
Housed at Duke University and in partnership with UNICEF, the Innovation Accelerator is an important hub for engaging faculty, staff, students and alumni around social innovation and entrepreneurship, global health, international development and civic engagement.
Through this partnership, UNICEF and Duke are helping social innovation entrepreneurs acquire knowledge, tools and networks to achieve maximum impact for children and youth.
While increasing the effectiveness, sustainability and scale of impact of the innovations selected, the Accelerator also seeks to:
For its inaugural cohort, the Innovation Accelerator worked with six social enterprises to advance their innovations in menstrual health and hygiene (MHH) — a priority area for UNICEF as part of its global efforts to promote gender equity. Innovations in MHH go a long way toward supporting adolescent girls to become healthy, educated and empowered women, able to direct the course of their own lives.
As adolescent girls go through puberty and begin to menstruate, they face challenges at school and at home that can lead to stress, shame, embarrassment, confusion and fear. These challenges may include:
Poor mentrual hygiene management (MHM) has also been linked to reproductive and urinary tract infections. Interventions that ensure access to private facilities with water for MHM and that educate women about safer, low-cost MHM materials can reduce physical health risks while helping to keep girls in school.
The enterprises in Cohort 1 graduated from the program in October 2021 having achieved significant impact. For example:
Throughout the Accelerator program, the inaugural cohort received critical support in scaling their solutions, even as the COVID-19 pandemic impacted communities and disrupted vital services across the globe.
Seven social enterprise teams from six countries where selected in May 2021 to join the Accelerator to develop and scale innovations that tackle challenges in water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) in Africa.
The innovators’ solutions – which range from soap bars made from recycled soap remnants, to innovative handwashing stations designed for children with disabilities – aim to strengthen access to vital resources in underserved communities.
Water and sanitation are at the core of sustainable development and underpin poverty reduction, economic growth, environmental sustainability and health. Adequate sanitation is essential to childhood survival and development, improving children’s education, increasing productivity and building resilience in the face of disease and disaster. The Accelerator cohort will build on UNICEF's ongoing work with partners to strengthen WASH services in schools, households and community settings.
As noted in the Accelerator's 2021 annual report, the impact of Cohort 2's efforts so far include:
In August 2022, UNICEF and Duke announced a third cohort of six social enterprises, each dedicated to supporting Sustainable Development Goal 6 — clean water and sanitation for all — in East Asia and the Pacific and beyond.
Solutions range from a youth-led sanitation project in Vanuatu to a compact toilet with integrated shower and handwashing in Kiribati. Each project is related to futureproofing WASH systems, making them adaptive or climate resilient, with a focus on youth engagement and youth leadership. Learn more about these innovators and their projects here.
Learn more about the Duke-UNICEF Innovation Accelerator.
Top photo: Adolescent girls in the Ramgarh district of Jharkhand state, India, participate in a body-mapping activity, part of a UNICEF-supported program to improve menstrual health and hygiene and help girls stay in school. © UNICEF/UN0214896/Vishwanathan