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Subject:
From:
"Katim S. Touray" <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sun, 23 May 1999 23:39:17 -0500
Content-Type:
text/plain
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text/plain (235 lines)
Hi folks,

FYI

Katim

CIPE News wrote:

> The newest issue of Economic Reform Today (ERT) is now up on our World Wide
> Web site, Forum on Economic Freedom (http://www.cipe.org).  If you do not
> have Web access, use the instructions below to get the issue emailed to you
> using our email on demand system.
>
> -------------------------------------------------------------------------
> GROWING AN ENTREPRENEURIAL ECONOMY
> -------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Globalization is making it increasingly imperative that entrepreneurial
> education become a top national priority. The new issue of ERT takes an
> in-depth look at innovative ways to impart entrepreneurial skills to
> workers, both young and old. But teaching business skills alone will not
> bring about economic growth. Policymakers must also create an environment
> that will allow entrepreneurship to flourish.  Below, you will find a
> synopsis of each of this issue's articles:
>
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Letter from the Editor
> file name: e30_1.txt
>
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Growing an Entrepreneurial Economy
> by CIPE
> file name: e30_2.txt
>
> The creative process of entrepreneurship is the lifeblood of a strong
> private sector that drives growth and propels nations forward. This article
> explores how governments and nonprofit organizations can help entrepreneurs
> blaze a trail of prosperity by implementing appropriate policies and
> support programs.
>
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Making Education Count
> Interview with Paul Holden, Director of the Enterprise Research Institute
> file name: e30_3.txt
>
> Paul Holden, an expert on the Latin American reform process, underscores
> the importance of entrepreneurial education to instill the values of
> democratic, market-oriented reforms. However, he stresses that business
> education will not be successful without sound business policies.
>
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Policy Options to Promote Entrepreneurship
> by OECD
> file name: e30_4.txt
>
> This article presents some of the conclusions of the OECD's recent study of
> policies that foster entrepreneurship in five countries: Australia, The
> Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, and the United States.
>
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Kenya: Sharing Business Skills
> Victor Pratt, founder and Chairman of Kenya Management Assistance Program
> file name: e30_5.txt
>
> This innovative leader showcases K-MAP's unique mentoring program that
> forges links among large, medium and small enterprises, thereby
> strengthening Kenya's business community. KMAP also offers business
> classes, helps entrepreneurs gain access to credit and works to make the
> country's leaders more pro business.
>
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
> West Bank and Gaza Strip: Teaching Entrepreneurship and Democracy
> by Sarah Kreimer and Jennifer Hidde, respectively, Co-Director of the
> Center for Jewish-Arab Economic Development and the Center's Development
> Director
> file name: e30_6.txt
>
> Two officers in this Israeli nonprofit organization explain how its
> entrepreneurial courses help stimulate the Palestinian economy. The Center
> recently added a civil society and democracy component to its business
> curriculum in order to strengthen the practice of civil society in the
> private sector.
>
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Strengthening the Voice of Business
> by CIPE
> file name: e30_7.txt
>
> Entrepreneurial training must be coupled with advocacy programs for
> political reform in areas that affect small business. This was the finding
> of programs that organized companies, business associations, and
> women-operated businesses in five diverse countries: Nigeria, Malawi,
> Poland, Paraguay, and Nicaragua.
>
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Romania: From Entrepreneurship Education to Policy Advocacy
> by Ion Anton, President of the International Center of Entrepreneurial Studies
> file name: e30_8.txt
>
> This nonprofit organization in Romania pursues a dual-track approach which
> couples business education with advocacy work. The author shares the
> experiences and lessons of the organization's work in Romania.
>
> Teacher's Guide
> file name: e30_15.txt
>
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Montenegro: Laying the Foundation of Entrepreneurship
> by Petar Ivanovic, one of the founders of the Center for Entrepreneurship
> in Podgorica
> file name: e30_9.txt
>
> Teaching entrepreneurship to young students in Montenegro-and in other
> countries- is critical to creating popular support for a flourishingcording
> to the Executive Director of this nonprofit organization in the former
> Yugoslavia. He also hopes that its graduate students will help influence
> the Republic's future policy-making process.
>
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Building Strength and Confidence
