From imagination to action: building a commons movement from the ground up: an interview with Julie Ristau and Alexa Bradley

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "From imagination to action: building a commons movement from the ground up: an interview with Julie Ristau and Alexa Bradley"

Transcription

1 & Oxford University Press and Community Development Journal All rights reserved. For permissions, please doi: /cdj/bsu009 From imagination to action: building a commons movement from the ground up: an interview with Julie Ristau and Alexa Bradley Tom O Connell * On the Commons (OTC) is a commons movement strategy center founded in Through workshops, presentations, and direct consultation and support, OTC brings visibility to the commons movement, initiates and catalyzes commons work, and supports the development of commons-based solutions and leadership. Readers can access OTC s Commons Magazine and online resource center at The following interview with OTC Co-director Julie Ristau and Program Director Alexa Bradley was conducted by Tom O Connell in Minneapolis, MN, on 28 June Editorial assistance was provided by OTC Senior Fellow Jay Walljasper. Tom: How did you first learn about the commons? Julie: I was introduced to the commons back in 2005 after many years doing community organizing in both rural and urban settings. When I first learned about this idea of the commons, I completely resonated with it. I was stuck in the work I was doing, feeling there was more that mattered than framing issues and figuring out the next set of activities. It just felt like a breakthrough of sorts. The commons was a positive way of thinking about what we could stand for and what we were missing in our lives. It seemed a less rigid way of thinking about organizing. It felt more about connecting people and less about professionalized organizing and campaigns. Alexa: I actually heard about the commons from Julie. I remember getting an invitation from Julie to a gathering that she was developing with others involved in the early days of On the Commons. It was such a significant moment because I was at a point in my own work where I was struggling *Address for correspondence: thomas.oconnell@metrostate.edu Community Development Journal Vol 49 No S1 January 2014 pp. i133 i143 i133

2 i134 Tom O Connell with how to break through what felt like an inability of people to imagine a more life-giving future and more transformational goals in the work. A lot of the work I was doing at that point was trying to help organizations and communities build strategies for longer-term change. A key part of that was imagining a longer-term change that we would like to see. People seemed stuck. They wanted more and better health care and better jobs and more and better this and that but were really not able to envision more fundamental changes in our society. I remember getting a letter from Julie and it just felt like yes, this was something that weaves together a number of themes that had at their essence a much more vibrant kind of citizenship; a sense of interconnectedness of human and ecological well-being and an emphasis on social equity as a central part of how we think about resources and how we use them and share them. It felt like it was a very bold vision that had a lot of idealism in it but at the same time rooted in things that had both historical and present-day realities. That felt really helpful to me. Tom: Did you feel that there was a tension between being practical on the one hand and visionary on the other, and was the commons the way to put these two together for you? Julie: The commons felt both practical and visionary. Early in our collaboration, we developed a set of working assumptions, including the idea that re-connecting people to their imagination was necessary in order for people to have a sense of hope. Many of our early collaborations were about tapping into people s almost cellular memories. That was part of our early design work and it still comes up. Alexa: We were trying to open up space for people to think in more transformational terms about what is possible. We wanted to orient our practical work toward change that is needed and that people are really hungry for. The commons provided a bridge for this to happen. Julie: In the beginning, talking about the commons was heavy lifting. We experimented with all sorts of things in our public workshops to foster a spirit of re-imagining what we share together. Everything from showing a big picture of the earth from space and asking how does this make you re-think the idea of home. We encouraged people to leap into a different way of experiencing and imagining what was possible in their lives and communities. Tom: I remember, Julie, having you come to a Political Economy class I was teaching and doing a session on the commons. One of the things you did was ask the students to think about where they ve experienced commons in their own life. That flipped the whole thing from something that happened back in Magna Carta days to a recognition that we do have experiences with the

3 Building a commons movement from the ground up i135 commons. The question really resonated with my students. It opened up the idea of the commons for them. Alexa: We learned early on that the commons did resonate with people but it was actually often people who were not at the forefront of the nonprofit organizing world. It was hard for a lot of people with staff positions at organizations to make that leap and understand how they would incorporate a commons perspective into their work. Often when we invite people to imagine something, the first things that surface come out of a dominant culture. It takes a little more digging to unearth the more creative and ultimately transformational ideas. What do we really want our communities to look like? What kind of relationships do we want between ourselves and other people, between ourselves and nature, between ourselves and the resources we share? These questions really take some deeper exploring because we have so much of an imprint from the dominant culture. Tom: Aren t there aspects of daily life, even in the United States, which do have elements of the commons: public parks, libraries, music, and other common cultural experiences? Does an awareness of examples like these offer a beginning to imagine what is possible? Alexa: Early on it became clear that most people don t think of our parks, public libraries, shared culture as being a commons. Julie: A lot of our early work with various organizations and our website was focused on helping people see, name, and claim what belongs to all of us. From there, we moved to talking about how people create commons and how people govern and share them. That became much more central to our work and helped to guide us to more visible projects. Tom: Can you talk a little bit about that work? Julie: I can still remember an ah-ha moment when we first started talking about commons-based solutions. We came to feel that people needed more than exposure to new ideas; they needed tangible ways to practice living out those possibilities. We started looking for key areas where commonsbased solutions could actually help transform society and people lives. We became focused on what we loosely call the elemental commons, like water, land, and local food systems. We also, at that time, initiated a body of work that was much more local around how do cities and communities share power and make decisions. We looked at the deterioration of democracy in our civic life and explored how commons thinking and practice help with both of those arenas. Alexa: We worked very deliberately to make the commons work a living practice. How do you reconnect a sense of belonging, a sense of this is ours, a sense of the kinds of relationships and decision-making structures that would enable a commons to be? There isn t a manual out there for that, and

