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Root Capital Selected for ImpactAssets 50 2013

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Cambridge, Massachusetts, October 28, 2013 – Root Capital has been selected for the ImpactAssets 50 for the third consecutive year. The ImpactAssets 50 is a publically available database of private debt and equity impact investment fund managers.  

The ImpactAssets 50 serves as a gateway for those interested in achieving social and/or environmental, as well as financial, returns on their investments.  Fund managers included in the ImpactAssets 50 2013 manage a combined $10.8 billion in assets within the impact investing market.

“ImpactAssets 50 is an important resource for investors seeking to channel their capital toward social and environmental impact, and Root Capital is honored to be included on the list with other industry leaders for the third year in a row,” said Willy Foote, Root Capital founder and CEO.

The ImpactAssets 50 includes a broad range of organizations spanning domestic and international geographies, sectors, asset classes and impact areas. Firms were chosen based on experience, impact, and with an eye toward reflecting the diversity of impact investment opportunities. The selection committee was chaired by ImpactAssets’ Chief Impact Strategist, Jed Emerson, and included experts from the CAPROCK Group, Eirene, Haas Business School, Labrador Ventures, Toniic, and UBS. 

The ImpactAssets 50 2013, along with additional details on the selection process, are available at: http://www.impactassets.org/impactassets-50.

About Root Capital

Root Capital is a nonprofit agricultural lender that grows rural prosperity in poor, environmentally vulnerable places in Africa and Latin America by providing capital, delivering financial training, and strengthening market connections for small and growing agricultural businesses.

About ImpactAssets

ImpactAssets is a nonprofit financial services firm that increases the flow of capital into investments that deliver financial, social, and environmental returns.  ImpactAssets’ donor advised fund (“The Giving Fund”), impact investment notes, and field building initiatives enable philanthropists, other asset owners, and their wealth advisors to advance social or environmental change through investment.

Monday, October 28, 2013

Women in the Middle

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Members gathering dried coffee beans at the Pangoa cooperative  in Peru

October 2013

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IN THIS ISSUE CONNECT WITH US ONLINE
Message from the CEOWhat We're ReadingFacebook  Twitter  Google+  YouTube
Read our New BlogJoin the Team
Interview with Wesley WeissbergSocial Media
New and Noteworthy 
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Message from the CEO

Willy Foote with Miriam Atuya and Ousseynou Diome, summer interns from the African Leadership Academy

Every October, we celebrate the United Nations’ International Day of Rural Women—a day for recognizing women’s unique contribution to rural development. But for a group so invaluable to our global food system and the economic health of farm families and communities around the world, one day of recognition isn’t enough.

A year ago we launched our Women in Agriculture Initiative (WAI, pronounced “way”) to recognize and advance the work of rural women every day. The initiative has become a central component of our mission to grow rural prosperity, and since its launch we have disbursed more than $85 million to gender-inclusive businesses, reaching upwards of 130,000 female farmers.

Through the WAI, we’ve worked with many inspiring women who are challenging inequity in the workplace and revolutionizing family, community and economic dynamics. While some are charismatic women entrepreneurs, many more are dedicated midlevel managers responsible for key operations of the agricultural businesses we fund. They may not be leading their enterprises, but they are instrumental in their organizations’ success and serve as powerful role models.

Silvia Roblero Torres, technical assistance and certification processes coordinator at CESMACH, a Root Capital client in Jaltenango, Mexico, is one woman among many leading from within rural enterprises around the globe. The daughter of coffee farmers, Silvia graduated from college with a degree in agronomy and returned home to work for CESMACH nine years ago.

“This was my first job,” Silvia told me recently. “It was difficult at first because I was a woman and much younger, but with time my colleagues worked alongside me and began to pass on their knowledge. Now my decisions are respected and things I do are taken into account.”

Silvia Roblero TorresSilvia has earned the respect of cooperative management and members, and uses this as a platform to advocate for greater gender equity among producers. After many visits to speak with women and their husbands, she has seen the shift toward increased female participation within the cooperative.

“In the early days there were very few women producers,” Silvia explained. “Now, 30 percent of the members are women. They are the owners of the land and the ones in charge. Each year, we see women take on larger roles within the cooperative.”

Through our financial management training with CESMACH and other agricultural businesses, Root Capital has worked extensively with middle managers like Silvia, providing them with the tools necessary to become true agents of change. And though there’s clearly more room for progress, Silvia and women like her have laid the first stones of what will surely become a well-worn path toward true gender equality. We are excited to accompany them on this journey.

Thank you for supporting this important path—it is indeed the “WAI” forward.

Regards,
 

Willy Foote Signature

William Foote, Founder and CEO

P.S. Can't wait for the next Root Capital newsletter? Check out the brand-new Root Capital blog for more frequent updates on our work. More details on the blog below.

 


Read our New Blog: Join the Conversation!
 

Back Roads to Boardrooms BlogThe Root Capital Back Roads to Boardrooms blog is now live!

Get the inside scoop on our work, from back-road visits with clients, to lending innovations in new markets, industries and geographies, to our efforts to catalyze a larger market for smallholder agricultural finance.

Read Willy Foote’s kick-off post sharing his reflections on our new foray into lending in the Democratic Republic of Congo and how it parallels our entrée into post-conflict Rwanda in 2005.
 

 


Interview: Wesley Weissberg of the Weissberg Foundation, a Long-Time Supporter of Root Capital and Advocate of the WAI.

Wesley Weissberg (left) interviewed women leaders and producers working in the coffee industry while in GuatemalaLast November, Wesley traveled with Root Capital to the rural highlands of Guatemala to meet with women members of several coffee cooperatives. A veteran radio producer, she documented her conversations in a series of audio stories about the trip and the women she met.

The first audio story  appears on Root Capital’s Back Roads to Boardrooms blog. A portion of her interview with Catherine Gill, Root Capital’s Vice President of Investor Relations, about the trip is published here.
 

