DREAMS Model Recognized as World Changing Idea by Fast Company

02 May 2023

The DREAMS model for poverty alleviation led by Mercy Corps and Village Enterprise is the recipient of Fast Company’s 2023 World Changing Ideas Award for the EMEA region. The model was recognized for its impact, design, scalability, and ingenuity in the pursuit of good. 

First developed by Mercy Corps and Village Enterprise in 2021, DREAMS (Delivering Resilient Enterprises and Market Systems) merges Village Enterprise’s poverty graduation program with Mercy Corps’ expertise in market systems development in order to equip refugees with the skills, resources, and markets to start sustainable businesses and graduate from extreme poverty. These two models have been combined before but have never been purposefully integrated and rigorously evaluated in combination, previously limiting the potential for impact and scale. 

Allison Huggins, Mercy Corps Deputy Regional Director for Africa said, “Self-sustaining solutions like DREAMS have never been more essential. As we look for solutions to address multiple forces – from climate change to the rise of violent extremist movements and globalization – rising displacement and global inequality will continue to play out in ways that profoundly impact the ability of families to sustainably escape from poverty.”

DREAMS is already transforming the lives of refugees living in the Bidi Bidi Refugee Settlement in Uganda and in Dollo Ado Refugee Camp in Ethiopia. In total, DREAMS will reach more than 33,000 households across the two countries and impact more than 200,000 lives.

“What makes DREAMS so special is the unique partnership between Village Enterprise and Mercy Corps that drives innovation as we take on two of the biggest challenges facing the world today—forced displacement and poverty,” said Liz Corbishley, Chief Strategy and Partnerships Officer at Village Enterprise. “DREAMS started as a project focused on providing sustainable support to refugees, and it has grown into a new model for ending extreme poverty—equipping the most vulnerable households with the skills, resources, and markets to become self-reliant.”

The model will be studied in a randomized controlled trial conducted by IDinsight, providing valuable evidence and insights that can be used by the international development and humanitarian sectors to better serve refugees and others living in extreme poverty in the future. 

DREAMS for Refugees was a 2021 winner of the Larsen Lam ICONIQ Impact Award for Refugees managed by Lever for Change. DREAMS is funded by Conrad N. Hilton Foundation, ICONIQ Impact, IKEA Foundation, Sea Grape Foundation, and The Patchwork Collective. 

Annemieke de Jong, Head of Programmes, Refugee Livelihoods at the IKEA Foundation said, “We firmly believe we can effectively invest in building livelihoods through DREAMS so families can get back on their feet, doing what families should do best—be a loving and thriving place to be.”

 

About Mercy Corps

Mercy Corps is a global team of nearly 6,000 humanitarians working to create a world where everyone can prosper. In more than 40 countries affected by crisis, disaster, poverty, and climate change we work alongside communities, local governments, forward-thinking corporations, and social entrepreneurs to meet urgent needs and develop long-term solutions to make lasting change possible. Mercy Corps has a total operating budget of over $550M and in 2022 reached over 38 million people. 

About Village Enterprise

Village Enterprise’s mission is to end extreme poverty in rural Africa through entrepreneurship, innovation, and collective action. We work with vulnerable women, refugees, and youth who are most impacted by climate change, conflict, and displacement, and equip them with skills and resources to launch climate-smart businesses, build savings, and put themselves and their families onto a sustainable path out of extreme poverty. Village Enterprise has started over 74,000 businesses, trained over 264,000 first-time entrepreneurs, and positively transformed the lives of over 1,565,000 people in Uganda, Kenya, Rwanda, Ethiopia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Congo-Brazzaville, Mozambique, and Tanzania.