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Bangladesh Youth Leadership Center

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bangladesh Youth Leadership Center
FormationJanuary 5, 2009; 15 years ago (2009-01-05)
FounderEjaj Ahmad
TypeNonprofit organization
FocusLeadership education
Location
Websitebylc.org

Bangladesh Youth Leadership Center (BYLC) is the first leadership institution in Bangladesh. Originally developed at Harvard Kennedy School's Center for Public Leadership in 2008, Bangladesh Youth Leadership Center was established in Bangladesh in 2009. The signature component of BYLC is the four-month-long youth leadership program, Building Bridges through Leadership Training (BBLT). Besides the BBLT program, BYLC also conducts programs and workshops[1] for university students.[2]

Ejaj Ahmad, founder and president of BYLC, speaks to students at the Victory Day Rally on December 16, 2009

About

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Formation

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The concept of a youth leadership center was originally developed at Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government in January 2008. The proposal for a month-long leadership program, Building Bridges Through Leadership Training (BBLT), was jointly developed by Ejaj Ahmad, then a graduate student at Harvard University, and Shammi S. Quddus, then an undergraduate student at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). The proposal was one of a hundred college projects awarded a grant by Projects for Peace in 2008.[3][4]

Ahmad and Quddus ran the pilot phase of BBLT in Chittagong in the summer of 2008, with technical and financial support from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Public Service Center. Building on the success and lessons learned from the pilot, the BBLT program was encapsulated within the framework of a non-profit organization, the Bangladesh Youth Leadership Center (BYLC).

In early 2009, BYLC was registered with the Registrar of Joint Stock Companies and Firms in Bangladesh as a non-partisan social venture.

The signature program of BYLC, BBLT, expanded into a four-month program for BBLT 4 in July 2010. The first month consists of intensive classroom training in leadership skills after school. In the next three months, students work in teams to implement their leadership training by designing and conducting community projects in local slums.

BYLC program participant, Tasfia teaches the alphabet to an underprivileged woman in Korail slum in Dhaka

Activities

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Office of Professional Development

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The Office of Professional Development (OPD), a key unit of the Bangladesh Youth Leadership Center (BYLC), aims to provide students, fresh graduates, and young professionals with professional development training and placement services.[5]

BYLC Ventures

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BYLC Ventures funds Bangladesh's most promising founders, hone their leadership capabilities, strengthen their business acumen, and help validate their big ideas as they transition into investable business.[6]

Awards and recognition

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In 2009, Ahmad was profiled as one of Asia's most promising young leaders and awarded the 2009–2010 Paragon Fellowship by the Foundation of Youth Social Enterprise.[7] He was also among 20 outstanding young social entrepreneurs recognized by the International Youth Foundation (IYF) for the 2010 YouthActionNet Fellowship.[8] The 2010 fellows came from 18 different countries across five continents.[9] He was also featured in The Washington Post on a special program titled 'On Leadership: Ejaj Ahmad, bringing Obama to Bangladesh'.[10] Assistant secretary Robert O. Blake, Jr. of the Bureau of South and Central Asia Affairs in the US government mentioned the Bangladesh Youth Leadership Center as one of "South Asia's Unheralded Stories" at the 2010 San Diego World Affairs Council.[11] Ahmad was selected as one of the 150 delegates from Asia and the US in the 2010 Asia 21 Young Leaders Summit in Jakarta, Indonesia.[12] In recognition of his work at BYLC, Ejaj Ahmad has received an Ashoka Fellowship in 2016.[13] Additionally, BYLC has received considerable media attention in Bangladesh via newspapers, radio and press conferences.[14]

References

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  1. ^ "Public Lecture on "Leadership for the 21st Century" at BRAC University". Star Campus. Vol. 2, no. 1. The Daily Star. April 2009.
  2. ^ "Exploring Real Leadership: BYLC holds lecture at IBA". Star Campus. Vol. 2, no. 1. The Daily Star. April 2009.
  3. ^ "Our Story". BYLC.
  4. ^ "2008 - Projects for Peace". Projects for Peace.
  5. ^ "OPD". opd official website.
  6. ^ "BYLC Ventures opens applications for its fourth cohort". Daily Sun. Retrieved 9 December 2021.
  7. ^ "Ejaj Ahmad". Foundation for Youth Social Entrepreneurship.
  8. ^ "Ejaj Ahmad". YouthActionNet.
  9. ^ "Ejaj Ahmad honored as a 2010 Global Fellow of the International Youth Foundation" (PDF). BYLC. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 3, 2012.
  10. ^ "'On Leadership: Ejaj Ahmad, bringing Obama to Bangladesh'". The Washington Post. June 8, 2010.
  11. ^ "Remarks by Assistant Secretary Robert O. Blake, Jr. at the San Diego World Affairs Council" (PDF). BYLC. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 28, 2013.
  12. ^ 2010 Asia 21 Young Leaders Summit
  13. ^ "The Ashoka Globalizer | Ashoka | Everyone a Changemaker".
  14. ^ "Press Clippings". BYLC. Archived from the original on November 19, 2015. Retrieved October 28, 2015.