Reveal the creative and entrepreneurial
Ideas engineer, with Phd in structural analysis of complex problems. After working as a teacher in engineering courses, I decided to found IPTI because I believe that the main meaning of life is to transform, to do our best to make the world better than we received, and I needed an agile organization, which recognize failure as an essential element of success and knows how to work together with society to build effective, scalable and sustainable solutions for social problems. Between 2004 and 2007, I coordinated an experience of implementing digital culture in 600 cultural Brazilian NGOs and along the process we conceived The Human Project (THP), a proposal of how art, science and technology can promote human development in communities of extreme poverty. In 2009 we moved IPTI from São Paulo to Santa Luzia do Itanhy, one of the poorest towns in Brazil, which has become THP global lab.
We work to solve the problem of inter-generational transfer of poverty in small towns, located in remote rural regions, with special emphasis on children and adolescents who gradually end up being captured by the feeling of conformity and surrendered to the destiny to which they seem to be condemned, mainly because of the low quality education that hinders processes of human capital accumulation. Our project (The Human Project) proposes a holistic and virtuous cycle of development of effective, scalable and sustainable innovative solutions for problems in basic education, entrepreneurial education and basic health in close partnership with the local community, as a strategy to improve human capital. Two pillars (ethics and identity) are worked across in all of our projects, with a perspective for changing local mindset, so that each person realizes their potential for personal and community transformation and this is our strategy to elevate humanity.
The problem of inter-generational transfer of poverty in small towns, located in remote rural regions, is usually a consequence of a self-reinforcing mechanism that blocks opportunities for social and economic development and forces people to remain poor, also known as poverty trap. Some of the main factors that trap population groups in such processes of chronic poverty are related to limited possibilities to accumulate human capital (high proportion of illiterate people and a low mean level of educational attainment among the people aged 15 years and over), geographic isolation and poor connections to bigger markets, limited and low value possibilities of work and income, poor quality of basic infrastructure (low coverage levels of clean water and sewage system), among others. On the other hand, there is a mentality of high distrust, dependence of welfare, short-term thinking and low self-esteem that also contributes to crystallize a local underdeveloped mindset. This problem affects millions of people, mainly in south hemisphere countries. In Brazil more then 35% (+2,000) of the municipalities present high level of socio-economic vulnerability and the majority are located in north and northeastern regions.
“The Human Project” is our model to promote economic and social prosperity in poverty-stricken towns and it is essentially based on the formation of human capital, in a long-term perspective, with the goal of extracting poverty from people's mind and revealing these people's creative and entrepreneurial potential, so that they become the main protagonists of change. In this sense, IPTI creates strategies, methodologies and tools to engage members of the communities to develop innovative solutions to their own problems and the end products are known as Social Technologies (ST). At the core of Social Technologies are effectiveness, scalability and sustainability. IPTI applies a systemic and evolutionary perspective to build social technologies that implement a virtuous cycle of the capital formation process with special focus on children and adolescents. So, we build ST's to provide children having access to high quality education in language and maths, to provide to all adolescents the opportunity to explore their potential to become entrepreneur in creative and digital business, focusing on initiatives that aim at value-added products that take advantage of the local identity. Finally, the cycle goes by building ST's to provide children and adolescents basic health (ex: food security, iron deficiency anemia).
Our global lab is Santa Luzia do Itanhy, a little town located in south of Sergipe state, in the northeastern in Brazil, which socio-economic conditions represents many of the contexts of regions we want to help. This town has 14,000 inhabitants, of which 59% live in conditions of poverty (average income below U$ 2 PPP), with 9,000 inhabitants living in rural communities. Less than 21% of the students reach the fifth year of elementary school with adequate performance in maths and language and the illiteracy rate is 29%. The vast majority of the population is of African descent, the local economy is essentially based on artisanal fishing and small farmers. The municipality is surrounded by mangroves, the region's main ecosystem. All social technologies generated in Santa Luzia do Itanhy aim to solve a local problem and the people involved with the problem work together with us as co-designers of the solution since the first beginning and later they act also as disseminators of the technologies to other regions, in addition to being encouraged to become entrepreneurs, by creating for-profit or non-profit social business.
- Elevating opportunities for all people, especially those who are traditionally left behind
Our experience is well-aligned with the first (Elevating opportunities for all people, especially those who are traditionally left behind) and third dimension (Elevating understanding of and between people through changing people’s attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors) of The Elevate Prize because our work is mainly focused on small towns, located in remote rural regions, a typical scenario of people and places traditionally left behind, and our mission is to arouse the transforming role of people, so that they can make a difference in their community, in Brazil and in the world, which means an effort to chance local mindset.