Q: What made you interested in traveling to Guatemala to visit Root Capital’s clients

I went on a Root trip to Ecuador a few years ago and it was one of the most interesting travel experiences I have had. Getting off the main road—often four or five hours off the main road—and traveling with people who knew the land and the people was a great privilege. We met a woman who was the elected leader of a large organic alcohol cooperative that sold its product to the Body Shop, where all the cane was cut by hand and cooked on-site at each person’s house. We met women who grew quinoa in the traditional fashion, having brought back a crop that hadn’t been valued or sold in decades, possibly centuries. We met women who picked and sorted a fruit that only grows in the Andes; they were so pleased to no longer work in the flower fields where the crop was so heavily sprayed with pesticides that many of them had had serious physical reactions. I loved the women’s stories and had a strong desire to someday go back with time and equipment and get those stories on tape.

Q: You interviewed the female president of a coffee cooperative in this first piece. Is there anything about her you would like readers to know that didn’t make it into your story?

Lesbia was the only woman in the room who wore pants. None of the men or women wore traditional Guatemalan dress, but the other women were all dressed in traditionally feminine Western clothing: bright-colored, fitted shirts and skirts. Lesbia wore a tan polo shirt with the logo of the cooperative and black trousers. She didn’t speak until we spoke to her, but when she spoke she was like no one else in the room. We had gone around with the microphone to ask some basic questions, which most of them answered quickly, in a quiet voice. When we got to Lesbia, she had so much to say, and she spoke with force and passion. I wasn’t sure if she had expressed her views so passionately in front of her colleagues before. It was exciting to see.

Q: Why is gender-lens investing important to you?

When my father started this foundation he focused on issues close to home, in Washington, DC, but over time, perhaps as a reader of Nick Kristoff’s columns, he began to learn and care about the issues women were facing in the developing world, and to believe that helping to better their lives would better the world at large. It was his vision, but I share and support it.

Root Capital is so smart in their approach, so if they take on a gender lens I know it is going to be done with the same objective, well-studied approach through which they do everything. I’m glad that our interest in them and our interest in gender-lens investing have come together.

 


New and Noteworthy

Skoll Foundation
Root Capital has raised just over $41,000 of our $50,000 goal as part of the Skoll Foundation’s Social Entrepreneurship Challenge. Help us get there by donating today. If Root Capital receives at least 10 donations before November 5th at 12pm ET, we will be entered to win an extra $5,000 for our cause!

 

  • Root Capital has been invited to blog on the Huffington Post Impact page. Check out our recent posts here.
     
  • Mike McCreless, Root Capital’s Director of Strategy and Impact, was featured in a radio interview with The BBC’s The Forum, underscoring the importance of serving the interests of farmers when measuring impact.
     
  • In his latest Forbes blog post, In Violent Congo, Hope in the Shape of a Coffee Bean, Root Capital CEO Willy Foote remarks on the power of courageous capital and capitalism in war-ravaged places like the Democratic Republic of Congo.
     

 


What We're Reading

  • The Aspen Network of Development Entrepreneurs (ANDE) released a case study on Honey Care Africa, showing how collaboration between Root Capital, Open Capital Advisors, the Lundin Foundation and the Grameen Foundation helped Honey Care Africa adapt and grow its business.

 


Join the Team: Research Coordinator - Peru

ACCDER, a Root Capital partner, is seeking a Research Coordinator to be based in Lima, Peru. The Research Coordinator will plan and conduct studies using a combination of on-site data collection methods. In addition, the Research Coordinator will help review the social and environmental indicators in loan applications of potential clients. This position will work closely with Root Capital’s Impact, Credit and Financial Training teams.

View additional employment opportunities at Root Capital

 


Stay Connected with Root Capital's Social Media

Congratulations to Erin Chase, winner of our chocolate and hat giveaway!
 
Follow our Founder and CEO on his Forbes blog.
 

 

 

Invirtiendo en Adaptabilidad

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La roya del café es una enfermedad fúngica que debilita y finalmente mata los arbustos de café. Las principales causas de la epidemia que está atacando a Centroamérica y al norte de Perú actualmente son el clima más cálido y húmedo, la poca inversión en los cafetales a través del tiempo y el envejecimiento de los cafetos. Según la Organización Internacional del Café, la epidemia actual de roya de la hoja de café es la de mayor incidencia en 40 años, que ha infectado a más de la mitad de los cafetales de Centroamérica y que ha dejado pérdidas que llegan a $1 mil millones en la cosecha 2012-2013.  

La Iniciativa de adaptabilidad de los caficultores es un proyecto colaborativo entre Root Capital, Green Mountain Coffee Roasters, Inc. (GMCR), el Fondo Multilateral de Inversiones (FOMIN) del Banco Interamericano de Desarrollo y la Fundación Skoll. La iniciativa es diseñado para estabilizar las cadenas de suministro, al invertir en los caficultores en la base de la cadena de valor que están en el frente de lucha contra la epidemia de la roya de la hoja del café en Latinoamérica.

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Investing in Resilience

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Coffee rust, called La Roya in Spanish, is a fungal disease that weakens and eventually kills coffee trees. The principal causes of the outbreak that is sweeping Central America and northern Peru today are a warmer, wetter climate; historic underinvestment in farms and aging coffee trees.  Root Capital 's Coffee Farmer Resilience Initiative is a collaborative venture designed to stabilize supply chains by investing in coffee farmers at the base of the value chain, who are on the front lines of battling the leaf rust epidemic in Latin America.  This shorter clip provides a brief introduction to coffee rust.

