Three Peace Corps Response (PCR) volunteers were sworn in
mid-June by U.S. Ambassador Philip Goldberg at the Peace Corps Office in Manila where one of the
volunteers will be working with the International Rice Research Institute
(IRRI) starting July, according to an IRRI bulletin on Thursday.
Melody L. Balcet, one of the volunteers and an IBM employee,
will work for three months with IRRI the premier international research
organization dedicated to reducing poverty and hunger, improving the health and
welfare of rice farmers and consumers, and protecting the rice-growing
environment for future generations through rice science.
Balcet will serve as an institutional strengthening
specialist to help build the capacity of IRRI’s voluminous research information
assets through digitization, big data analytics, and cloud computing, among
other IT transformation strategies.
She will also be working as part of a team that is serving
the Southeast Asian Regional Center for Graduate Study and Research in
Agriculture (SEARCA), a non-profit research and training center mandated to
strengthen institutional capacities in agricultural and rural development in Southeast Asia .
IRRI and SEARCA have been active member agencies of the Los
Baños Science Community for many years.
Launched in December 2015, the Peace Corps Response program
is part of the innovative public-private partnership between Peace Corps and
IBM.
The partnership allows highly skilled IBM corporate
professionals to serve overseas in short-term, high-impact pro bono consulting
assignments.
The volunteer will serve alongside a 14-member IBM Corporate
Service Corps (CSC) team of IBM employees from the U.S. ,
Brazil , South Africa , Slovakia ,
Italy , Spain , Mexico ,
the Netherlands , and India that will
arrive in July 2016 to serve the country for one month.
The CSC is IBM’s pro bono consulting program, which was
created in 2008, to help solve some of the most challenging problems in
communities around the world while providing IBM employees with unique
leadership development.
IBM employees spend four weeks in groups of 10 to 15 working
collaboratively with their host government and community counterparts to
develop blueprints that address issues such as economic development, energy and
transportation, education, and healthcare.
PYXERA Global, an international NGO, which specializes in
pro bono programs and one of IBM’s global implementing partners of the
Corporate Service Corps, is part of the coordination team that is carrying out
the program in Los Baños , Philippines .
The Peace Corps and IBM partnership, one of its kind, is
working with three countries in 2016 with the Philippines as the second to host
the project.
The first was recently completed in Ghana , Africa
supporting girls’ empowerment and education through the Let Girls Learn
initiative in March. The third engagement will be in Mexico this August supporting an
environmental project.
In 2015, the PCR program fielded 332 volunteers globally,
the highest number in its 20-year history.
PCR was originally founded as Crisis Corps in 1996 and has
fielded more than 2,900 volunteers serving more than 80 countries.
The Philippines
has the largest PCR program, which started in 2007 and for this year more than
20 response volunteers are scheduled to serve.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=2&sid=&nid=2&rid=900154
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