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01 Feb 1998, Bangladesh. Professor Muhammed Yunas, founder of the Grameen Bank in Bangladesh visits several of the Grameen Bank Centers. The Bank pioneered the concept of small or microloans to women, allowing them to start businesses and gain economic power. One successful business has been the purchase of mobile phones. Women rent phone time at a profit to others in their village, allowing converations with husbands, fathers and sons working overseas. Image by © Karen Kasmauski/CorbisMuhammad Yunas, Grameen Bank Founder
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Original caption: Bangladeshi woman received a micro-loan from the Grameen Bank for a sewing machine. She is using it to earn a living. Her daughters watch as she uses the sewing machine. Image by © Karen Kasmauski/Science Faction/CorbisBangladeshi Woman Sewing Her Way to Success
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01 Feb 1998, Narsingdi, Bangladesh. A Bangladeshi woman who has received a small loan from Grameen Bank to produce dyed cloth looks at some of her products while they are drying. | Location: Narshinghdi, Bangladesh. Image by © Karen Kasmauski/CorbisWoman with Dyed Cloth
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01 Feb 1998, Bangladesh. Grameen Bank loans allow these Bangladeshi women to operate a business. With a $300 Grameen Bank loan, each purchased a phone as an investment, renting time to others in their village to communicate with family members, many of whom work overseas. Image by © Karen Kasmauski/CorbisWomen with Cell Phones
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ca. 1998, Bangladesh. Launched into business with a small loan from the Grameen Bank, a Bangladeshi woman travels from door to door selling cookware. Image by © Karen Kasmauski/CorbisWoman Selling Cookware
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01 Feb 1998, Narsingdi, Bangladesh. The Grameen Bank in Bangladesh is a pioneer of small loans or microloans, that can help women start businesses and gain economic power. The loans are carefully monitored with strict repayment guidelines. Here, in the village of Narsinghdi, money to repay a loan is collected from participants in the program. The Grameen Bank approach is considered highly successful and is widely emulated. | Location: Narsinghdi, Bangladesh. Image by © Karen Kasmauski/CorbisGrameen Bank Loans
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Original caption: Saluting the future, women meeting near Dhaka to repay micro-loans acknowledge the official from the Grameen Bank, who freed them from lives of powerlessness and isolation. Clients are 95 percent female and 100 percent poor. Image by © Karen Kasmauski/Science Faction/CorbisBangladesh Grameen Bank Micro-loans
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Original caption: A Grameen Bank borrower saws wood as part her small business in a Bangladesh village. Image by © Karen Kasmauski/Science Faction/CorbisGrameen Bank Borrower at Work
![Karen Kasmauski](https://wisesociety.it/wp-content/plugins/autothumb/image.php?src=/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/foto-logo-chiamata2.png&h=70&w=70&zc=1&hash=3267dc44075cf4807f09ae61797d8656)
Foto di Karen Kasmauski
Since 1984, Karen Kasmauski has photographed more than two dozen major stories for National Geographic magazine. Her work examines issues of science, public health, and global change.
Kasmauski entered college with plans to become a marine biologist. The degrees she ultimately received, in anthropology and religion, helped her explore her real fascination—how science allows us to understand ourselves and how that shapes our destiny.
Da photography.nationalgeographic.com
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