Over the past five years, Pacific’s Global Center for Social Entrepreneurship has actively recruited a visionary and activist Board of Stakeholders composed of recognized social entrepreneurs, corporate executives, non-profit directors, foundation CEOs, microfinance specialists, venture capitalists, academicians, management and fundraising technicians. Beyond their advisory role, we label our board as ‘stakeholders’, because they are vested in our commitment to Empowering Leaders Today, for Impact Tomorrow by providing the Center with strategic planning, mentorship to students, financial support, internship opportunities, in addition to assisting the Center in developing curriculum and strategic alliances. As our Board grows in depth and diversity, we are finding that we are attracting new sectors that provide additional opportunities for more innovative initiatives that include: venture capitalists, international financiers, legal and human rights. The future potential is that our Board members are now personally committed to the Center’s sustainability.
Over the last 4 years, hundreds of students from all nine Pacific Schools have held domestic and international internships, conducted on-site action research, attended Practitioner Speaker Series presentations, confronted social entrepreneurs head on, been mentored experientially and schooled academically, and embarked upon careers in social entrepreneurship, all of which was a result of their direct personal relationship with the Board of Stakeholders. This Board effectively translated the theory of social entrepreneurship into the challenging reality, no holds barred. It also brought face to face academicians with practitioners, corporate with non-profit, and movement veterans with the new generation of activist leaders.
Meet Our Stakeholders

Ron Cordes, GCSE Board Chair
Co-Chairman | Genworth Financial Wealth Management
Ron Cordes has been involved in the wealth management industry for over 25 years. In 2006, he sold AssetMark Investment Services to Genworth Financial (NYSE:GNW), and currently serves as Co-Chairman of Genworth Financial Wealth Management, which is responsible for over $20 bb of assets under management in partnership with over 6,000 independent financial advisors. Ron is also President of the Cordes Foundation, which he established in 2006, and has committed over 30% of the Foundation’s portfolio to Impact Investments, about which he writes and speaks extensively. He is a member of the Board of Regents for the University of the Pacific, as well as Chairman of the Advisory Board for the University’s Global Center for Social Entrepreneurship, and is a Board member of FairTrade USA, ThinkImpact and the East Bay Community Foundation. Ron is co-author of “The Art of Investing & Portfolio Management”, published in 2004 by McGraw Hill, and was recognized as an Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year in 2005. He holds a BS in Business Administration from the University of California, Berkeley.

Charles Ansbach
President, CFRE | Ansbach & Associates
Charles Ansbach is a Managing Consultant for the Western United States and Asia for the Skystone Ryan Corporation, the leading international fundraising and management consulting company in the world. Mr. Ansbach speaks regularly on emerging issues of large scale fundraising, corporate partnerships and social entrepreneurism. He has helped organizations raise millions of dollars to support worthy causes, has created successful corporate sponsorship programs, designed major public/private partnerships and created nationally recognized social entrepreneur projects. Mr. Ansbach serves on a variety of Boards of Directors and was voted an “Outstanding Fundraising Executive of the Year” by his peers in the Association of Fundraising Professionals.

Taddy Blecher
Founder | Maharishi Institute
Taddy Blecher has helped over 5,000 disadvantaged South African youth to go through university or other education post-school. These graduates are now earning well over R 200 million in annual salaries and will earn and put R7.8 billion into the economy over their working lives. He has helped raise over R 400 million to supporting education for the historically disadvantaged, including building a R 150 million empowerment fund to support education. As a return commitment the university students all teach in their communities and 600 000 South African school kids have been trained on life-skills. The organisation’s work has been supported in South Africa by Nelson Mandela, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, the Oppenheimer family, and internationally by Sir Richard Branson, Bill Gates, Oprah Winfrey, Dalai Lama, Michael Dell, amongst others. Dr Blecher’s work has been hailed as a potential model to offer mass-scale tertiary education solutions, and bring-about lasting poverty alleviation and has been written-about as a case-study in over 35 published books. Taddy is a recipient of the Skoll Award for Social Entrepreneurship and was chosen as a Young Global Leader of the World Economic Forum, as well as a Young Global Leader, as one of 100 people under the age of 40 making an exceptional contribution to the world.

