entrepreneurs - The firm Legatum announced Aug. 17 a structured gift of $50 million to create a new center at MIT to support aspiring entrepreneurs from the developing world who have a strong commitment to development entrepreneurship. 9/17/2007 Legatum Center for Development and Entrepreneurship at MIT More: Business and management More: Entrepreneurship More: International relations and collaborations More: Students |