Mr. Sherif Samy and Eric Davis |
Project Goals
Using Egypt as a pilot study, the
project seeks to empower youth in countries around the world by promoting their
competence in social entrepreneurship. This effort will not only provide
assistance for individual youth entrepreneurs, but develop a model for social
entrepreneurship which can be applied in different regions of the world. “Youth social entrepreneurship” refers to a youth
entrepreneurial venture which has, as part of its mission, the purpose of
contributing to the betterment of the society in which it operates.
Mr. Sherif Samy answers a question at the Roundtable Panel |
As was discussed at the
Roundtable, the project entails the following processes. First, the project has identified a large number of successful social entrepreneurship
ventures in Egypt and other countries in the MENA region. Second, the project is developing a group of
young Egyptian social entrepreneurs who will identify successful social entrepreneurial
ventures in Egypt and serve as mentors to youth entrepreneurs.
Third, once identified, successful
youth social entrepreneurs will be invited to present proposals in a
competitive platform, based on a “shark-tank” model, or via international video
conferencing, to potential investors in Egypt and the West who can help them improve
and expand their enterprises.
Finally, the project is raising funds from public
and private funding sources to provide financing for the project in its
start-up phase.
The project is intended to
allow successful youth entrepreneurs to scale-up their ventures, initially
through the aforementioned investments. We hope the initial investments will attract
additional and ongoing domestic and foreign investment, particularly from the
United States. To assist successful youth social entrepreneurs, we’re able to
offer them access to a wide variety of patents developed by an engineering
faculty member at Rutgers University at no cost.
An innovative aspect of the
project is the creation of a website where youth social entrepreneurs can exchange
information on their respective entrepreneurial ventures. The ability to share information in a password
protected section of the website is intended to allow youth entrepreneurs to
benefit from the efforts of youth entrepreneurs elsewhere in the world. Using
grant funding, the project will organize workshops in a variety of countries where
youth can meet and generate a synergy from the exchange of information the
United States and abroad to improve their ventures.
Genesis of the project
Project rationale
Regarding the genesis of this initiative, earlier in my career, I conducted research on industrialization and economic development in Egypt. My book, Challenging Colonialism: Bank Misr and Egyptian Industrialization, 1920-1941, was published and recently reissued by Princeton University Press. This book, which has been translated into Arabic, led to an invitation for me to keynote a conference at Cairo University in November 2016 on reviving the private sector of the Egyptian economy (see details of the conference below).
At the conference, I met Mr. Sherif Samy, one of the grandsons of Muhammad Talcat Harb, the founder of the Bank of Egypt (Bank Misr) in 1920. The bank subsequently established 23 companies designed to challenge British and foreign domination of the Egyptian economy.
The companies Talcat Harb founded include the Misr Company for Spinning and Weaving which is located in al-Mahalla al-Kubra in the center of the Egyptian Delta. It is still the world’s largest spinning, weaving, dying and bleaching complex for cotton textiles to this day. Among the other companies established by the Bank Misr is Egypt Air and the Misr Company for Theater and Film (Studio Misr) which began the process which made Egypt’s film industry the largest in the Middle East.
The companies Talcat Harb founded include the Misr Company for Spinning and Weaving which is located in al-Mahalla al-Kubra in the center of the Egyptian Delta. It is still the world’s largest spinning, weaving, dying and bleaching complex for cotton textiles to this day. Among the other companies established by the Bank Misr is Egypt Air and the Misr Company for Theater and Film (Studio Misr) which began the process which made Egypt’s film industry the largest in the Middle East.
The Roundtable was very fortunate to host Mr. Sherif Samy as its Keynote Speaker. Mr. Samy is a prominent Egyptian entrepreneur who has served in financial capacities in countries throughout the world. A former director of the Egyptian Financial Supervisory Authority, Mr. Samy is also actively involved in micro-finance in Egypt and is a strong advocate of youth social entrepreneurship.
Project rationale
Youth comprise a large demographic in many
countries of the world, especially in LDCs. They comprise as much as 70% of the population under the age of 30. Often ignored by politicians, and
lacking resources, much of their creative energy fails to find an outlet and is
lost to their respective communities. Social entrepreneurship offers youth the
opportunity to put their creativity to work and to contribute to what are, in
many countries, stagnant public sector dominated economies.
Social entrepreneurship can also serve as a
deterrent to extremism. Unfortunately, large numbers of youth lack hope in the
future. In some instances, such feelings
have led youth to use their creative skills to promote violence and wreak havoc
through participation in terrorist organizations, whether the so-called Islamic
State, Boko Haram, al-Shabab or al-Qacida.
Social entrepreneurship can serve multiple functions. Not only can it empower youth by offering them employment and the ability to contribute economic value to their respective communities, but it can also offer youth an alternative to extremist narratives and ideologies.
Social entrepreneurship can serve multiple functions. Not only can it empower youth by offering them employment and the ability to contribute economic value to their respective communities, but it can also offer youth an alternative to extremist narratives and ideologies.
Project activities
The website currently under development will
be launched during the fall of 2018. The project is also developing a Massive
Open Online Course (MOOC) entitled, “Youth, Social Entrepreneurship and
Sustainable Development,” which will made available to youth social
entrepreneurs globally, and will be taught by the faculty of the UNMA, and other
academic units at Rutgers University, beginning in the winter of 2019.
As mentioned previously, to identify social
entrepreneurial ventures that would benefit from further investment, and
possible technical assistance, we will evaluate proposals via “shark tank”
models, or via international video conference meetings, during the late fall
2018. Because we have the necessary infrastructure in place, the first “shark
tank” and/or video conference is likely to be held in Cairo, Egypt. All
presentations by youth social entrepreneurs will be filmed and the successful
projects will subsequently be presented to local investors in Egypt, the host
country, and the United States.
The project anticipates dispersing
investments to youth entrepreneurial ventures during late 2019. A Project
Supervisory Council, comprised of representatives of Rutgers University, the business community in Egypt and the United States, and UN agency officials,
will oversee the investment process. Assessment of the success of the
investments will be conducted on an ongoing basis by the Project Supervisory
Council.
For further information on this project,
please contact Dr. Eric Davis, Director, MA Program in Political Science –
United Nations and Global Policy Studies, and Professor of Political Science,
at davis@polisci.rutgers.edu
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