We founded IPTI in the city of São Paulo (2003) and the idea behind was to employ science and technology to generate innovative solutions to improve people's lives, especially in poor communities. Throughout the work in the digital culture project (2004-2007) we realized that in order to achieve what we dreamed it was necessary to add art to the model, change the organization to a community of extreme poverty, which was small and represented the majority of the communities that we would like to help, and that we needed to learn how to dialogue with this community, because an important part of the knowledge necessary to generate these innovative solutions, in an effective, scalable and sustainable way, belongs to the people from the community and they do not even know that they know. So we moved to Santa Luzia do Itanhy and over the past few years we have managed to compose a team whose main skill is the ability to mediate scientific and technological knowledge with the community knowledge, without no fear of failing and taking into account the IPTI values: Local grounding/global articulation; Commitment to innovation; Poetics of difference; Visible and invisible dynamic; Empathy; Confidence, perseverance and overcoming.
I was born in Sergipe, in northeastern Brazil, and I always lived surrounded by the problem of social inequality. I was privileged to be born in a middle class family, which was able to give me a quality education and access to culture. My grandfather had a small orange farm where I used to spent my vacation. While I was a child I used to play with the children of the community, all belonging to poor families, but there were no differences between us. As I grew up I started to perceive inequality. I continued to attend schools and museums while most of my little friends had to work to help their parents and many had to leave the school. I spent a good part of my life developing my academic career, but memories as a spectator of inequalities in Brazil always bothered me, until the moment I decided to act, first by resigning from the university and creating the IPTI and later moving IPTI to Santa Luzia do Itanhy. I had no previous personal connection with Santa Luzia do Itanhy, but I had personal connections with the stories of people who live in communities like Santa Luzia do Itanhy.
My main skills are resilience and faith, in this case faith in society's capacity to undertake and solve its own problems, without depending on third parties, including governments. My formation in engineering has contributed a lot for me to be able to advance with pragmatism towards my utopia. The experience I had of working with hundreds of art and culture communities, from all regions of Brazil, over 3 years, opened my mind to realize how wrong I was when trying to carry out the dialogue between art, science, technology and society (as a Phd I used to carry a non intentional arrogance to believe that I always had the best solutions). Finally, the fact that I live in Santa Luzia do Itanhy and I work with incredible and creative people from this little town, while having access to corporations and social investors from around the world, puts me and IPTI in a unique position to be able to solve the problem of poverty trap in small and remote towns.
The main obstacle was dealing with the mentality of social investors (companies and individuals) who usually want short-term solutions, maximum impact in terms of the number of beneficiaries and have difficulty in understanding systemic approaches. Our model is systemic, focuses on innovation, consequently involves few people (pilot group) and has a higher development cost, and considers scalability and sustainability in a long-term perspective, only after we achieve at a reliable and effective local version and with people from the community with capacity to act as disseminators to other people and regions. In addition, we chose to move our center from São Paulo, an important economic center in Brazil, to Santa Luzia do Itanhy, a little, poor and remote town. So, getting financial support in the beginning was quite difficult, but at no time we give up what we believed in and now we have results that help us to attract the interest of new investors, both in Brazil and abroad, and inspire people and communities to believe they can make the difference. In the beginning I was called as “crazy” and now I am called “visionary”, which to me is nothing more than a crazy person with reputation.
My leadership role is to encourage all people that work with us to do their best and be able to produce results that are positive for the society and for themselves and to transmit a sense of confidence, e.g. they can count on me to overcome hard moments. A specific moment that highlights this attitude was in the beginning of 2017. We had a 3-year contract (2016-2018) with the State Secretariat of Education to validate the scalability model of the social technology Synapse in 130 schools from different cities. The Secretariat started to delay payments and when we reached the limit of our reserves we had to decide to cancel the project and fire the team or take a huge risk of continuing and maybe never receive the remaining budget. My decision was to continue, I went through the worst year of my life, with debts growing every month, but I avoid to transmit the problems to the team, because I believed that we were generating something that could transform education in Brazil. The result is wonderful and today we have a network of teachers who preserves the project autonomously (see: https://vimeo.com/408840562). The Secretariat finished to pay us in 2020.
- Hybrid of for-profit and nonprofit
