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Diez grandes favelas de Brasil lanzarán un
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Diez favelas más prósperas de Brasil lanzarán un Banco del G10
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iAfrica Bongi, Head of Operations at Yebo Fresh 2 months ago 4 min read
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Around the world, township communities have historically been largely ignored by businesses. This is beginning to change, however, as corporates and organisations are taking note of the potential within this untapped market ‒ and using good business sense to boost communities in the process.
Take Piramal Sarvajal, for example. In India’s slums and underprivileged communities where safe drinking water is a scarce commodity, this mission-driven social enterprise is using technology to ensure that the underserved have access to this basic necessity.
One of their solutions is water ATMs that provide 24/7 access to safe and affordable drinking water. These dispensers are off the grid thanks to solar
新冠疫情下的经济: 中国好,德国受益 | 经济纵横 | DW
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Most people are familiar with the concept of social and economic inequality, but although it affects a large part of the world s population, it is still somewhat abstract for many people. Photographer Johnny Miller intends to make it visible through his project Unequal Scenes, capturing images of spatial inequality from a very revealing perspective: aerial imagery.
The project started in South Africa, a country that is socially and spatially marked by apartheid, and now has been taken to Brazil to document scenarios in which extreme poverty and wealth coexist within a few meters, showing how distance is not only a measurement of physical length but can also imply more complex aspects, deeply rooted in our society.