TOMORROW—Audrey Tang @audreyt, #Taiwan's digital minister, discusses social innovation, open government, youth empowerment, and more with @AsiaPolicy's @dannyrrussel. Get tickets: https://t.co/Kop8zej7F1pic.twitter.com/fqPRPTQgGd
— Asia Society NY (@AsiaSocietyNY) September 20, 2018
By Lee Mannion
EDINBURGH, Sept 24 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) — As a transgender woman and one-time anarchist revolutionary, Taiwan's digital minister Audrey Tang has spent her life challenging preconceptions.
Now Tang — the world's only transgender minister — is bringing her iconoclastic approach to the job, seeking to break down barriers between government and business and help entrepreneurs find solutions to social problems.
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Countries can only solve the problems they face if government, business, and the social movements to which she devoted her time before becoming a minister make common cause, she said in an interview with the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
"I think that common value finding is of utmost importance to the governance nowadays when it comes to social entrepreneurship," said Tang, 37.
"Because otherwise, we will just have people lobbying for environmental values, for social values, for economic values, and so on without a coherent way to blend those ideas into a common value that everybody can live with."
Since she became a minister in 2016, Tang has pledged to give social enterprises — businesses that seek to benefit society as well as making a profit — preferential access to government contracts.
The first went to Agoood Inc, which hires people with Down syndrome, to design leaflets. Since then, social enterprises have been hired to train people with disabilities and help them find jobs.
Taiwan recently announced a Social Innovation Action Plan to enlist their help in achieving the Sustainable Development Goals — 17 targets agreed by world leaders aimed at helping everyone live healthier, more prosperous lives on a cleaner planet.
Tang said social enterprises were increasingly filling gaps in the market for services once seen as the exclusive preserve of government — and often doing a better job.
Agoood, for example, has helped street vendors who use wheelchairs boost their trade by offering phone charging and Wi-Fi facilities and Fairtrade coffee.
'No Enemies'
Tang was among the activists who occupied Taiwan's parliament building in 2014 to protest a trade deal with China that they said had been agreed in secret.
Thousands of young supporters, many of them students, rallied on the streets of the capital for weeks in what became known as the "sunflower movement."
In the tense aftermath, the government offered Tang a ministerial post, hoping she could help them prevent a repeat of the protests.
Her anarchist principles make her an unconventional minister — she refuses to take or give orders and practices "radical transparency," making details of all her dealings — including a transcript of this interview — publicly available.
Tang, who changed her name and began taking hormones when she was 24 after deciding to transition, has said her brain "knows for sure that I'm a woman."
Affirming her gender identity has informed her politics by giving her a greater understanding of what it is to be vulnerable, she said.
"Both organizational ability and this experience of vulnerability are very important."
Despite a long working day, Tang makes sure she gets eight hours sleep, saying this is when she comes up with her ideas.
During her free time, she enjoys "troll hugging" — engaging with those who attack her on social media, and sometimes befriending them.
"Once you learn there are some common values there are no enemies anymore," Tang said.
(Reporting by Lee Mannion @leemannion. Editing by Claire Cozens. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's rights, trafficking, property rights, climate change and resilience. Visit http://news.trust.org)