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How can a big organization set itself up on a journey to become stronger, better, and faster through small innovations?
A project in Indonesia opens livelihood opportunities for women and encourages their participation in community development.
The widespread loss of natural ecosystems and biodiversity is much more than a conservation issue; countless lives and livelihoods depend on them.
A strategy for increased banking opportunities in Southeast Asia.
Urban planners solicit ideas and solutions from the public in refining Singapore’s master plan.
The lessons learned by the Asian Development Bank, which was one of the last organizations to leave Afghanistan[1] in 1980 and one of the first to return in 2002.
Singapore pioneered road pricing as a tool to reduce traffic congestion and improved it over the years into a high-tech, pay-as-you-use system.
Seoul dismantled an old highway and revived a stream, the city, and local spirit, through the creation of the Seoul Greenway.
Energy master planning is key to preparing bankable projects that improve municipal heating, lower costs, and help achieve environmental goals.
Gender bonds can scale up women’s access to finance and promote gender equality at the same time.