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Submitting guest blogs is open to Global Washington’s members of the Atlas level and above. We value a diversity of opinions on a broad range of subjects of interest to the global health and development community.

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Dr. Is In! Developing your case and messaging: Stand out for what you stand for!

By Zahra Emrani

The third Global Washington’s 2013 capacity-building workshop was held on April 24 with a session on “Developing your case and messaging.” The lunchtime presentation was lead corporately by Sean Dimond director of External Relations at Pilgrim Africa and Joy Portella president of Minerva Strategies. Sean took participants through the general concepts and frame work of case and messaging and Joy presented case studies of her past works. At the end Sean took participants through taking a case and applying the conceptual theme that been discussed earlier to create a clear and powerful message.

Participants included representatives from the Days for Girls, Prosthetics Outreach Foundation and other GlobalWA members based in the greater Seattle area.

“Not only the presentations are wonderful, these workshops give us the opportunity to get to know and network with other communication coordinators in this sector.” said Jenna Swalin, Communications Coordinator at Initiative for Global Development. She added “Although participants are from diverse background and different starting points, presenters did a great job in addressing participants’ need!” Alison Dvaladze, Assistant Director for Outreach & Independent Consultant at Jackson school of international studies, University of Washington pointed out that “using the case studies and practical examples was super useful to understand the concept and learn how to implement it in practice!”

The “Dr. Is In” series on Fundraising will start on May. The first two sessions are “Building a Fundraising Plan & Case for Support” on May 10 and “Motivating Individual Donors: Building a Loyal Base of Donors” on May 14. Visit Global Washington’s website for the full list and to register for a session.

Global Social: Vietnam and Southeast Asia

Last week’s Global Social networking event focused the conversation on Vietnam and Southeast Asia; speakers from Peace Trees Vietnam and Partners Asia gave brief presentations on their work and opened the floor for questions

Michael Auch, Executive Director of Peace Trees Vietnam, discussed his organization’s goals and outlined five ongoing projects: mine risk education and de-mining; survivor assistance; citizen diplomacy trips, during which US citizens visit parts of Vietnam; building libraries and kindergartens; and microlending programs. Auch gave a brief overview of each project and highlighted PTV’s goal of integrating and leveraging the programs with each other to create a stronger presence in Vietnam that would provide a broader variety of services to the local populations.

Therese Caouette, Executive Director of Partners Asia, spoke about her ongoing work in Burma and focused particularly on Burma’s potential for growth in the coming years. In the last 18 months, Caouette said, Burma has experienced massive changes and newfound openness and this in turn allows her to speak more freely about Partners Asia’s work in the country. Partners Asia works mostly with populations in the rural border areas of Burma, as these groups are often desperately poor and vulnerable to exploitation and trafficking. The organization functions primarily as a small grant maker and instrument of community-led change.

Pwint Htun, a board member of Partners Asia and telecommunications consultant, spoke briefly about the trend toward openness and mobile communications in Burma; 95-95% of Burmese people, she said, lack access to financial services and about 95% have no access to communication services. The rapid increase in availability and ease of communication means that a new system must be designed in Burma “with the poorest people in mind,” as they stand to benefit the most from regulation and social change.

Before and after the presentations, Global Social attendees sampled Vietnamese sandwiches, sipped wine, and chatted with each other about their own work in Southeast Asia.

Our next Global Social will focus on Latin America, and will be on May 8th at HUB Seattle, 4:30-6:30pm. Join us!

Global Socials: Mingling With Purpose

By Nicole Neroulias Gupte

Dozens of representatives of Seattle-area nonprofits, businesses and academic/research institutions working in global development have mixed and mingled at Global Washington’s first two Global Socials of 2013. The March 20 gathering focused on India and China, featuring speakers from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Unitus Seed Fund, and the Mona Foundation. The April 10 social focused on Vietnam and Southeast Asia, with speakers from PeaceTrees Vietnam and Partners Asia.

This series provides valuable opportunities for Global Washington members and stakeholders working in the same region to discuss their work, share ideas and inspire further collaboration. Common themes include the balance between technological advances, which increasingly help reach and mobilize the world’s poorest, and grassroots knowledge, which can predict challenges and help tailor an international program more effectively to a specific region or community.

“Telecommunication and mobile banking services is what enables growth in the developing world,” said Pwint Htun, a Partners Asia board member working in Burma. “Technology is fantastic… but the social engineering, the community organizing is the enabler that is really necessary,”

The Global Socials are held at HUB Seattle, a historic Pioneer Square building that offers meeting and workspace to socially conscious projects. The next two socials will be on May 8, focused on Latin America, and June 12, focused on Kenya, Uganda and East Africa. For more information or to register, visit https://globalwa.org/convene/global-washington-events.