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Green Mountain Coffee Roasters, Inc.; Multilateral Investment Fund; Skoll Foundation and Root Capital Join Forces to Fight the Leaf Rust Epidemic Devastating Latin American Coffee

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
(Comunicado de prensa en español abajo)

$7 Million Public-Private Partnership Models Holistic Approach to Ensure Agricultural Supply Chain Stability in Face of Increasing Climate Risk

BURLINGTON, VT (November 7, 2013)—Green Mountain Coffee Roasters, Inc. (GMCR), the Multilateral Investment Fund (MIF) of the InterAmerican Development Bank and Skoll Foundation announce today support for the non-profit agricultural lender Root Capital ‘s Coffee Farmer Resilience Initiative. The initiative is a collaborative venture designed to stabilize supply chains by investing in coffee farmers at the base of the value chain, who are on the front lines of battling the leaf rust epidemic in Latin America.   

“We depend on a long-term supply of high-quality beans for our business,” said Lindsey Bolger, Vice President of Coffee Sourcing Excellence for GMCR. “This investment will provide coffee farming families with the tools and capacity they need to more successfully confront threats to their coffee and their livelihoods, through greater long-term resilience at the cooperative and household level.”

The announcement was made before hundreds of coffee industry professionals at Let’s Talk Roya, a solutions-oriented conference hosted by Sustainable Harvest, a private sector partner helping to implement the initiative.

The largest-ever partnership between the organizations combines long-term lending to finance the replacement of diseased coffee trees affected by the fungal disease with short-term trade credit, financial management training, climate-smart agronomic assistance and household-level income diversification. The $7 million initiative will allow Root Capital to lend more than $10 million for resilience investments, and provide financial management training, to 50 agricultural enterprises representing 40,000 farmers, reaching approximately 200,000 family members in farming communities in Latin America.

Beyond the direct impact, the initiative aims to serve as a blueprint for holistic investments in farmer resilience that can be replicated and scaled by other private-public partnerships in agriculture. Seeded with funding from the Skoll Foundation, the initiative complements global efforts to build the market for smallholder agricultural finance in a manner that encourages environmental stewardship and resilience, in addition to sustainable rural livelihoods.

Coffee rust, called La Roya in Spanish, is a fungal disease that weakens and eventually kills coffee trees. The principal causes of the outbreak that is sweeping Central America and northern Peru today are a warmer, wetter climate; historic underinvestment in farms and aging coffee trees. According to the International Coffee Organization, the current epidemic of coffee leaf rust is the highest incidence in 40 years, with more than half of Central America’s coffee farms infected, and losses reaching $1 billion in the 2012-2013 harvest. 

“Root Capital’s Coffee Farmer Resilience Initiative is a holistic approach that responds to the current crisis while investing in rural enterprises’ ability to maintain consumer supply in the face of growing shocks from climate change and volatile commodity markets,” says Willy Foote, Root Capital Founder & CEO.  “The initiative is a blueprint for agricultural supply chain sustainability that creates shared value for farmers, buyers and consumers.”

Root Capital launched the Initiative with a $2 million loan to SOPPEXCCA, a 650-member coffee farmer cooperative based in Jinotega, Nicaragua.  SOPPEXCCA will use the loan to renovate farms ravaged by the fungus, replacing dead coffee trees with new, high-quality, rust-resistant varietals.

Latin America is the world’s largest producer of coffee, producing 60 percent, according to the International Coffee Organization (ICO). The areas hardest hit by roya, Central America and Peru, produce roughly 20 percent of Latin America’s total volume.

In Central America alone, approximately 2 million of the 43 million inhabitants are directly employed by the coffee industry, according to the ICO, which estimates that more than 400,000 became jobless after the 2013-2013 harvest, due to La Roya.

“This public private partnership has big implications for agricultural sustainability, says Claudio Cortellese, Head of the Access to Markets Unit of the MIF. "It will improve the well-being of hundreds of thousands of Latin American coffee farmers while serving as a model for long-term resilience that other agricultural value chains can reproduce, from quinoa to cacao. ”

"Like small businesses in the U.S., smallholder coffee farming is the economic engine for rural communities in Latin America," notes David Griswold, President and Founder of Sustainable Harvest Coffee Importers.  "We're pleased to be working with Root Capital, IDB and GMCR to help increase farmers' resiliency to the effects of climate change, enabling them to continue to deliver the high quality coffee U.S. consumers and the rest of the world depend on." 

Watch the video about the initiative. 

Contacts:
Meg Wilcox, Root Capital, mwilcox@rootcapital.org, +1 617-319-6457
Laura Peterson, Corporate Communications Manager, GMCR laura.peterson@gmcr.com,
+1 802 488-2459
Georg Neumann, Associate, Knowledge and Strategic Communications, GEORGN@iadb.org,
+1-202-623-2441

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About Root Capital

Root Capital is a nonprofit agricultural lender that grows rural prosperity in poor, environmentally vulnerable places in Africa and Latin America by lending capital, delivering financial training, and strengthening market connections for small and growing agricultural businesses. Since 1999, Root Capital has disbursed more than $500 million in credit to over 450 businesses, improving livelihoods for 750,000 rural producer households.  For more information, visit www.rootcapital.org.

About Green Mountain Coffee Roasters, Inc. (NASDAQ: GMCR)

As a leader in specialty coffee and coffee makers, Green Mountain Coffee Roasters, Inc. (GMCR) (NASDAQ: GMCR), is recognized for its award-winning coffees, innovative Keurig® brewing technology, and socially responsible business practices. GMCR supports local and global communities by investing in sustainably-grown coffee, and donating a portion of its profits to social and environmental projects. For more information, please visit www.gmcr.com; www.greenmountaincoffee.com, or www.keurig.com.

About the Multilateral Investment Fund

 The Multilateral Investment Fund (MIF), a member of the Inter-American Development Bank Group, supports private sector-led development benefitting low-income populations and the poor - their businesses, their farms, and their households. The aim is to give them the tools to boost their incomes: access to markets and the skills to compete in those markets, access to finance, and access to basic services, including green technology. A core MIF mission is to act as a development laboratory - experimenting, pioneering, and taking risks in order to build and support successful micro and SME business models. It is the largest international technical assistance provider to the private sector in Latin America and the Caribbean. More information at www.fomin.org.

