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David Bornstein

    David Bornstein se especializa en escribir sobre innovación social. Su obra profundiza en cuestiones trascendentales del progreso humano, destacando el poder de los individuos y grupos que buscan un cambio positivo en el mundo. A través de sus escritos, descubre historias de personas que encuentran soluciones nuevas y eficaces para problemas complejos. Su prosa inspira a los lectores a considerar su propio potencial para contribuir a un futuro mejor.

    The Price of a Dream
    Blue Plate Special
    Cómo cambiar el mundo
    • Blue Plate Special

      • 290 páginas
      • 11 horas de lectura

      Campbell McBride drives to her father's house in Murray, Kentucky, dreading telling him she's lost her job as an English professor. Bill isn't there or at his office in town. His brash young employee, Nick Emerson, says Bill hasn't come in this morning, but he did call the night before with news that he had a new case. When her dad doesn't show up by late afternoon, Campbell and Nick decide to follow up on a phone number he'd jotted on a memo sheet. They learn who last spoke to Bill McBride, but they also find a dead body. The next day, Campbell files a missing persons report on her father. When Bill's car is found, locked and empty in a secluded spot, she and Nick must get past their differences and work together to find him.

      Blue Plate Special
    • The Price of a Dream

      • 370 páginas
      • 13 horas de lectura

      One afternoon in 1976 an economics professor, taking a walk in a village in Bangladesh, met a poor woman. The woman was trying to support herself by constructing and selling bamboo stools. She earned two cents a day. When the professor asked her why her profit was so low, she explained that the only person who would lend her money to buy bamboo was the trader who purchased her final product and the price he set barely covered her costs. The professor's instinct was to open his wallet and give her some money. Then he had another thought: Why not give her a loan? . That thought became the genesis of a remarkable institution: the Grameen ("Village") Bank. Today, the Grameen Bank is considered the most successful self-sustaining antipoverty program in the world. It has more than two million borrowers - 94 percent of them women - and its approach has been replicated throughout the world, including in hundreds of locations across the United States and Canada. The Price of a Dream traces the history of the Grameen Bank and in candid, vivid prose transports the reader to one of the world's most dramatic settings for a firsthand view of how this institution is helping millions of people change their lives.

      The Price of a Dream