This excerpt is from Muhammad Yunus, Creating a World Without Poverty (Public Affairs: 2008).
Just ask the great microfinance pioneer Muhammad Yunus of Bangladesh's Grameen Bank -- women are the best bet.
Muhammad Yunus and the Grameen Bank shared the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize.
She was active in developing micro-finance two decades before Muhammad Yunus and Grameen bank shared the Nobel Peace prize for microcredit.
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Muhammad Yunus is a global leader in anti-poverty efforts, and pioneered the use of "micro-loans" to provide credit to poor individuals.
Elsewhere, the hounding of Muhammad Yunus, a Nobel laureate and founder of the Grameen Bank who briefly flirted with politics, was vindictive.
The concept was pioneered by Muhammad Yunus, the founder of Grameen Bank in Bangladesh and winner of the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize.
Poverty alleviation and sustained social change was the original intent of Dr. Muhammad Yunus in his pioneering efforts to develop the industry.
He struck up a relationship with Muhammad Yunus, the founder of Grameen Bank, which provides microfinance, to turn the dream into reality.
Its role in helping people out of poverty was highlighted when microfinance pioneer Muhammad Yunus won the Nobel peace prize in 2006.
One candidate to fill it is Muhammad Yunus, a Nobel-prize-winning microcredit pioneer.
Had she lived, I truly believe that she might have won, as did her fellow social entrepreneur Muhammad Yunus, the Nobel Peace Prize.
She understands microcredits and used to hang out in the mid-1980s in Arkansas with their advocate, 2007 Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus.
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First, all videos were screened by an expert panel, including Arianna Huffington of The Huffington Post and Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus.
The idea of microfinance was developed by Muhammad Yunus, who founded the Grameen Bank in Bangladesh and was awarded a Nobel prize in 2006.
Grameen Bank, a microlending organization founded by the Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus, a Muslim Bangladeshi economics professor, now operates in the United States.
Grameen Bank founder Muhammad Yunus is fighting a protracted political battle in his home country of Bangladesh, where the government recently ousted him from his post.
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Sims references a little better by the name of Muhammad Yunus, who launched the microfinancing industry with Grameen Bank and won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006.
The Bangladeshi Nobel Peace Prize winner, Muhammad Yunus, wrote in an article published by local newspapers on Thursday that the disaster was "a symbol of our failure as a nation".
Muhammad Yunus, a Nobel-prize-winning microcredit pioneer, seen as a potential saviour earlier this year when he announced plans to enter politics and launched a new party, has walked off the pitch.
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She has squabbled publicly with her most famous compatriot, microcredit pioneer and Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus, over his control of Grameen Bank, and with the World Bank over a bridge project linked to corruption allegations.
Insurance heads like Aetna CEO Ronald Williams and Cigna CEO David Cordani, government honchos like Congressional Budget Office director Douglas Elmendorf, and thought leaders like Grameen Health founder Muhammad Yunus were among the thousands in attendance.
Social innovators like Ashoka organization founder Bill Drayton and Muhammad Yunus who started the concept of micro credit and those working individually like the Goldman Environmental Prize winners are taking new paths in resolving social and environmental problems.
Muhammad Yunus, the Grameen Bank founder who helped to establish the concept of microfinancing, has said that, if the poor, particularly women, can gain access to credit and generate their own income, that could consequently address the problem of poverty.
More than 300 notables from all walks of life have contributed essays thus far, including Garrison Keillor, Diane von Furstenberg, Bill Gross, Erica Jong, Muhammad Yunus, Tom Hanks, Ken Burns, Harold Prince, David McCullough, Thomas Friedman, Barbara Kingsolver, and many others.
Many Western diplomats think the government has taken to using the courts to pursue rivals and enemies as many say it did when it insisted recently that Muhammad Yunus, a Nobel laureate, should retire as head of Grameen Bank, a microcredit institution.
Recently SKS founder Vikram Akula (which also has billionaire Vinod Khosla and Sequoia Capital as investors), got into this very debate with his one time idol, Muhammad Yunus, the Nobel Prize founder of Grameen Bank and the father of microfinance.
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