About the Skoll Foundation

The Skoll Foundation was created by Jeff Skoll in 1999 to pursue his vision of a more peaceful, prosperous, and sustainable world. The mission of the Skoll Foundation is to drive large-scale change by investing in, connecting, and celebrating social entrepreneurs and the innovators who help them solve the world’s most pressing problems. Social entrepreneurs are society’s change agents—creators of innovations that disrupt the status quo and transform our world for the better. By identifying the people and programs already enacting positive change throughout the world, the Foundation empowers them to extend their reach, deepen their impact, and fundamentally improve society.  More information at www.skollfoundation.org.

 

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7 millones de dólares de la asociación público-privada modelan este enfoque integral orientado a garantizar la estabilidad de la cadena de suministro agrícola ante el incremento del riesgo climático

SAN SALVADOR (7 de noviembre de 2013)—Green Mountain Coffee Roasters, Inc. (GMCR), el Fondo Multilateral de Inversiones (FOMIN) del Banco Interamericano de Desarrollo y la Fundación Skoll anunciaron hoy su apoyo a la Iniciativa de adaptabilidad de los caficultores de Root Capital, una organización sin fines de lucro que otorga préstamos al sector agrícola.  La iniciativa es un proyecto colaborativo diseñado para estabilizar las cadenas de suministro, al invertir en los caficultores en la base de la cadena de valor que están en el frente de lucha contra la epidemia de la roya de la hoja del café en Latinoamérica.  

"Nosotros dependemos de un suministro de largo plazo de granos de alta calidad para nuestro negocio", comenta Lindsey Bolger, Vicepresidenta de Suministro y Excelencia Café en GMCR. "Esta inversión  les brindará a las familias de los caficultores las herramientas y la capacidad que necesitan para afrontar con mayor éxito las amenazas a su café y a sus medios de subsistencia, a través de una mayor adaptabilidad de largo plazo en la cooperativa y los hogares".

El anuncio fue hecho ante cientos de profesionales de la industria del café en Hablemos de Roya, una conferencia orientada a buscar soluciones y organizada por Sustainable Harvest, un aliado del sector privado que ayuda a implementar la iniciativa.

La alianza más grande de la historia entre organizaciones combina los préstamos de largo plazo para financiar la reposición de cafetos afectados por la enfermedad fúngica con el crédito comercial de corto plazo, la capacitación en gestión financiera, la asistencia agronómica climática inteligente y la diversificación de los ingresos familiares. La iniciativa de 7 millones de dólares permitirá a Root Capital prestar más de 10 millones de dólares para inversiones en adaptabilidad y brindar capacitación en gestión financiera a 50 empresas del sector agrícola que representan a 40.000 agricultores y alcanzan aproximadamente a 200.000 miembros de familias en las comunidades campesinas de América Latina.

Más allá del impacto directo, la iniciativa tiene como objetivo servir de modelo para inversiones integrales en adaptabilidad agrícola que otras asociaciones público-privadas pueden replicar y ampliar en el sector agrícola.

La roya del café es una enfermedad fúngica que debilita y finalmente mata los arbustos de café. Las principales causas de la epidemia que está atacando a Centroamérica y al norte de Perú actualmente son el clima más cálido y húmedo, la poca inversión en los cafetales a través del tiempo y el envejecimiento de los cafetos. Según la Organización Internacional del Café, la epidemia actual de roya de la hoja de café es la de mayor incidencia en 40 años, que ha infectado a más de la mitad de los cafetales de Centroamérica y que ha dejado pérdidas que llegan a $1 mil millones en la cosecha 2012-2013. 

"La Iniciativa de adaptabilidad de los caficultores de Root Capital  tiene un enfoque integral que responde a la crisis actual y a la vez invierte en la capacidad de las empresas rurales para mantener la oferta al consumidor frente a una creciente crisis del cambio climático y la volatilidad de los mercados de productos básicos", comenta Willy Foote, Fundador y Presidente de Root Capital.  "La iniciativa es un modelo para la sostenibilidad  de la cadena de suministro agrícola que crea un valor compartido para los agricultores, compradores y consumidores".

Root Capital lanzó la Iniciativa con un préstamo de 2 millones de dólares a SOPPEXCCA, una cooperativa de caficultores compuesta por 650 miembros y ubicada en Jinotega, Nicaragua.  SOPPEXCCA utilizará el préstamo para renovar las fincas afectadas por el hongo, sustituyendo los cafetos muertos por variedades nuevas, de alta calidad y resistentes a la roya.

Latinoamérica es el principal productor mundial de café, con un 60 por ciento, según la Organización Internacional del Café (OIC). Las zonas más afectadas por la roya, Centroamérica y Perú, producen aproximadamente el 20 por ciento del volumen total de Latinoamérica.

En Centroamérica, la industria del café contrata aproximadamente a 2 millones de sus 43 millones de habitantes, según el ICO, que estima que más de 400.000 se quedaron sin trabajo después de la cosecha 2013-2013, debido a la roya.

“Esta alianza público privada tiene grandes implicaciones para la sostenibilidad agrícola”, menciona Claudio Cortellese, Jefe de la Unidad de Acceso a Mercados, Fondo Multilateral de Inversiones del Banco Interamericano de Desarrollo.  La alianza mejorará el bienestar de miles de productores cafetaleros latinoamericanos y servirá también como un modelo de adaptación a largo plazo que puede ser replicado por otras cadenas de valor agrícola, desde la quinua hasta el cacao.”

"Al igual que las pequeñas empresas en los EE.UU., el cultivo de café de los pequeños productores es el motor económico de las comunidades rurales de América Latina," afirma David Griswold, director general y fundador de Sustainable Harvest Coffee Importers."Estamos muy contentos de estar trabajando con Root Capital, el BID y GMCR para ayudar a aumentar la adaptabilidad de los agricultores a los efectos del cambio climático, lo que les permite seguir ofreciendo un café de grande calidad a los consumidores de los Estados Unidos y el resto del mundo."

Vea el video sobre la iniciativa.  

