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The Audacious Project

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The Audacious Project is a collaborative funding initiative between TED and non-profits that convenes funders and social entrepreneurs in order to scale solutions to the world's most urgent challenges.[1] In 2018, The TED Prize was recast as The Audacious Project.

Details

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The TED Prize was a prize commissioned by the American media organization TED Conferences. It ran from 2005 to 2017, culminating in a prize amount of $1 million.[2] In 2018, The TED Prize was recast as The Audacious Project.

TED described the change as:

a new model to launch big, inspiring ideas with the potential to affect millions of lives. Housed at TED, the Audacious Project brings together a powerful coalition of nonprofit organizations and individual donors with members of the public, allowing them to pool resources and work together in service of change-making ideas. An ambitious scale-up of the TED Prize's mission, The Audacious Project will increase impact by many orders of magnitude.[2]

The Audacious Project is supported by The Bridgespan Group, but lists many more organizations as its partners, including Virgin Unite and the Gates Foundation. According to TED, the project has helped participants raise $280m USD in funding.[3]

Winners

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Unlike the original TED Prize, The Audacious Project awards a number of different winners each year. The nomenclature has also changed from 'winners' to 'Big Ideas'.

The Audacious Project Big Ideas[4]
Year Big Ideas Organization
2018 What if we hit the brakes on climate change by tracking gas emissions from space? Environmental Defense Fund
What if a million Black women launched a health revolution? GirlTrek
What if we digitally empowered community health workers to make care available to all? Living Goods + Last Mile Health
What if we supported millions of African farmers in growing more food — for themselves and the world? One Acre Fund
What if we eliminated a disease that has blinded people for thousands of years? Sightsavers
What if we ended the injustice of automatic jail time for those who can’t afford bail? The Bail Project
What if we explored the ocean’s vast twilight zone, teeming with undiscovered life? Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
2019 What if science could eliminate racial bias in policing? Center for Policing Equity
What if we could empower more than one million girls to enter the classroom? Educate Girls
What if we could harness the power of proteins to create the next generation of medicines and materials? Institute for Design Protein
What if plants can help slow climate change? Salk Institute for Biological Studies
What if we could massively reduce disease from parasitic worms in Africa? The End Fund
What if island nations’ debt could be restructured to protect vast areas of ocean? The Nature Conservancy
What if we could eliminate child sexual abuse from the internet? Thorn
What if every child came to school on day one ready to learn? Upstart Project
2020 What if we could harness AI to tackle the looming antibiotic resistance crisis? The Collins Lab and MIT Jameel Clinic[5]
Decoding the communication of whales with advanced machine learning and state-of-the-art robotics Project CETI
A global surveillance network to stop the next pandemic before it starts ACEGID + Broad Institute
Lifting the world’s poorest people out of ultra-poverty BRAC
Delivering mental health support to anyone, anywhere via text message Crisis Text Line
Supporting humanitarian response by mapping areas home to one billion people Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team
Supporting millions of African farmers to lift themselves and their communities out of poverty One Acre Fund
Leveraging medicine donation to make life-saving prescriptions more affordable for all Americans SIRUM

References

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  1. ^ EABW Editor (2020-01-31). "END Fund announces project to Deworm Rwandan children". East African Business Week. Retrieved 2020-02-20.
  2. ^ a b "TED Prize". www.ted.com. Retrieved 2020-02-13.
  3. ^ "TED raises $280M to help nonprofits battle climate change, online sex abuse and more". TechCrunch. 17 April 2019. Retrieved 2020-02-20.
  4. ^ "The Audacious Project". The Audacious Project. Retrieved 2020-02-13.
  5. ^ "Jim Collins receives funding to harness AI for drug discovery". MIT News | Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Retrieved 2020-11-13.