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Travel with Love

Travel with Love

When she was a little girl, Zheng Chu Yun loved to watch airplanes flying across the sky and she even chased after them. Though she could no longer do that post diagnosis with muscular dystrophy, she made a vow that one day she would sit on the plane and let ...

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Green School Bali: An ode to bamboo, the world’s future

Green School Bali: An ode to bamboo, the world’s future

Located 20 minutes North of Denpasar and 15 minutes South of Ubud, Green School’s eight-hectare campus sits among lush vegetation, divided by the Ayung River. It looks more like a serene, though rustic, holiday resort than a school. The school’s tagline is “Equipping Children For 2025”. By that, the Hardys want, ...

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Seeing Me for Who I Am

Seeing Me for Who I Am

You may have heard the expression “what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger”, but is that really true? What comes to mind when you see a blind person walking down the street? According to most people I ask, they tell me they either feel pity or admiration.

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Open Source Technology for Rural Hospitals in Thailand

Open Source Technology for Rural Hospitals in Thailand

Dr Kongkiat Kespechara, a self-taught computer programmer, medical doctor and social entrepreneur from Thailand, shares his experience setting up and running Hospital OS with SEforum. Hospital OS is an open-source software that enables small rural hospitals to more effective employ their resources to serve and to address the health issues ...

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A look at Thailand’s young fleet of “ICT4D” social entrepreneurs

A look at Thailand’s young fleet of “ICT4D” social entrepreneurs

Internet cafes and computer gaming centers line every major street in Bangkok. With that, Thailand’s new generation of innovators are no strangers to Information & Communication Technology (ICT). But what's more, they are not satisfied in using these important ICT skills for just pursuing monetary returns. Thailand is fast becoming a ...

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Conversation, News / Posted: Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

Seeing Me for Who I Am

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You may have heard the expression “what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger”, but is that really true? What comes to mind when you see a blind person walking down the street? According to most people I ask, they tell me they either feel pity or admiration.

 
Feature Articles, News / Posted: Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

INSIGHT: Social Initiatives

Part One: Clay IN-SIGHT
Clay INSIGHT1

The recent flourishing of social enterprises to support and integrate the visually impaired community is a heartening sign of Singapore society progressively becoming more inclusive.
These social enterprises range from traditional outfits employing the visually impaired people in consumer services, such as the Society for the Physically Disabled’s (SPD) mobile massage and car-washing services, to [...]

 
Feature Articles, News / Posted: Sunday, May 23rd, 2010

My Dog, My Companion, My Guide

KK3

A typical day for beautiful golden Labrador retriever, Kendra, is waking up next to her loving master, followed by donning her full regalia of harness, leash, and ID tags, which reveals her professional role.

 
Feature Articles, News / Posted: Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

Health Services for Migrant workers and more

Bringing Healing, Inspiring Hope, Bridging Communities
HealthServe1

Tang Shin Yong travels from his home in Bishan to Geylang every morning. But unlike regular patrons of the infamous red-light district, he does not come for pleasure but strictly for work.

He spends most of his day serving its residents, many of whom form the vibrant migrant population there.

 
Feature Articles, News / Posted: Monday, April 12th, 2010

Away from home, a place to call HOME

HOME1

For seven days a week, Bridget Lew arrives promptly at the Humanitarian Organization for Migration Economics (H.O.M.E.) at ten am every morning. There, for the whole day, she is kept busy overseeing her brainchild, H.O.M.E., as the organisation’s president.

Her responsibilities include management, balancing finances and handling discipline problems as well as duties down to the smaller tasks such as ensuring that everyone has enough food, manning one of the help-desks, and even buy groceries.