Martin Burt
Executive Director | Fundacion Paraguaya
Martin Burt founded Fundacion Paraguaya and brought an innovative microcredit program to Paraguay in 1985, while the country was under dictatorial rule that made citizen initiatives a particularly challenging and even dangerous undertaking. Over the years, Fundacion Paraguaya has supported 35,000 micro entrepreneurs who create 19,000 new jobs each year, and it has taking on innovative and entrepreneurial challenges through a Junior Achievement program that builds the skills of young entrepreneurs. Its agricultural school is breaking new ground by demonstrating that well-managed, sustainable agriculture can be profitable and by helping young people learn to think of themselves as rural entrepreneurs. Martin is a Pacific alum and is currently the visiting professor of Social Entrepreneurship. He has been recognized with the following international honors: Skoll Award for Social Entrepreneurship, Inter-American Development Bank Award of Excellence for Social Enterprise, and the Schwab Foundation Social Entrepreneur Award.

Jack Crawford
General Partner | Velocity Venture
Jack is a Sacramento native who has evolved from CPA to entrepreneur to venture capitalist. As a CPA with PriceWaterhouseCoopers, Jack saw a wide range of businesses and was inspired to start his own – including one of the first Internet Service Providers in Sacramento. Through the 1990’s, Jack secured his reputation as a serial entrepreneur in founding three more software companies. His efforts were recognized in 2000 when he was chosen as “Entrepreneur of the Year” by the Money Hunt television show. Since 2000, Jack has focused his energy on venture capital and in 2005 launched Velocity Venture Capital to provide capital for entrepreneurs in the greater Sacramento area. Jack is now combining his operating experience with his venture capital investments to help drive the success of the most promising companies in the region. Jack and the Velocity fund management team work closely with company founders to fine-tune strategies, add management, build out Boards of Directors, grow revenues, raise capital, and facilitate a positive exit. In addition to successful historical efforts with Compassoft (venture backed by ATV), Atone (acquired by Core Logic), and Varatouch (acquired by Atrua), he currently serves as a Board member with Freepath, Jadoo Power, Laru Corporation and WINDensity. Jack has long-standing relationships within the region and has served on the board of Sacramento Area Regional Technology Alliance and SACTO, written for Comstock’s Business Magazine on technology investing, and has been a guest lecturer on venture capital at Sacramento State and UC Davis business schools. Mr. Crawford is an alumnus of Harvard Business School’s “Private Equity & Venture Capital” executive program and a graduate of the NVCA “Venture Capital Institute.” Jack earned a B.S. degree in Accounting from Arizona State University and is a Certified Public Accountant in California. Additionally, Jack is the Founder and Chairman of Social Venture Philanthropy-Sacramento – a foundation focused on mobilizing the next generation of philanthropists to “strategically give” donations and time to important non-profits focused on education, health and fitness. Jack and his wife, Karen, live in El Dorado Hills with their three children and enjoy golf, cycling and running. To establish a culture of fitness in his family and community, Mr. Crawford trained and completed an IronMan triathlon in France during 2009.

Mike Del Ponte
Founder | Sparkseed
Mike is the founder of Sparkseed, a nonprofit organization that invests in the top college-age social entrepreneurs in the United Sates. He ran his first national organization at the age of 18, which focused on building community on high school campuses to prevent school violence. Before founding Sparkseed, Mike served as a humanitarian on four continents, as a member of the Christian Peacemaker Teams in the West Bank, an orphanage volunteer in Jamaica, and a microfinance consultant in Nepal. Mike enjoys public speaking and has addressed audiences at the Yale Law School, Social Venture Network, the Haas School of Business at UC Berkeley, and many other venues. Mike received his B.A. from Boston College and an M.A.R. from the Yale University Divinity School. He is a member of the Sandbox Network and a Frank H. Buck Scholar.

Sean Foote
Venture Partner | Labrador Ventures
More info coming soon…

Tim Freundlich
Managing Partner | Good Capital
Tim is the Executive Director in Giving Assets, Special Advisor to the Calvert Foundation, and Managing Partner for Good Capital, and an innovator in new financial instruments in the social enterprise sector. Over the last thirteen years, he has served in a number of capacities at Calvert Social Investment Foundation, including his current role as Special Advisor. Tim conceived of and launched the Giving Fund – the $40 million impact investment-based donor advised fund which has been spun out to a new organization, Giving Assets, for which he serves as the Executive Director. He was also instrumental in building the $225 million Calvert Community Investment Note sourced form 12,000 investors large and small (with more than $750 million invested into 300+ nonprofits and for profits globally), and helped launch Community Investment Partners, an analysis and asset administration group for community development and social enterprise investment with $300 million under administration. He co-founded and serves as Managing Partner for Good Capital, which in addition to its flagship Social Enterprise Expansion Fund LP, has two operating spin outs, the annual SOCAP Conference and Hub Bay Area. Additionally, he serves on the Board of Hub North America that links to a global network of 25 Hubs across five continents with 6,000+ members. He lives in San Francisco with his wife Julie and sons Milo and Gus.