Contactos:
Meg Wilcox, Root Capital, mwilcox@rootcapital.org, +1 617-299-2517
Laura Peterson, Gerente de Comunicaciones Corporativas, GMCR laura.peterson@gmcr.com,
+1 802 488-2459
Georg Neumann, GEORGN@iadb.org, +1-202-623-2441

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Acerca de Root Capital

Root Capital es un prestador de inversión social, sin fines de lucro, que apoya el crecimiento de la prosperidad rural en sectores de bajos recursos y de vulnerabilidad ambiental en África y América Latina, mediante el otorgamiento de préstamos, capacitación financiera y fortalecimiento de las relaciones comerciales para pequeñas empresas agrícolas y en desarrollo. Desde 1999, Root Capital ha desembolsado más de 500 millones de dólares en créditos a más de 450 empresas, mejorando las condiciones de vida de los hogares de 750.000 productores rurales.  Más información en www.rootcapital.org.

Acerca de Green Mountain Coffee Roasters, Inc. , (NASDAQ: GMCR)

Como un líder en especialidades de café y marcas de café, Green Mountain Coffee Roasters, Inc. (GMCR) (NASDAQ: GMCR) es reconocida por su innovadora tecnología de elaboración de café galardonada Keurig® y sus prácticas empresariales socialmente responsables. GMCR apoya las comunidades locales y globales al invertir en café producido de manera sostenible y dona una parte de sus ganancias a proyectos sociales y ambientales. Más información en www.gmcr.com; www.greenmountaincoffee.com, ó www.keurig.com.

Acerca del Fondo Multilateral de Inversiones (FOMIN)

El Fondo Multilateral de Inversiones (FOMIN), miembro del grupo BID, apoya el desarrollo del sector privado en beneficio de la población de bajos recursos, sus negocios, establecimientos rurales y hogares. El objetivo del FOMIN es proporcionarle a esta población las herramientas para incrementar sus ingresos, asegurar su acceso a mercados y la creación de capacidades para competir en esos mercados, el acceso a financiamiento y a servicios básicos, incluyendo el uso de tecnologías verdes. Su misión es actuar como laboratorio, experimentando, siendo pionero y asumiendo riesgos para construir y sostener modelos de negocios exitosos para las micro y pequeñas empresas. El FOMIN es el mayor proveedor internacional de asistencia técnica en América Latina y el Caribe. Más información sobre el FOMIN en www.fomin.org.

Acerca de la Fundación Skoll

Jeff Skoll creó la Fundación Skoll en 1999 para sustentar su visión de un mundo sostenible de paz y prosperidad. Encabezada por su Presidenta Sally Osberg desde 2001, Skoll tiene como misión impulsar un cambio a gran escala al invertir, conectar y celebrar a los emprendedores sociales y otros innovadores dedicados a la solución de los problemas más acuciantes del mundo. Los Premios Skoll para el Emprendimiento Social, el programa insignia de la fundación, se presentan cada año en el Foro Mundial Skoll en Oxford, Inglaterra. Más información en www.skollfoundation.org.

 

Stay Connected with Root Capital

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Thursday, November 7, 2013

GMCR, MIF and Skoll Foundation pledge US$7 million for rust leaf relief

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Global Coffee Review

New England firms helping growers hit hard by coffee fungus

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Thursday, November 7, 2013
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New Impact Study on Nicaragua Coffee Client

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COOMPROCOM is a fast-growing “gazelle” and an economic anchor in the Nicaraguan communities it serves.  Our new case study evaluates how the coffee cooperative impacts farmer livelihoods.

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Where's the Feast? Cracking Food Insecurity

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Maize farmers in Burkina Faso

November 2013

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IN THIS ISSUE CONNECT WITH US ONLINE
Message from the CEOWhat We're ReadingFacebook  Twitter  Google+  YouTube
Featured MediaJoin the Team
Interview with Jeff DykstraSocial Media
New and Noteworthy 
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Message from the CEO

Willy Foote thanking two Root Capital employees, Richard Tugume (left) and Brandon Boyle (right), for their five years of service.

Every Thanksgiving, as we gather with family and friends to share an autumn feast, my mind is drawn to the countries in which Root Capital works where food insecurity is a reality for 20, 30, sometimes even 50 percent of the population. For me, this stark contrast between abundance and scarcity makes the celebration of Thanksgiving especially meaningful, and our food security work ever more urgent.

Since 2010, Root Capital has been working to alleviate hunger in rural communities in Africa and Latin America by investing in domestic and regional value chains. This work transcends our typical impact focus on producer livelihoods to also include local consumers who benefit from access to more abundant, domestically produced food—often at lower cost. Over the past three years Root has provided loans, and in many cases financial training, to enterprises like Nyirefami, a Tanzanian agro-processing business that provides more than 75,000 Tanzanian consumers with low-cost, nutritious flours sought after by mothers with young children, and Royal Golden Egg, a poultry and livestock business in Ghana that supplies more than 250,000 Ghanaians with eggs as a readily available source of protein.

Earlier this year, to hone this work, we launched our Food Security & Nutrition portfolio, focused exclusively on domestic value chain lending. La Vivrière, an enterprise based in Senegal that processes, packages, and sells grain-based products primarily for domestic consumption, was the first business to receive such a loan. Dismayed by the trend toward increased consumption of imported rice in Senegal, which typically imports as much as 70 percent of the rice its population consumes annually, La Vivrière founder Bineta Coulibaly sought to increase demand for high-quality local grains.

Bineta Coulibaly, Founder and CEO of La Vivrière.Today, Bineta’s company uses locally grown, vitamin- and mineral-rich grains like millet to create nutritious and affordable flour products for time-constrained working mothers, as well as other products sold to local consumers throughout Dakar. La Vivrière, which means “food-producing” in French, reaches 180,000 consumers.

