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Jane McGonigal, and social entrepreneurs Peter Thum and Leila Janah to join the ranks.
FORBES: Connect
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What so many of the people Janah met really wanted was a job that pays decently.
FORBES: Samasource Taps Silicon Valley To Create Jobs For Poor People
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Also included: social entrepreneur Leila Janah, whose company Samasource I wrote about last year.
FORBES: The Amazing Women Who Make America, Telling Their Stories Via Video
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Janah has seen how finding work for poor people gives them a sense of dignity and self.
FORBES: Magazine Article
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What so many of the poor really want, Janah told me, is a job that pays decently.
FORBES: Google Gives A Boost To 'Microwork' Nonprofit Samasource
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Does Janah feel she's taking jobs away from Americans by using low-cost foreigners?
FORBES: Magazine Article
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Janah grew up in various suburbs of Los Angeles in a family she describes as not well-off and attended public high school.
FORBES: Magazine Article
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Leila Chirayath Janah is only 28, but it didn't take her long to come to the conclusion that massive foreign aid isn't the solution to poverty.
FORBES: Magazine Article
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Leila Chirayath Janah, founder of San Francisco nonprofit Samasource, talked about the thrill of providing refugees in Kenya with computer-based work commissioned by Silicon Valley companies (including Google).
FORBES: Magazine Article
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Leila Janah, a social entrepreneur who employs an army of women and youth living in poverty, believes in her work so much she tattooed the name of her organization, Sama, on her arm.
FORBES: God Save the Philanthropunks! What Punk Rock Can Teach Us About Saving the World
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Helping a large Indian outsourcer go public, Janah hit on the notion that poor, educated people even in rural areas of developing countries could do data-entry work, just as people living in large Indian cities do.
FORBES: Focus