Andrew E. Rice Award 2017

2017 Andrew E. Rice Award

For Leadership and Innovation by a Young Professional in International Development
Presented at SID-Washington's Annual Conference

Each year we present the Andrew E. Rice Award for Leadership and Innovation by a Young Professional in International Development (Rice Award) at our Annual Conference. This award recognizes the achievements of an exceptional young professional working in the field of international development. Previously named “The Truman Award,” the award was established in 2003 by Andrew E. Rice and Robert Berg to honor leadership, innovation, impact and commitment. It was renamed The Rice Award in 2011 to honor the memory and contributions of one of its chief architects.

The recipient of this award will demonstrate leadership and innovation, as well as tremendous promise for advancement in the field of international development. The selected winner will also recognize the importance of international development as a means of service to those who are most in need and will work towards sustainable, people-centered development.

2017 Rice Award Winner: Mr. Pascal Masuba

We are delighted to announce the winner for our 2017 Andrew E. Rice Award, Mr. Pascal Masuba! This year the SID-Washington Rice Award Committee reviewed twenty-five exceptional applications from across the globe. This award recognizes the achievements of an exceptional young professional demonstrating leadership, innovation and excellence in their contributions to the field of international development. The Rice Award will be presented at the 2017 SID-Washington Annual Conference on Thursday, June 1. Please join us in congratulating Pascal for his outstanding achievements!
 

Winner Profile

Mr. Pacal Masuba is an international development professional, emerging creative designer, and an information systems graduate with over six years of experience in the nonprofit sector. Serving as a child advocate for Search for Common Ground during the Sierra Leone decade civil war, Pascal dedicated his life to being the voice of the voiceless and a shoulder for the vulnerable and marginalized of societies.
 
He then joined BRAC as an International Young Professional and after completing a 6-months training program in Bangladesh, he led the Communications Unit of BRAC Sierra Leone for over two years. During the Ebola outbreak in Sierra Leone, Pascal also acted as an Emergency Response Coordinator; giving daily situation updates and analysis, and shaping the organization's response both in the short and long-term.
 
Pascal is the founder of Zenith Academy (a home remedial for school dropouts in Sierra Leone), co-founder and head of the Social Innovations unit of the African Changemakers Network (a platform that brings together outstanding young African changemakers). Pascal is an Atlas Corps fellow, a YALA Citizen journalist, a HIVE Global Leader, and a HeForShe advocate. Currently Pascal serves at World Vision International as a Knowledge Management and Communications expert; providing technical support to World Vision's global campaign to end violence against children.
 

Award

The Rice Award will be presented to the awardee at the Society for International Development’s Annual Conference in Washington, DC. While there will be only one winner, other notable candidates may be mentioned at the award presentation ceremony.

The award consists of:

  • An inscribed plaque recognizing the awardee;
  • A prize in the amount of $1,000;
  • A one-year, honorary membership to SID-Washington;
  • The opportunity to present your work at an upcoming SID-Washington event.

We have had many exceptional and inspiring awardees in the past. Last year's winner, Nungari Mwangi, conducted field research on cut flower value chains in Kenya and previously worked as a consultant for Dalberg Global Development Advisors, primarily working on agriculture strategies with the public sector. She has also worked closely with the Ministry of Agriculture in both Tanzania and Sudan and is working towards her PhD in Development Studies at the University of Cambridge. 

In 2015, we honored Mariam Adil, who is an Operations Analyst with the World Bank, and who founded GRID, the Gaming Revolution for International Development, that gamifies the practice of international development by creating low-cost digital games that inspire social change. 

For a list of past winners, please click here.

    

     Nungari Mwangi, 2016 Andrew E. Rice Award Winner                                                                                             Mariam Adil, 2015 Andrew E. Rice Award Winner

Eligibility

  1. Age from 22 to 32 years old.

  2. Availability to either accept the Rice Award in-person at SID-W’s 2017 Annual Conference on June 1, 2017 or the ability to provide a pre-recorded video acceptance speech to be shown at the Annual Conference.