> by Lorraine Corner, Regional Program Advisor of the East & South East
> Regional Office of UNIFEM in Bangkok Thailand
> file name: e30_10.txt
>
> Drawing on her extensive experience training women throughout Southeast
> Asia, this seasoned expert argues that women near the subsistence level
> have special training needs relative to men. According to her, women need
> basic business training, access to credit, and the know-how to develop the
> right products and master the appropriate technology.
>
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Educating Women: Teaching the Very Poor
> by Andrina Lever, President of the Women Entrepreneurs of Canada Foundation
> file name: e30_11.txt
>
> The author showcases inspiring examples of women who have surmounted
> tremendous obstacles to establish successful businesses in Canada. She
> concludes that women entrepreneurs benefit from learning, training,
> sharing, and association.
>
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
> South Africa: Kick Starting the Entrepreneurial Revolution
> by Margaret Worthington-Smith and Fiona Macaulay, founders of the Triple
> Trust Organization and Making Cent$, respectively
> file name: e30_12.txt
>
> Triple Trust Organization, a nonprofit organization in South Africa, has
> developed simulation games to teach entrepreneurship to young people and
> adults. Introducing young people to this concept will bring out their
> entrepreneurial characteristics and provide them with the skills required
> to set up and run small businesses.
>
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Educating Tomorrow's Entrepreneurs
> by Allan Gibb, Professor at the Durham University Business School, the UK
> file name: e30_13.txt
>
> Confused about the difference between entrepreneurship and business? This
> expert on entrepreneurship discuses the conceptual and practical
> differences between teaching entrepreneurship and business.
>
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Latvia: Teaching Business Nationwide
> by Janis Stabins, President, Latvian Entrepreneurship & Management Academy
> in Riga
> file name: e30_14.txt
>
> The challenge of teaching entrepreneurship in a country with little history
> of business development may seem daunting, but the author from this former
> Soviet Republic offers one innovative solution. Among its other projects,
> the organization teaches business skills via television. It is the
> country's second most popular televised educational show.
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
> HOW TO GET A COPY
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> *VIA EMAIL*
>
> If you have a hard time accessing the World Wide Web quickly or
> effectively, we suggest that you use our email-on-demand system.  This
> easy-to-use system allows you to pick and choose the articles or issues of
> most interest to you and have them sent directly to your mailbox.
>
> The first step is to receive an index so that you may see the articles and
> issues available to you along with their assigned file names.  The latest
> indexes are available by year, beginning with 1996.  For example, to obtain
> the 1997 index, you first send an email message to [log in to unmask]
> Make sure you leave the subject blank!  In the message section of your
> email, type "get cipe-files INDEX_97" (without quotes or angle brackets)
> and our computer will do the rest.
>
> In the yearly indexes, articles are arranged by issue number and include a
> brief abstract.  Each article is also assigned a file name-"1_e23," for
> example-which you will need in order to request that article.
>
> To request any of the individual articles from the Economic Reform Today
> issue described above, send an email message to [log in to unmask]
> Again, make sure that you leave the subject blank, and type "get cipe-files
> <filename>" (without quotes or angle brackets) in the text of your message.
> You may request as many files as you wish by entering multiple lines.  For
> example, you might put the following in the body of your message:
>
>    get 1_e30.txt
>    get 2_e30.txt
>
> Each file will be returned to you as a separate email message.
>
> *VIA THE WORLD WIDE WEB*
>    The entire issue is available on CIPE's Web site,
>    <http://www.cipe.org/>.
>
> *IN HARD COPY*
>    In OECD member countries, Economic Reform Today is available for $35 per
>    year. Send your check to:
>
>       CIPE
>       1155 Fifteenth Street
>       Washington, DC 20005, USA
>
>    Your check must be in US dollars and drawn on a US bank or a bank that has
>    a correspondent relationship with a US bank.
>
>    In other countries (including OECD members the Czech Republic, Hungary,
>    Mexico and Turkey) Economic Reform Today is often available free of charge
>    through the US Information Service (USIS). Contact your local US embassy
>    for information on how to contact USIS.
>
> ============================================================================
> THE CENTER FOR INTERNATIONAL PRIVATE ENTERPRISE
> 1155 15th Street NW; Washington DC 20005
> telephone: 202 721-9200; fax: 202 721-9250; email: [log in to unmask]
> Visit CIPE's Web site: HTTP://WWW.CIPE.ORG
> ============================================================================

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