“HACK FOR 2030” WORKS TO ADDRESS UN SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS IN FIVE-DAY HACKATHON
Hostelling
International Boston hosted “Hack For 2030: The Final Presentations,” the
world’s first sustainable hackathon inside a hostel on Sunday. For five days,
hackers and global change-makers joined together to create and design social
enterprises to address the United Nation Sustainable Development Goals, a UN
initiative dedicated to “promoting and coordinating implementation of
internationally agreed development goals,” according to the Sustainable
Development Knowledge Platform website.
Attendees
came to the hotel to view the final presentations of the competition. The
hackathon was a collaboration of three different organizations — Hostelling
International USA, World Merit and Wanderbrief — all connected through travel
and social action.
HI
Boston not only hosts visitors from over 100 countries, but is also a “green
building,” one of the most sustainable hostels in the world, making it a
natural pick to host “Hack for 2030,” according to Netanya Trimboli, director
of communications and PR for Hostelling International USA.
“We
are a nonprofit with the purpose of creating a more tolerant world,” Trimboli
said. “We bring people from different backgrounds together in these hostels and
create experiences where they get to know each other and break down cultural
barriers.”
Hostelling
International USA is a network of hostels committed to sustainability and
breaking down cultural barriers. World Merit is an organization that
incentivizes social action by rewarding their members, called “changemakers,”
with opportunities and events. Wanderbrief is a platform that connects creative
freelancers, whom Wanderbrief calls “creatives,” with companies abroad, trading
their skills for travel costs and experience.
The
projects participants worked to develop were created in August at World Merit’s
event, Merit360. According to its website, individuals ages 18-35 were invited
to develop a strategy to “lead and inspire a global community to take action
and create change.”
“It’s
where we bring 360 people together to work on projects to tackle the United
Nations Sustainable Development Goals,” said Marlou Hermsen, general manager of
World Merit. “We really felt the urge of proving the delegates of our program a
follow-up to keep working on their projects and keep the momentum going.”
When
the team came up with the idea for a hackathon, Hermsen said, they thought
identifying groups in need first would help move the process along faster.
There
were 17 participants at the hackathon from all over the world, made up of
changemakers from World Merit, creatives from Wanderbrief and developers
recruited to help create the programming needed for the projects, and they were
all split into four groups.
Throughout
the five-day event, they volunteered at a local hospital and explored the city,
but once the hackathon began, they all got down to work.
“They
were finding a specific solution for their specific needs and they had 48 hours
to do that,” Hermsen said. “So everyone worked on a different pace. I know some
people slept and some people didn’t.”
Three
groups presented new and improved Merit 360 projects to the judges. The first
project, “LAIRN,” is a platform that distributes life-skill educational
programs to children around the world via radio. The second, “The Climate
Express,” is a plan to bring resources and information to communities most
affected by climate change to make them more resilient. Another project,
“Keeper,” is an initiative to fight the stigma against menstruation that stops
girls, all over the world, from going to school.
In
addition to these three projects, a fourth group was given the task of creating
an app for the UN World Tourism Organization, which had just declared 2017 the
International Year of Sustainable Tourism for Development. This task was
assigned to a team of four strangers — Ramin Bahari, a freelance graphic
designer based in Amsterdam, Gururaj Sridhar, a software engineer from India,
Richard Yatar, a Merit360 executor from the Philippines and Femata
Stubblefield, a World Merit changemaker from Liberia.
“This
experience meant a lot to me,” Stubblefield wrote in an email. “I really want to
be able to make significant changes with World Merit and I’m really glad I got
paired with people I didn’t know to enhance the experience even more.”
Bahari
presented the winning idea, Good Guides. The concept is a tourism app that can
connect travelers to locals willing to offer activities such as a bike ride
through the city or lunch at a favorite restaurant. Travelers would receive a
new experience and get to learn about the local culture, while guides receive
points for successful meet-ups, which can be redeemed for travel discounts.
“There
are people all over the world that are a part of these projects,” Hermsen said,
“so hopefully some of the creatives and developers will help to implement them
around the world.
By Michael
Dratch
Credit:
www.dailyfreepress.com
“HACK FOR 2030” WORKS TO ADDRESS UN SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS IN FIVE-DAY HACKATHON
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