With global population surging to nine billion by 2050 and erratic weather threatening the future of agriculture, investing in food security in the developing world is more important than ever. Rising temperatures may reduce food production by as much as 2 percent every decade for the rest of the century, while demand simultaneously rises by up to 14 percent, according to a recently leaked report by the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

Tackling the agricultural implications of climate change while simultaneously increasing food security will require pathological collaboration between all links of the value chain. As my friend Jeff Dykstra, CEO of Partners in Food Solutions, a technical assistance provider and Root Capital collaborator, put it recently, "organizations that bring different pieces of the puzzle must work closely together."

This Thanksgiving, I’m grateful for businesses like Nyirefami, Royal Golden Egg and La Vivrière that are helping to feed thousands in countries where people routinely do not have enough to eat. As we prepare for the holidays, and the hunger season persists in many places, we know that your support helps us build a more prosperous, food-secure future for rural families in Africa and Latin America.

Sincerely,
 

Willy Foote Signature

Willy Foote, Founder and CEO

P.S. Our hearts go out to the millions of Filipinos whose lives were shattered by Super Typhoon Haiyan. For those who wish to contribute to the relief efforts, please consider supporting Gawad Kalinga, a fellow Skoll entrepreneur organization working tirelessly to respond to the tragedy.

 


Featured Media: Investing in Resilience Video

Investing in ResilienceCoffee leaf rust, called La Roya in Spanish, is a fungal disease that weakens and eventually kills coffee trees. According to the International Coffee Organization, the current epidemic of coffee rust is the highest incidence in 40 years, with more than half of Central America’s coffee farms infected and losses reaching $1 billion in the 2012-2013 harvest.

In this video, we outline our plan to build resilience in coffee-farming communities currently battling the rust epidemic. In addition to long-term lending for coffee renovation and rehabilitation, short-term lending, financial management training and climate-smart agronomic training coordination, we will also support the development and launch of small side businesses for farm families, as well as the planting of short-cycle crops for cash and household consumption. These investments are critical for strengthening food security for farm families, particularly in the short term, as households absorb the shock of lost income tied to coffee leaf rust.

 


Interview: Jeff Dykstra, CEO, Partners in Food Solutions

Jeff Dykstra, CEO, Partners in Food SolutionsPartners in Food Solutions is one of Root Capital’s allies within the food security space. Earlier this month, we spoke with CEO Jeff Dykstra about his organization and the challenges and opportunities associated with improving food security and nutrition around the world.

Q: What approach does Partners in Food Solutions take to improving food security?

Partners in Food Solutions (PFS) is an organization that aggregates the experience and know-how of employee volunteers from four leading global food companies, General Mills, Cargill, Royal DSM and Bühler, to share with small and growing food companies in Africa. PFS is pioneering a volunteer movement that brings together corporate knowledge, expertise and resources to improve food security and nutrition and to enrich lives around the world. Right now, we work in Kenya, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Zambia and Malawi.

To date, we’ve worked with about 70 Africa-based companies directly on a couple hundred different projects. We’ve worked with another 330 companies or so in those countries with more of a sectorwide training approach. When we see issues that are common across the industry, we’ll put together a training package that can deliver expertise to a group of companies at once.
 
Read the full interview with Jeff on our new blog, Back Roads to Boardrooms.

 


New and Noteworthy

 


What We're Reading


Join the Team: Accounting Manager

Root Capital is seeking an Accounting Manager to join our team in Cambridge. The Accounting Manager will be responsible for the timely and accurate full-cycle accounting for the Cambridge office and for assisting with the external audit and IRS Form 990. S/he will oversee Cambridge bank accounts and will ensure the accuracy of the notes payable subledger and the payroll processing.

View additional employment opportunities at Root Capital.
 


Stay Connected with Root Capital's Social Media

Check out our latest Back Roads to Board Rooms post and share on Twitter
 

 

Coffee shops, farmers and a banker team up to save Latin American coffee

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Tuesday, December 3, 2013
Name of News Outlet: 
PRI's The World

Alissa Thuotte

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Thoutte, Alissa
Investor Relations Associate

Alissa works closely with the Senior Manager of Institutional Relations to identify prospective funders, create engagement strategies, prepare grant proposals and manage stewardship for select funders. Prior to joining Root Capital, she worked as the corporate and foundation relations coordinator for Partners in Health and as a development assistant at Boston Medical Center. She holds a B.A in English from the University of Massachusetts. 

Languages: 
Spanish, French
Location: 
US

Celebrating Our 1500th Loan

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Our 1500th loan goes to Nahualá, a Guatemala coffee cooperative. One-third of Nahualá’s organic coffee is sold under the Café Femenino brand, giving women members a premium boost.

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Loan Officer, Rwanda (Independent Contractor)

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Summary

The Loan Officer, together with the Root Capital team, is responsible for the following activities in Rwanda, Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, and Burundi: proactively work to identify potential borrowers, initiating contact and providing information on Root Capital’s credit services; analyze loan applicants, applying Root Capital’s rigorous financial, environmental, and social criteria; structure loans for qualified clients and present written analysis and recommended terms to internal reviewers for approval; manage client relationships through the loan closing process, including ensuring complete and accurate legal documentation; monitor existing loans to ensure timely repayment; and assist in coordinating and technical assistance on financial management to selected candidates and clients. 

 

Mission and History of Root Capital

Root Capital’s mission is to grow rural prosperity by investing in small and growing agricultural businesses that build sustainable livelihoods in Africa and Latin America.

Root Capital is a nonprofit social investment fund that grows rural prosperity in poor, environmentally vulnerable places in Africa and Latin America by lending capital, delivering financial training and strengthening market connections for small and growing agricultural businesses.

Root Capital clients include associations and private businesses that help create sustainable livelihoods by aggregating the products of hundreds, and often, thousands of farmers. Since our launch in 1999, we have provided more than $400 million in credit to over 460 small and growing agricultural businesses.

Root Capital envisions a thriving financial market serving agricultural businesses that generate long-term social, economic, and environmental sustainability for small-scale farmers and their communities around the world. Headquartered in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Root Capital currently has associated offices in Costa Rica, Mexico, Peru and Kenya..