Saul Garlick
President, CEO | ThinkImpact
Saul Garlick is the founder and executive director of ThinkImpact, an international non-profit organization that connects American students to rural villages in Africa to alleviate poverty through leadership and entrepreneurship. Garlick also serves as ambassador to the United States for The Buffelshoek Trust, an organization committed to the construction of much-needed schools in rural South Africa. Saul served as managing editor of the SAIS Review, as founder and Editor-in-Chief of The Hopkins Donkey and has worked on Capitol Hill for Rep. DeGette (D-CO) and as acting desk officer for Angola in the Bureau of African Affairs at the U.S. Department of State. Garlick serves on several boards including the Advisory Board for the Global Center for Social Entrepreneurship at Univ. of the Pacfic and the National Board of Directors of the College Democrats of America Alumni Association, and the Advisory Board of the Next America Project at CSIS. Garlick is a Truman Scholar and has received numerous awards including the William C. Foster Award, the Circles of Change Award, and the Fire Within Social Entrepreneurship Award. Garlick received his BA with honors in 2006 from Johns Hopkins University and his MA in American foreign policy and International Economics at the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) at Johns Hopkins University.

Joe Johnson
Executive Vice President (Administration) | American University of Nigeria
Joe’s career in the banking industry spanned 36 years. His last three assignments were as President of troubled community banks that required substantial restructuring to return them to profitability. During his career he also taught bank management, small business finance, and analyzing financial statements. Upon his retirement in 2005 he has taught at UOP in the Masters Program both entrepreneurship and organizational behavior. He also consults with small businesses and banks. He is on the board of the Katalysis Bootstrap Fund that supports a network of 22 microfinance institutions serving over 250,000 clients in the poorest countries of Central America. Joe conducted courses in Entrepreneurship at universities in Uganda and Rwanda in the fall of 2008 for SIS and the Global Center, which resulted in business plan competitions among the students in both institutions, judged by a delegation of visiting professionals led by Margee Ensign and Ron Cordes.

Heidi Kuhn
Founder | Roots of Peace
A cancer diagnosis and successful treatment prompted Heidi Kuhn to want to give back to the less fortunate and to live close to and nurture the land. Inspired by the international campaign to ban land mines, she founded Roots of Peace in 1997 at her family’s home in the California wine country. The organization takes practical steps toward sustainable development and enduring peace by converting minefields to vineyards, agricultural fields and safe migration corridors for wildlife. Roots of Peace has helped renew production in Croatia’s wine-growing regions. In Afghanistan, it has removed 100,000 land mines and proved farmers could earn more growing grapes than poppies. The model has been extended to additional provinces in Afghanistan and Angola, as well as a new start-up program in Vietnam. Heidi is a Pacific alum and a winner of the Skoll Award for Social Entrepreneurship.

Jonathan Lewis
Founder, CEO | MicroCredit Enterprises
Jonathan is Founder and CEO of MicroCredit Enterprises, where he works full-time on a pro bono basis to address global poverty issues. MicroCredit Enterprises is an innovative, open source, not-for-profit venture which leverages private capital to make tiny business loans primarily to impoverished women in developing countries. The MicroCredit Enterprises model takes advantage of economic guarantees in the developed world to provide capital for microcredit.
Previously, Mr. Lewis was founder and President of the Academy for International Health Studies and also founded the International Summit on Public-Private Health Sector Partnerships. He has served as CEO of the California Assoc. of HMOs, Chief Budget Advisor to the President of the California State Senate, Member of the Cabinet of the California Superintendent of Public Instruction, and Chief of Staff for three California commissions in the fields of health, education and tax policy. He was the founding Chair of Freedom from Hunger’s distinguished Ambassadors Council and a founding Initiator of the Alliance for Fair Microfinance. He is currently a Member of the Advisory Boards for the Global Philanthropy Forum, the International Center for Corporate Accountability and several social entrepreneur companies. He has also been the founder/owner of a public policy consulting firm, real estate investment company, public interest citizens’ group (tax reform) and contemporary art gallery. His latest venture, Opportunity Collaboration, seeks to bring together leaders from all over the world to leverage resources and create new alliances in the fight against poverty.

