California State University, Channel Islands,
is launching a new
social business
institute
Nobel laureate kick-starts CSUCI
institute
Written by Marlize van Romburgh
Monday, 08 February 2010
http://pacbiztimes.com/index.php?option=com
California State University, Channel Islands, is
launching a new social business institute it hopes will revolutionize
its curriculum - and it has a Nobel laureate as its pitchman.
CSUCI will feature Muhammad Yunus, founder of the Grameen Bank, in a
keynote event on Feb. 26 that also launches the university's new
California Institute for Social Business.
The institute is the first of its kind in the
California public university system, and the fact that CSUCI, launched
in 2002, is still a relatively new institution means it's well
positioned to try something different. "We're nimble, and part of
our flexibility is that we're a young institution," CSUCI
President Richard Rush said. "We're able to try to implement those
things that are interdisciplinary, multi-cultural and
international."
Rush said he told Yunus, " 'We're trying not to replicate what
is going on elsewhere - good as it is - we want to try something
new not tried anywhere else. Something truly interdisciplinary.'
"
In a speech in Berlin, Yunus had said that CSUCI
is a university "educating for the future."
With the launch of the institute, the university is seeking to move
its curriculum forward, exposing students to issues of poverty and
environmental problems and educating them to come up with market-based
solutions.
The university was put in touch with the Nobel laureate by Julia
Wilson, its vice president for advancement. She had formerly worked
with Yunus' Grameen Bank, the organization widely credited as the
catalyst for the international microfinance movement.
Yunus and the bank were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006 for
providing access to credit to thousands of the world's poorest,
people who usually don't have collateral to secure conventional bank
financing. The idea behind microfinance is that entrepreneurs in
developing countries often need only a small loan - sometimes less
than $100 - to kick-start a business and become
self-sustainable.
To better understand the social business concept,
a group of CSUCI faculty and administrators visited Bangladesh during
the early stages of planning for the institute. There, they visited
with villagers in some of the poorest regions of the world, and began
to understand the microfinance model and the idea of social
entrepreneurship - that is, business for more than the sake of
profits.
"We're now considering the possibility of creating social
businesses of our own with our students. We'd like to expose them to
third world countries," Rush said.
The new institute will have several elements. In its undergraduate
curriculum, it will offer social business classes through its business
school, which may lead to the establishment of a minor or
concentration in social business. Students will be encouraged to study
abroad to fulfill some of the requirements for the minor or
concentration.
CSUCI is also looking to integrate social business concepts into its
MBA program.
"Around the nation and around the world, there's a growing
interest in this field," said CSUCI Dean of Faculty and Economics
Professor Ashish Vaidya. "Business schools around the country are
looking at how they should be preparing their students to be involved
citizens who are aware of the challenges of the 21st century."
Because it wants students to gain practical benefits and move beyond
classroom learning, the institute will also function as an incubator
for business projects. Plans suggest that the institute may host an
international business plan competition, which would culminate with a
ceremony including a monetary award of seed capital for winning
projects.
The institute will work with students on a more regular basis to start
social businesses in the surrounding community and may be able to
provide a micro-loan structure to students to start such
projects.
Lastly, the institute plans to be a breeding ground for academic
research concerning social entrepreneurship. Faculty - ideally
working with students - will conduct and publish research based on
case studies and field work. If the institute is able to secure
funding, an endowment will allow for a fellowship program.
"There are social problems that we need to address," Vaidya said.
"The question is, 'Are there business solutions we can use to
solve them?' Students, with faculty supervision, can begin to
address these problems, and gain real-world experience that will help
them when they graduate."
Rush said that he hopes the institute will lay the groundwork for
other universities, both public and private, to follow suit. "When I
was hired it was my thought that we'd try to build a 21st century
university. And I've been privileged to have the faculty and staff
join with me as we try to build something for the future," he
said.
Vaidya said that faculty from across the board are already
embracing the interdisciplinary approach - not just professors in
business and economics, but also from engineering, the hard sciences
and the humanities have all expressed their support for the
institute.
"From an academic community standpoint, our approach is that we want
to educate the whole student to be really an engaged, global citizen,"
Vaidya said.
If it hopes to get all that done in the next year and a half, CSUCI
has its work cut out for it. By the fall - and once the institute
receives final approval from the academic senate - the university
hopes to hire a director and administrative support for the institute
and form advisory boards with regional, national and international
partners. By next spring, it hopes to begin faculty research and
student projects as well as development of the social business
incubator.
All that will require millions of dollars in funding, and with a
cash-strapped public university system the institute is striving to be
almost purely privately funded. The endowment alone is expected to be
$12 million and annual operating costs for the institute are estimated
at $560,000.
Vaidya said that in the spirit of the free-enterprise system, the
university is looking to the business community for monetary support.
"All of this will depend on the resources we can generate. We're
not expecting state funding," he said. "We're hopeful that these
ideas are something the private community will embrace."
With Yunus as the institute's public face, the university has
already received a lot of attention. The Nobel prize winner will
return to the Camarillo campus Feb. 26 for all-day events and to talk
about his book, "Creating a World Without Poverty: Social
Business, the New Face of Capitalism." The campus has distributed
3,600 copies of the book and expects record turnout at the event.
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