 

Responsibilities

Business Development: 

  • Develop a pipeline of qualified loan candidates in Rwanda, Eastern DRC, and Burundi. Develop networks of referrers, including buyers and other value chain actors, technical assistance providers, and trade associations. Present Root Capital’s credit offerings to qualified businesses and invite loan application.

Credit Analysis

  • Collect information about loan applicants as specified by Root Capital’s credit policies.
  • Perform due diligence to verify client information, including conducting site visits and management interviews.
  • Conduct written financial, operational, and management analysis of applicant companies.
  • Structure loans, present analysis, and make credit recommendations to Root Capital’s credit committees for decision-making, following Root Capital’s credit underwriting policies.
  • Apply Root Capital’s social and environmental impact criteria. Support Root Capital’s portfolio servicing personnel to close loans, including ensuring proper documentation of loan agreements according to Root Capital’s internal policies.

Credit Risk Management

  • Ensure that all proposed loans meet Root Capital’s criteria for credit quality and security.
  • Work with the Risk Manager and loan monitoring staff in Nairobi to track performance of active loans.
  • Lead communication with Root Capital clients to address identified deficiencies in active loans. In heightened risk situations, collaborate with Risk Manager to devise and implement a collections strategy.

Financial Advisory Services (FAS)

  • As necessary, collaborate with the FAS Coordinator in Nairobi to address financial management weaknesses of prospective and existing clients as necessary by facilitating training provision through qualified local consultants.
  • Conduct client needs assessments, help to develop training plans, and work with local trainers to ensure effective implementation.

Organizational and Administrative Responsibilities

  • Participate in one-on-one meetings with regional Credit Manager or designated representative.
  • Submit regular expense reports.
  • Communicate in a timely fashion within the team and between the team and other departments of the organization.
  • Participate in all-staff meetings of Root Capital’s Africa lending team.
  • Perform other duties as directed or as necessary.

 

 Qualifications and Experience

  • 5-8 years of experience working in agricultural, commercial, and/ or SME finance, in Rwanda and/ or elsewhere in East Africa. Commercial banking experience or a background in investment analysis is necessary. Strong abilities in financial analysis required.
  • Experience working with or in small and medium-sized agricultural businesses is desirable.
  • Strong interpersonal, negotiation, and presentation skills.
  • University degree in commerce, banking, finance, economics, or related field, or equivalent experience is desirable.
  • Professional experience or academic qualifications related to agricultural value chains is desirable.
  • Ability to work independently, while coordinating with others in a team effort.
  • Ability to work under pressure, establish and maintain deadlines, and coordinate a wide variety of activities at the same time. Strong organizational skills.
  • Ability to travel to rural areas of East Africa, including areas affected by violent conflict.
  • Fluency in English, including strong writing skills and ability to make public presentations, is required. Advanced ability in French and Kinyarwanda are strong pluses. Conversational Lingala or Kirundi a plus.
  • Strong ability with Microsoft Word and Excel is necessary. Additional knowledge of financial and/or database management software is a plus.
  • Ability to handle confidential information about the transactions and business activities of Root Capital and our clients.
  • Strong interest in the field of socially and environmentally responsible investments, and commitment to Root Capital’s mission to enhance rural livelihoods through lending and financial education.
  • Authorized to work in Rwanda.

 

Applications and Nominations

More information about Root Capital is available at www.rootcapital.org

Applications are due by January 15th, 2014, and will be reviewed on a rolling basis. Candidates are encouraged to apply as soon as possible.

Applications including a resume and cover letter describing your interest, qualifications, salary requirements, earliest availability, and how you learned of the position should be sent to: jobsafrica@rootcapital.org.  Please type “Loan Officer” followed by your name (Last, First) as the subject line of your email (e.g. “Loan Officer – Tabu, Eves”). Finalist candidates will be required to provide at least three work-related references.

Root Capital is an equal opportunity employer.

Loan Officer - Kenya

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Summary

The Loan Officer, together with the Root Capital team, is responsible for the following activities in Kenya: actively work to identify potential borrowers; proactively make contact with loan leads and provide information on Root Capital’s credit services; analyze loan applicants using rigorous financial, environmental, and social criteria; present loan analysis to Root Capital’s internal and external credit committees for decision; close loans, including ensuring complete documentation; monitor existing loans to ensure timely repayment; and assist in coordinating training and technical assistance on financial management to selected candidates and clients. 

 

Mission and History of Root Capital

Root Capital’s mission is to grow rural prosperity by investing in small and growing agricultural businesses that build sustainable livelihoods in Africa and Latin America.

Root Capital is a nonprofit social investment fund that grows rural prosperity in poor, environmentally vulnerable places in Africa and Latin America by lending capital, delivering financial training and strengthening market connections for small and growing agricultural businesses.

Root Capital clients include associations and private businesses that help create sustainable livelihoods by aggregating the products of hundreds, and often, thousands of farmers. Since our launch in 1999, we have provided more than $400 million in credit to over 460 small and growing agricultural businesses.

Root Capital envisions a thriving financial market serving agricultural businesses that generate long-term social, economic, and environmental sustainability for small-scale farmers and their communities around the world. Headquartered in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Root Capital currently has associated offices in Costa Rica, Mexico, Peru and Kenya..

 

Responsibilities

Business Development: 

  • Develop a pipeline of qualified loan candidates in Kenya. Develop networks of referrers, including value chain actors, technical assistance providers, and trade associations. Present Root Capital’s credit offerings to and invite loan applications from qualified businesses.

Credit Analysis

  • Collect information about loan applicants as specified by Root Capital’s credit policies.
  • Perform due diligence to verify client information, including conducting site visits and management interviews.
  • Conduct financial, operational, and management analysis of applicant companies.
  • Structure loans, present analysis, and make credit recommendations to Root Capital’s credit committees for decision-making, following Root Capital’s credit underwriting policies.
  • Apply Root Capital’s social and environmental impact criteria. Support Root Capital’s portfolio servicing personnel to close loans, including ensuring proper documentation of loan agreements according to Root Capital’s internal policies.