  3. At least two years of experience as a volunteer or paid young professional in international development including demonstrating exceptional commitment to improving the lives of people in developing countries.

  4. Application and all supporting materials must be received by Friday, March 31st, 2017.

Criteria

Rice Award applicants must submit a two-page maximum (11 pt. font), single-sided personal statement responding to the following:
  1. How have you demonstrated creativity and innovation by developing new ideas and/or adapting successful solutions to problems and challenges, or optimizing unique opportunities, in advancing international development?

  2. Describe your vision and experience leading people and change.

  3. What are some qualitative and/or quantitative measures of the impact of your work in international development?

  4. Demonstrate your commitment to upholding the ideals of sustainable, inclusive, just, equitable and participatory development.

  5. How have you committed to advancing the profession of international development? (e.g., through knowledge advancement, participation in relevant professional organizations, institutional development, etc.)

Applicants must also submit a three page maximum, single-sided resume or c.v.

Documentation provided in addition to the application form, personal statement, two letters of recommendation, and c.v./resume will not be reviewed. 

               

Nomination Process

Candidates for the award must complete the application form (either online or in print) and may submit up to two one-page letters of recommendation/support describing:

  1. The association with the candidate and the length of time associated with the candidate.

  2. The qualities and experiences that make the candidate distinct in the criteria areas.

  3. Why the person recommending/supporting his/her nomination believes the candidate should be selected for the Rice Award. 

Selection Process

The selection committee is comprised of international development professionals drawn from across the international development community including senior practitioners and young professionals.

Donations

Please contact us if you would like to donate to the Rice Award. We thank you for your generosity for donations received.

Contact Information

If you have any questions or concerns, please email [email protected] or call 202-331-1317.

About Andrew E. Rice

Andrew E. Rice helped create the field of international development. In the decades following World War II, decolonization and the Cold War necessitated a new relationship between the Western and developing worlds. That’s when Andy began thinking and writing about the nature of this new relationship and organizing others to do the same.

Andy was introduced to internationalism early on, spending part of his childhood in Geneva, where his father was the U.S. representative to an agency of the League of Nations. After serving in intelligence during the War and obtaining his undergraduate and master’s degrees from Harvard, he moved to Washington to begin a 60-year career crafting public policy.

He began by joining or helping to form a series of advocacy organizations dedicated to an internationalist foreign policy incorporating aid for the underdeveloped world. These included Americans for Democratic Action, the American Veterans Committee and the Point Four Committee (this last named for foreign aid’s position in President Truman’s list of diplomatic priorities in his 1949 inaugural address).

He also began publishing a newsletter, “Doorway to the 20th Century,” to report on this brand new discipline. His longtime friend and colleague Bob Berg recently recalled, “In the pre-Internet age it was THE place to find the news--crisply written…with never a hint of bias.”

After stints as a staffer on both sides of Capitol Hill and obtaining his PhD from Syracuse University, Andy served on the academic committee that gave birth to the Peace Corps. He then joined the Kennedy Administration as an aide to Chester Bowles, a prominent diplomat to the developing world and early UN official.

Andy was a founder of the Society for International Development (SID) in 1957 and in 1962 became executive director, a position he held for 15 years. Bob Berg has described the scene from that era: “SID's office was filled with young people beavering away. Andy, always cool, friendly, professional and kind, kept it going in highly productive and effective ways.”

Andy’s career both reflected and shaped changes in the idea of international development. As the need for environmental sustainability grew clearer, he became board chair of the environmentally-focused Worldwatch Institute. Seeing the need to better educate the public on the importance of internationalism, he became an active member of the United Nations Association, serving as chair of the national capital chapter.

Alina Zyszkowski, one of countless young professionals Andy mentored over his career, said of him: “Andy Rice was a true visionary and a real friend to so many of us…Today we hear a lot about knowledge sharing and networking. Andy was making that happen through SID over 50 years ago.”

Andy once summed up his approach to international development: “I believe that the right path to a better world is expanding individual freedom combined with cooperative endeavor.” Through his ideas, hard work and, to quote a colleague, “friendly, humble and generous” personality, he moved us all down that path.