Gillian Murphy
Director | San Joaquin Delta College Small Business Development Center (SBDC)
Gillian has directed the San Joaquin Delta College Small Business Development Center (SBDC) since 1989, providing consulting, training, and resources to the business community in a four-county region. She also directs the Statewide SBDC Hub which provides assistance to the 25 community college-based SBDCs throughout California. In 2001, Gillian was honored by the Sacramento District SBA Office with the Women in Business Advocate award and in 2002 was named Small Business Advocate of the Year by the Stockton/San Joaquin African American Chamber of Commerce and received a similar award from the San Joaquin County Hispanic Chamber in 2007. In 2004 and again in 2007, she was presented the State Star Award by the National Association of Small Business Development Centers. Gillian currently serves on Rep. Jerry McNerney’s Small Business Advisory Board and is a founding board member of the newly formed Central Valley Microfinance Fund, that will be operated out of the Global Center.

Royce Nicolaisen
Chairman, CEO | Otis McAllister, Inc.
Royce has more than 25 years experience in global trade and since 1991 has served as Chairman and CEO of Otis McAllister, Inc., a multi-million dollar international food and beverage import/export corporation founded in 1892. Otis is headquartered in San Francisco, with regional offices in Hong Kong, Mexico City, and Bangkok, and commercial operations in over 80 countries. Otis is among the first corporations to integrate social entrepreneurship criteria into their corporate grant program. Royce is a graduate of Columbia University and has served on boards of several agricultural and trade organizations. Royce is a member of the Lafayette-Orinda Presbyterian Church and an active member there of the Global Development Committee that funds sustainable development projects in Guatemala and other international programs. He is in the process of forming his own family foundation to support social entrepreneurship initiatives. Royce is a founding sponsor of the Global Center’s Ambassador Corps Fellowship Program.

Dave Peery
Executive Director | Peery Foundation
Dave is the executive director of the Peery Foundation, a family foundation based in Palo Alto, California. After working in the commercial real-estate business, he has turned his attention to bringing about social change through the work of the foundation. The Peery Foundation seeks to build self-reliance for youth and families living in poverty. The foundation does this by investing in social entrepreneurs in the San Francisco Bay Area and around the world. Dave earned a B.A. in Latin American Studies in 2005 from Brigham Young University, and lives in Palo Alto with his wife Lillie and their 4 children. The Peery Foundation is an early supporter of the Global Center, and a founding sponsor of its newly launched Ambassador Corps Fellowship Program.

Paul Rice
President, CEO | TransFair USA
Paul Rice is President & CEO of TransFair USA. Since launching the Fair Trade Certified label in 1998, Paul has pushed to mainstream the Fair Trade movement by partnering with over 800 U.S. companies, expanding certification across food products, and exploring new categories such as apparel. With 2009 global retail sales of almost $5 billion, Fair Trade certification is helping millions of small farmers and workers live better. Paul has been honored for his pioneering work as a social entrepreneur by Ashoka, the World Economic Forum, Ethisphere, Fast Company magazine, and the Skoll Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship. Previously, Paul worked for 11 years as a rural development specialist in Nicaragua, where he founded Nicaragua’s first Fair Trade, organic coffee export cooperative. Paul holds a BA from Yale University and an MBA from UC Berkeley.

Keely Stevenson
CEO | Bamboo Finance USA
Keely’s commitment to social change was sparked by her lessons learned working with people with terminal illnesses as a hospice volunteer in Sacramento, California in the early 1990s. She built on those lessons of appreciation for life through her work over the last decade in the field of social entrepreneurship with experience on five continents. She now currently serves as the CEO of Bamboo Finance USA, which is a commercial investment firm that specializes in the financing of social entrepreneurship globally. Keely joined Bamboo in 2007 after living in East Africa and working with the Acumen Fund, a global social venture investment fund. She supported the establishment of Acumen’s Nairobi office and provided management support to AtoZ, a producer of anti-malaria mosquito nets, focusing on distribution and pricing strategies in Tanzania. Earlier in her career, she was the first employee hired by the CEO of the Skoll Foundation where she designed grant programs for social entrepreneurs and led the team who created the world’s first online community for social entrepreneurs, Social Edge. She has also served as the Interim Executive Director of a social enterprise in Peru (ProPeru Fund) and a start-up professional development program for social entrepreneurs in India (Social-Impact International). She was a consultant on the viability of a UK based risk capital fund for Triodos Bank and economic development strategies for the Royal Bafokeng Nation, one of Africa’s wealthiest kingdoms. She studied politics at UC Berkeley and her passion for social business led her to pursue an MBA degree at Oxford University. She co-authored a publication on risk capital for social enterprises published by Oxford.

