WISE100 list 2025 announced | COP30 and Indigenous voices No images? Click here This week’s headlines from the pioneers of social entrepreneurship, impact investing and mission-driven business around the world![]() ![]() 21 MARCH 2025 Trump order threatens to ‘cut legs out from’ CDFI Fund, say campaigners Campaigners are urging policymakers to push back on one of the US president’s latest executive orders that could slash the work of community development financial institutions, which offer capital to underserved entrepreneurs and businesses. WISE100 Women in Social Enterprise 2025 top 100 and ‘Ones to Watch’ revealedThe WISE100 recognises the most inspiring and influential women in social enterprise, impact investment and mission-driven business. Find out who is in our Top 100 List, plus this year's Ones to Watch. Opinion: ‘COP30 must listen to the voices that have been historically silenced’This year’s COP30 in Brazil brings the climate change debate to the heart of the Amazon. But unless the language – and attitude – barrier is bridged, the conversation risks excluding the people who can help rebuild a sustainable planet. THE IMPACT WORLD THIS WEEK Your quick guide to the most interesting news snippets about social enterprise, impact investment and mission-driven business around the world from the Pioneers Post team. This week:
![]() ![]() THE EDITOR’S POST One of US president Donald Trump’s latest targets is community development financial institutions (CDFIs), as Laura Joffre highlights this week. These organisations offer credit to those people and businesses that mainstream banks deem too risky, which often includes many Black Americans and other people of colour, rural communities, and entrepreneurs with big ambitions but no track record. Campaigners are urging policymakers to reject their president’s executive order, but if it succeeds, it will undoubtedly have a devastating effect on a movement which has a rich and proud history of reaching out to help people from all walks of life to realise their own American dreams. Today’s movement of CDFIs in the US can trace a good proportion of its roots to the civil rights movement of the 1970s which had drawn attention to how banks refused to offer financial services to people living in black and minority ethnic communities. It was a practice known as ‘redlining’, reflecting the banks’ maps of the neighbourhoods they wouldn’t enter with red lines around them. Protests resulted in the 1977 Community Reinvestment Act, obliging banks to lend to all of the people that they took deposits from. One way to do that was to invest in emerging locally-embedded financial institutions which had community knowledge and trust. CDFIs in the US get funds not only from the banks, but also philanthropy, corporate donors and the government, which, in 1994, created the CDFI Fund which offers financial support and technical assistance to CDFIs. During the 1990s, the CDFI movement expanded quickly and now there are more than 1,400 across the country collectively managing US$300bn. As an emerging CDFI movement in the UK began to spread its wings in the 2000s (as banks in the UK too had their no-go areas), practitioners looked admiringly at their counterparts in the States, highlighting the government support that made all the difference. And they did get UK government backing. In 2001, UK Treasury minister Paul Boateng, serving under Labour prime minister Tony Blair, highlighted an incoming new tax credit for investments in CDFIs (the Community Investment Tax Credit which would be introduced in 2002). He described how a “strong economy means an inclusive economy…Everybody with ideas and initiative, in every community, should have the chance to start and succeed in business.” CDFIs provide finance where it is most needed, with an aim of creating wealth where it doesn’t yet exist. By offering tailored support to their clients, they help to ensure that even the riskiest-seeming loans stand a good chance of being repaid. By doing this, they help ex-prisoners set up their first businesses, people with spiralling debts get back in control, and start-up social enterprises to take their earliest steps towards sustainability. The CDFI movement in the UK has been through tough times too as government interest waned. At its peak there were more than 80 institutions; now it sits around 50, and representative body Responsible Finance is campaigning for increasing acknowledgement of the movement. If Trump’s order goes ahead and CDFIs in the US are beaten down, surely it would be an own goal. Laura quotes Harold Pettigrew, CEO of the Opportunity Finance Network, in her story. He said: “We can’t have America First without putting our communities first.” Without fair access to finance, people and enterprises in the most deprived neighbourhoods don’t have a chance of helping themselves out of poverty. The same goes for other countries all around the world too – this sort of capital is vital to helping micro entrepreneurs and social enterprises to get up and running. By the way, if you’re not yet a Pioneers Post member, make sure you read this article before it goes behind the paywall. As a social enterprise, we want our stories to be as widely accessible as possible, which is why everything we publish is freely available for one week. Joining Pioneers Post means supporting our mission to continue to produce top quality, independent, solutions-based content, which aims to help our audience do good business, better. Also this week we’re delighted to publish our much anticipated annual WISE100 list of the leading 100 women in social enterprise, impact investment and mission-driven business alongside our ‘ones to watch’. We’re also getting excited about the WISE100 awards ceremony which takes place next week. We’re looking forward to seeing lots of you – in person or online – in Glasgow, Scotland with our partners at NatWest Social & Community Capital. JULIE PYBUS ![]() ![]() ![]() We want Pioneers Post to reach social entrepreneurs and impact investors far and wide. FASE IMPACT FIRE TALKS 2025 Join us for thought-provoking discussions on the hot topics of 2025! The FASE IMPACT FIRE TALKS allow pioneers, movers and shapers to kindle their Join us! This event series is co-funded by the European Union and free for investors. MORE HIGHLIGHTSThe tools and insight you need to do good business, better What is gender-lens investing? IMPACT 101: You've heard of gender-lens investing, but what does it actually entail? Is it only about women, and how does it overlap with impact investing? Sana Kapadia from Heading for Change has the answers in our brand new explainer. SEEN ONLINE![]() "Ben & Jerry’s lawsuit against Unilever shines light on a fundamental problem. Certified B Corps commit to balancing profit and purpose, but when mission-driven brands get acquired, corporate parents often mute their advocacy to avoid controversy. The Solution: Steward Ownership. Instead of selling to corporations that may dilute their mission, companies can structure ownership to lock in purpose." Brenna Davis, CEO, Organically Grown Company, on LinkedIn. THE NOTICEBOARDA space for our partners and subscribers to share your news, programmes, events and more. 📌 Social Enterprise UK is inviting all UK social enterprises to take part in its flagship State of Social Enterprise 2025 survey. The survey helps to show the size of the sector, the social value it creates, and the contribution it makes to sustainable growth with the aim of supporting advocacy for favourable government policy. It should take less than 20 minutes to complete here. If you have announcements to share, send us an email and we’ll try to include them in our next newsletter. 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