All People Making a Difference
- Bystander Revolution stands up to bullyingParent and author MacKenzie Bezos founded Bystander revolution to inspire simple acts of courage, kindness, and inclusion, and to counter bullying online or in person.
- Difference MakerVicki Houska raised 12 foster kids. Now she helps other families do it.She lined her St. Louis-area basement with freezers and shelves and began distributing food, diapers, and toiletries free to local foster families.
- A couple in Rwanda defeats ethnic hatred with loveViateur and his wife, Judith, have married across the divide between Hutus and Tutsis, becoming entrepreneurs and peace builders.
- Boys persuade girls to go back to school in IndiaEducate Girls trains young people to go into villages to find girls who are not in the classroom.
- Games for Change do more than just entertainVideo games with a purpose, from peacemaking to teaching empathy to treating social problems such as discrimination, are growing in number and sophistication.
- In a slum in Kenya, help is just a click awayIn a Nairobi, Kenya, slum, residents used technology to map the area, a key first step in solving problems from waste removal to street lighting. Those with phones can now report problems more accurately.
- Difference MakerMichel Serfaty asks questions others dare not pose about Jews and MuslimsRabbi Michel Serfaty takes his 鈥榝riendship bus鈥 around France to spread a message of tolerance and understanding
- A New York City man left his waitress a $3,000 tip. Here's why.An anonymous man inspired by a 'pay-it-forward' movement launched by his eighth-grade science teacher left the tip to a Times Square waitress who said she was facing eviction.聽
- Kenyan women make a healthy profit selling aloe to cosmetics firmThe aloe plants reduced erosion and improved the soil, enabling grass to grow in a dry climate. The leaves are exported to Britain as an ingredient in cosmetics.
- Some Adidas products to be made of plastic debris from oceansThe sportswear company wants to help save the oceans by recycling marine plastic trash into products.
- Engaged couples ask for charitable donations rather than giftsA small but growing number of Americans are integrating donations to charity into weddings or other milestone celebrations.
- Tweets could create flood maps that help save livesMessages on social media during a recent flood in Jakarta, Indonesia, gave information about locals conditions such as water depth, enough to create useful flood maps, researchers found.
- Superyachts sail to the aid of cyclone-hit VanuatuCyclone Pam left behind devastation all along the string of some 80 islands that make up Vanuatu. Luxury yachts pitched in to help, bringing aid to remote locations.
- An app pushes factories in China to cut pollutionEnvironmentalist Ma Jun built a mobile phone app that lets users see whether a Chinese factory or power plant is violating pollution standards. His efforts won him a $1.25 million prize from the Skoll World Forum on Entrepreneurship.
- Using comedy to poke fun at anti-Muslim prejudice'Daily Show' comedian Aasif Mandvi co-wrote the Web series 'Halal in the Family,' which is based on an 'ordinary' Muslim American family.
- Difference MakerRobert Anderson sees homeless people as individuals, not problemsBecause of the efforts of the former police officer, many people he came to know on the streets now have stable housing 鈥撀 in a place and in a program he helped create.
- How shoes that grow could help change the lives of children in povertyInspired by a trip to an orphanage in Nairobi, Kenya, Kenton Lee was inspired to create a pair of shoes that would fit kids for as many as five years.
- India builds its first 'smart' cityWith many of its biggest cities are already bursting at the seams, India is working on its first 'smart' city, with gleaming towers, drinking water on tap, automated waste collection, and a dedicated power supply 鈥 luxuries to many Indians.
- Why one Iraqi youth turned away from violenceAl-Nasir Bellah Al-Nasiry was attacked and shot as a teenager. But instead of seeking revenge today he is a medical doctor and an advocate for a peaceful future in Iraq.
- Gwyneth Paltrow's $29 food stamp budget: Do celebrity challenges work?Gwyneth Paltrow faces a social media backlash for participating in a food bank challenge to live on a $29 grocery budget for a week. Critics accuse her of mocking the experience of hunger. But such celebrity challenges can raise awareness and funds.