Karen Tse
Founder, CEO | International Bridges to Justice
Karen is CEO and Founder of International Bridges to Justice. A former public defender, Karen first developed her interest in the cross section of criminal law and human rights as a Thomas J. Watson Fellow in 1986, after observing Southeast Asian refugees detained in a local prison without trial. In 1994, she moved to Cambodia to train the country’s first core group of public defenders and subsequently served as a United Nations Judicial Mentor. Under the auspices of the U.N., she trained judges and prosecutors, and established the first arraignment court in Cambodia.After witnessing thousands of prisoners of all ages being held without trials, usually after being tortured into making ‘confessions’, Karen founded International Bridges to Justice in 2000 to promote systemic global change in the administration of criminal justice. In the initial stages, she negotiated groundbreaking measures in judicial reform with the Chinese, Vietnamese and Cambodian governments. Under her leadership, IBJ has expanded its programming to sixteen countries, including Rwanda, Burundi and India. IBJ has created a Global Defense Support Program to bring IBJ assistance to public defenders worldwide. In 2010, IBJ launched the Justice Training Center in Singapore.A graduate of UCLA Law School and Harvard Divinity School, Karen was named by U.S. News & World Report as one of America’s Best Leaders in 2007. She has been recognized by the Skoll Foundation, Ashoka and Echoing Green as a leading social entrepreneur. Karen was the recipient of the 2008 Harvard Divinity School’s First Decade Award, and the 2008 American Bar Association’s International Human Rights Award. She also received the 2009 Gleitsman International Award at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government.

Warner Woodworth
Professor of Organizational Behavior | Marriott School, Brigham Young University
Warner is a social entrepreneur and professor of organizational behavior at the Marriott School, Brigham Young University. He has been a leader in the global movement to prepare a new generation of college-age social entrepreneurs for fighting poverty. Using his courses and the university as a social enterprise incubator, he has spun off over 40 humanitarian projects in the past 15 years- providing capacity building mechanisms such as literacy, healthcare, microfinance, appropriate technology, and worker-owned co-ops. Over the last decade, Warner has been a founder, board chair, or director of Enterprise Mentors, HELP International, and the UNITUS Microfinance Fund as well as 13 other non-profit organizations that have established income-generating family microenterprises for self-reliance in 22 countries. Collectively, Warner, his students, and their associated non-profit organizations have raised over $10 million for microfinance, trained 140,000 micro-entrepreneurs in small business skills, and served more than a million impoverished microcredit clients in India, Mexico, Kenya, the Philippines, and many other countries.

Sakena Yacoobi
Founder | The Afghan Institute of Learning (AIL)
Sakena founded the Afghan Institute of Learning (AIL) in 1995 to restore educational and health programs in Afghanistan that were dramatically cut during 30 years of warfare. The organization’s 18 Women’s Learning Centers (the first of their kind in Afghanistan) provide services to more than 350,000 Afghan women and children each year. Its 16 Educational Learning Centers have trained 10,000 teachers and have provided school supplies to thousands of young Afghan students, while its university has prepared 180 students for careers as community leaders. AIL was the first organization to offer human rights and leadership training to Afghan women. AIL plans to expand its teacher training programs and its partnership network to 100 new community-based organizations, ultimately training 3,300 new teachers and improving the health of 500,000 women and children. Sakena has been honored with countless awards including the 2005 Democracy Award of the National Endowment for Democracy, the 2004 Women’s Rights Prize from the Peter Gruber Foundation, the Ashoka Senior Fellow Award as the first Ashoka from Afghanistan, the 2006 Skoll Social Entrepreneurship Award, the 2007 Gleitsman International Activist Award from the Center for Public Leadership at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, and most recently the Henry R. Kravis Prize in Leadership awarded in March 2009. Sakena is a Pacific alum and was awarded an Honorary Doctorate by the University of the Pacific recognizing her as an exemplary social entrepreneur and humanitarian in 2007.