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| Muhammad YUNUS |
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| 2006 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate, Managing Director, Grameen Bank (Bangladesh) |
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As founder of the Grameen Movement, Professor Muhammad Yunus is a revolutionary.
His ideas couple capitalism with social responsibility and have changed the face
of rural economic and social development forever.
Professor Yunus is
responsible for many innovative programs benefiting the rural poor. In 1974, he
pioneered the idea of Gram Sarker (village government) as a form of local
government based on the participation of rural people. This concept proved
successful and was adopted by the Bangladeshi government in 1980. In 1978, he
received the President's award for Tebhaga Khamar (a system of cooperative
three-share farming, which the Bangladeshi government adopted as the Packaged
Input Program in 1977).
A Fulbright Scholar at Vanderbilt University,
Professor Yunus received his Ph.D. in Economics in 1969. Later that year, he
became an assistant professor of Economics at Middle Tennessee State University,
before returning to Bangladesh where he joined the Economics Department at
Chittagong University.
The UN secretary general appointed Professor
Yunus to the International Advisory Group for the Fourth World Conference on
Women in Beijing from 1993 to 1995. Professor Yunus has also served on the
Global Commission of Women's Health (1993-1995), the Advisory Council for
Sustainable Economic Development (1993-present), and the UN Expert Group on
Women and Finance. He also serves as the chair of the Policy Advisory Group
(PAG) of Consultative Group to Assist the Poorest (CGAP). Yunus has also served
on many committees and commissions dealing with education, population, health,
disaster prevention, banking, and development programs. He is currently on the
boards of many international organizations including Amanah Ikhtiar Malaysia (a
Grameen replication project), the International Rice Research Institute in the
Philippines, and Credit and Savings for the Poor in Malayasia. Professor Yunus
also sits on the board of the Calvert World Values Fund, the Foundation for
International Community Assistance, the National Council for Freedom From
Hunger, RESULTS and the International Council of Ashoka Foundation, all of which
are located in the US.
Professor Yunus has received the following
International awards: the Ramon Magsaysay Award (1984) from Manila; the Aga Khan
Award for Architecture (1989) from Geneva; the Mohamed Shabdeen Award for
Science (1993) from Sri Lanka; and the World Food Prize by World Food Prize
Foundation (1994) from the US. Within Bangladesh, he has received the
President's Award (1978), Central Bank Award (1985), and the Independence Day
Award (1987), the nation's highest award. |
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