Credit Risk Management

  • Ensure that all proposed loans meet Root Capital’s criteria for credit quality and security.
  • Work with the Risk Manager and loan monitoring staff in Nairobi to track performance of active loans.
  • Lead communication with Root Capital clients to address identified deficiencies in active loans. In heightened risk situations, collaborate with Risk Manager to devise and implement a collections strategy.

Financial Advisory Services (FAS)

  • As necessary, collaborate with the FAS Coordinator in Nairobi to address financial management weaknesses of prospective and existing clients as necessary by facilitating training provision through qualified local consultants.
  • Conduct client needs assessments, help to develop a training plan, and work with local trainers to ensure effective implementation.

Organizational and Administrative Responsibilities

  • Participate in one-on-one meetings with regional Credit Manager or designated representative.
  • Submit regular expense reports.
  • Communicate in a timely fashion within the team and between the team and other departments of the organization.
  • Participate in all-staff meetings of Root Capital’s East Africa lending team.
  • Perform other duties as directed or as necessary.

 

 Qualifications and Experience

  • 5-8 years of experience working in agricultural, commercial, and/ or SME finance, in Kenya and/ or elsewhere in east and southern Africa. Banking experience or investment analysis is necessary. Advanced knowledge of financial analysis. Experience with small and medium-sized agricultural businesses is desirable.
  • Strong interpersonal, negotiation, and presentation skills.
  • Master’s Degree in Business Administration (MBA), finance, economics, or related field, or equivalent experience is desirable.
  • Professional experience or academic qualifications related to agricultural value chains is desirable.
  • Ability to work independently, while coordinating with others in a team effort.
  • Ability to work under pressure, establish and maintain deadlines, and coordinate a wide variety of activities at the same time. Strong organizational skills.
  • Ability to travel to rural areas of Kenya, East and Southern Africa.
  • Fluency in English, including strong writing skills and ability to make public presentations, is required. Fluency in Kiswahili is also desirable.
  • Strong ability with Microsoft Word and Excel is necessary. Additional knowledge of financial and/or database management software is a plus.
  • Ability to handle confidential information about the transactions and business activities of Root Capital and our clients.
  • Strong interest in the field of socially and environmentally responsible investments, and commitment to Root Capital’s mission to enhance rural livelihoods through lending and financial education.
  • Authorized to work in Kenya.

 

Applications and Nominations

More information about Root Capital is available at www.rootcapital.org

Applications are due by January 17th, 2014, and will be reviewed on a rolling basis. Candidates are encouraged to apply as soon as possible.

Applications including a resume and cover letter describing your interest, qualifications, salary requirements, earliest availability, and how you learned of the position should be sent to: jobsafrica@rootcapital.org.  Please type “Loan Officer” followed by your name (Last, First) as the subject line of your email (e.g. “Loan Officer – Neema, Truphosa”). Finalist candidates will be required to provide at least three work-related references.

Root Capital is an equal opportunity employer.

Root Capital Wins East African Agriculture Finance Initiative of the Year

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Wednesday, December 11, 2013
Name of News Outlet: 
Focus on East Africa

Martin Lubanga Buyeka

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Martin Buyeka
Portfolio Associate

Martin oversees the preparation and administration of loan agreements and security documents, and assists in the institutional and operational growth of Root Capital Africa's activities. Previously, he worked as a trade finance operations officer and a credit and legal documentation officer at Standard Chartered Bank. Martin holds a B.S. in Quantitative Economics from Makerere University.

Languages: 
English, Kiswahili
Location: 
Kenya

Unlocking Growth and Impact: Financial Advisory Services

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Small agricultural businesses throughout the developing world face significant barriers to accessing the capital they need to grow and lift farmer communities out of poverty.  For many, weak financial management systems are a limiting factor. Since 2004, Root Capital has provided financial management training that has strengthened over 300 agricultural businesses in Latin America and Africa.  This video shows how Root Capital's dual strategy of credit plus financial advisory services have helped two Peruvian coffee cooperatives, Chirinos and Aprocassi, to grow their businesses and improve their members' livelihoods.

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Desencadenando Crecimiento e Impacto: Servicios de Asesoria Financiera

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En los países en vías de desarrollo, las empresas agrícolas pequeñas se enfrentan a significativas barreras de acceso al capital que necesitan para crecer y ayudar a que las comunidades campesinas salgan de la pobreza. Un factor limitante, para muchas, son los débiles sistemas de gestión financiera. Desde el 2004, Root Capital ha proporcionado capacitación en gestión financiera que ha fortalecido a más de 300 empresas agrícolas en América Latina y África. Este video muestra como la doble estrategia de servicios de crédito más asesoría financiera de Root Capital, ha ayudado a dos cooperativas peruanas de café, Chirinos y APROCASSI, para hacer crecer sus negocios y mejorar la calidad de vida de los miembros de las cooperativas.

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Laura Ramirez

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Laura Ramirez
Administrative/HR Assistant

Laura oversees administrative, HR and IT activities for the office in Costa Rica. Previously, she worked as Regional Support for GBM's SAP implementation project in Costa Rica and also worked as the Administrative/HR Coordinator for Damco Costa Rica. She is currently completing a bachelor degree in administration from Universidad Americana and has a professional degree in written and conversational English from Berlitz Costa Rica.

Languages: 
Spanish, English
Location: 
Costa Rica

Faina Rozental

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Faina Rozental
Impact Associate

Faina is responsible for supporting initiatives related to social and environmental performance management and its relation to programmatic strategy. Previously, she worked as a sales and training officer for the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) in Washington, D.C. Faina holds an M.A. in economics and a B.A. in economics and international relations from Boston University. 

Languages: 
English, Russian, Spanish
Location: 
US
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