Nuru International is a U.S.-based social venture with the goal of helping the poor living in remote rural areas of Kenya and Ethiopia to end extreme poverty in their communities.[1] [2] Nuru is a Kiswahili word that means "light."

History

Nuru International was founded by, CEO, Jake Harriman, who attended the U.S. Naval Academy and served over 7 years in the U.S. Marine Corps as a Platoon Commander, including in four operational deployments, two of which were combat tours in Iraq during the Iraq War.[3]

Harriman's experiences in combat compelled him to believe that extreme poverty was a contributing factor to global terrorism.[4] Harriman left his career in the Marine Corps and enrolled at Stanford University's Graduate School of Business to start an organization that would fight terrorism by ending extreme poverty.[5] Nuru International began operations in 2008.[6]

Development model

Nuru International trains and equips local leaders in effective poverty reduction methods developed by other humanitarian organizations around the world. Because of this approach, Nuru has been called a "general contractor of the NGO sector."[7] Nuru is piloting a community development model that aims to be integrated, self-sustaining, and self-scaling and to address four areas of need: hunger, inability to cope with economic shocks, preventable disease and death, and lack of access to quality education for children.[8] By partnering with organizations such as One Acre Fund, Nuru seeks to create an efficient, scalable model.[9]

Servant Leadership

Nuru identifies and mentors local leaders in the principles of servant leadership, and mobilizes the community into groups led by these local leaders, supplying them with necessary expertise to lift their communities out of extreme poverty.[10]

Sustainability and Scalability

Nuru integrates revenue generation models into all five of its program areas to achieve sustainability and eventually scale to achieving national impact.[11]

Pilot project

Nuru International's first project was in Kuria, Kenya. Located in the southwest of the country, Kuria is one of the poorest districts in Kenya.[12]

Since Nuru began partnering with the community in 2008, 5,525 farmers and their families have enrolled in Nuru's agriculture loan program and have experienced a 123% increase of their maize yields on average.[13] Nuru's other program areas (healthcare, education, and community economic development) operate in concert with the agriculture program to comprise a holistic approach to humanitarian development.[14]

References

  1. Guidestar Profile
  2. "What Social Enterprises in the Global South Can Teach the North". Stanford Social Innovation Review. 23 August 2018. Retrieved 5 September 2019.
  3. "Recession lesson: Confidence without arrogance" by Andrew S. Ross, September 12, 2010.
  4. Uncommon Valor: A Marine Trades His Guns for Good by Will Laughlin, tonic.com.
  5. Giving to Stanford - Student Profile - Jake Harriman
  6. Profile: Nuru International - One Day's Wages
  7. The Huffington Post - How to Design for (Real) Impact by Jacob Donnelly, September 10, 2010.
  8. Non-profit organization Nuru utilizes Macs to end extreme poverty. by Dalrymple, Jim. Loop Insight. November 18, 2009.
  9. Rainer Arnhold Fellows Profile - Nuru International
  10. Nurturing Self-Help Among Kenyan Farmers, by Stanford Business Magazine Winter 2009
  11. Humanitarian organization has roots (Harriman '98). US Naval Academy Alumni Association and Foundation. March 24, 2010.
  12. Jake's Story, Metro News, November 11, 2009.
  13. Nuru International. by Allison Gilligan, Relevant Magazine, Reject Apathy. April 28, 2010.
  14. Behind the Scene with Jake Harriman Ideation Conference, 2010.
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