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Thinking Big and Scaling Up—BRAC’s Model for Poverty Alleviation

  • When
  • September 24, 2007
    3:00–7:00 p.m. (EDT)
  • Where
  • Open Society Foundations–New York
    224 West 57th Street
    New York, NY 10019
    United States of America
Thinking Big and Scaling Up—BRAC’s Model for Poverty Alleviation (September 24, 2007)

Since BRAC’s modest inception as a small-scale relief rehabilitation project in 1972, BRAC has grown into one of the world’s largest nonprofit organizations, with over 40,000 full-time staff and over 160,000 paraprofessionals, 72 percent of which are women. BRAC’s annual budget is over $430 million, 78 percent of which is self-financed, and BRAC’s microfinance program, with 6 million borrowers, has cumulatively disbursed $4 billion. More than 1.5 million children are currently enrolled in 52,000 BRAC’s schools and over 3 million have already graduated. BRAC’s health program reaches over 100 million people in Bangladesh with basic healthcare services and programs for TB, malaria, and HIV/ AIDS.

Asia Society and the Open Society Institute Middle East & North Africa Initiative hosted the forum “Thinking Big and Scaling Up—BRAC's Model for Poverty Alleviation.”

BRAC employs a holistic approach to alleviating poverty by integrating its core programs (health, education, and microfinance) with strategic linkages and constant evolution. BRAC works with people whose lives are dominated by extreme poverty, illiteracy, disease, and other constraints. With multifaceted development interventions, BRAC strives to foster education, create wealth, better health, and improve quality of life.

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