4 i136 Tom O Connell so part of our work is really to figure out how to bring our organizing experience to supporting this commons sensibility. Tom: You mentioned the work on food systems and land. Julie: On the municipal front here in Minneapolis, we applied a commonsbased approach to a local food system movement through the organization Homegrown Minneapolis. We experimented with ways for citizens to co-create food-related policies and practices in partnership with the city planning agency. This was very different from how city processes are typically run, which is more of an input model where city officials lay out the parameters and solutions and then ask the community members for input on what city officials have already figured out. OTC innovated a creative, commons-based partnership between the city and community as the form for the Minneapolis Food Council. In the role as a key catalyst and leader, we partnered with the city to create an innovative process that drew on a commons framework to distill the principles identified by the community as key to the success of the work: equity, collaboration, relationships with each other and our food, celebration, cultural distinctiveness, sufficiency, local ownership, and empowerment. The Minneapolis Food Council, formed in the spring of 2012, is a commons-based structure that has standing in the community and the city. It is constructed as a hybrid council, one that is neither fully owned nor fully independent of the city. The city went from not allowing food to be grown for sale within city boundaries, to welcoming this and looking for ways to assist these new urban farmers. New community gardens were created in record time, and the city is taking a partnership approach to access to water and insurance challenges. The city and community are focused together on creating a more equitable food system by thinking of new ways to approach our shared resources such as land, parks, public buildings, and public spaces. Tom: So the ultimate goal isn t simply doing a project or enacting a policy. It s changing the way people think about what they re doing and therefore how they do it. Is that accurate? Julie: Yes. We use this term animateur to describe what we do and what Commons catalysts or leaders in the field are trying to do. To animate literally means to breathe new life into situations. Commons leaders spark reorientation by moving beyond what is to what could be and thereby illuminating latent and previously unimagined possibilities for a life-sustaining future. Animateurs engage in creative ways with people and groups to weave together what appear to be disparate efforts and bring to life equitable ways to steward our shared social and natural inheritance. As animateurs, we work to enable this different kind of leadership and a different kind of decision-making process that is so life-giving and energizing for community

5 Building a commons movement from the ground up i137 members that it takes on a life of its own. That s what the community organizing always aspired to be, right? Tom: Yes, and there are some parallels between the dynamics of what you re describing with US nonprofits and similar dynamics with NGOs around the world as well as the field of community development more generally. Do you want to talk about the Great Lakes Initiative, which has been your most expansive undertaking so far? Alexa: We were looking for places where people were already engaged in work conducive to commoning at a larger scale. We are living in an era of accelerating dispossession of the commons in the United States and globally: land grabs and water grabs and the displacement of people from commons that have been their livelihood for all recorded time. So if we re proposing that the commons is a countervailing force to corporate control at that scale, we really need to see if that works. Is it something that can really come to life in this time, in this country, in meaningful ways? At the US Social Forum held in Detroit in 2010, we were engaged with people from Detroit, Chicago, Milwaukee, Duluth, and Toronto. Many of them were young and people of color, who were looking at water questions. We began to consider what would happen if we began thinking and acting as if the Great Lakes were a commons. Julie: The Great Lakes Commons also emerged from local and international work On the Commons was involved with. Our work with Heart of the Beast Theatre in Minneapolis provided a wonderful laboratory for developing our thinking and practice. It was a two-year process working with the theater and community members around how they experienced water. We did focus groups with the audiences, and it was very clear that people fundamentally understood they could not be disconnected from water. They did not like the concept of ownership of water. The word belonging is what people really gravitated to. That experience was a real gateway opportunity and taught us that people could really understand the commons through their relationship to water. Alexa: The other point that was really important about the Great Lakes was changing our thinking about the commons as stuff to understanding it as a set of social relationships. The organizing work really began with asking who would need to be part of the conversation if we re trying to activate a body of commoners around the lakes. What kinds of relationships would they need to have with one another? We challenged ourselves to think beyond the usual suspects. There are a number of water activists already visible in the Great Lakes area, including some very bold ones who have pushed the boundary of major environmental issues. We realized there are many other people who should be part of that conversation who aren t typically involved. The most obvious omission are the First

6 i138 Tom O Connell Nation and Native American people who are very much a part of the Great Lakes but are left out of almost all policy conversations about them. We started connecting with the leadership of these communities in various parts of the Great Lakes. We were also interested in ways that water questions affect low-income and working-class people in urban areas, so we connected with the Detroit People s Water Board that was fighting against life-threatening water shutoffs for people who couldn t pay their water bills. We started making connections between the range of issues and constituencies we saw. You could drop any of these issues into a silo: the issue is fracking, no, the issue is bottling, no, the issue is pollution. We stepped back and said these are all manifestations of the fact that our commons are being violated and we, citizens of the Great Lakes, don t have the power to shape our water future. We need to change that. Julie: We never would enter a conversation about the Great Lakes without people saying things like, I would give everything up for the Great Lakes. Alexa: Yes and when we asked elected officials and staff of public agencies about the governance of the Great Lakes, they said they didn t know enough to comment. This illustrated again just this huge disconnect from people s passion for the Great Lakes and how they could act on that passion. Part of what has made this an important undertaking is the audaciousness of the proposition that the Great Lakes could become an actual functioning commons. After all, you re talking about the governments of the United States and Canada! So there s one level in which it feels completely unrealistic. On the other level, the proposition has been so attractive and we ve found an incredible outpouring of involvement from folks like the professors at Michigan Technological University who are taking this up as a central theme for their research, to artists and activists of different stripes, to people working in public health. There s just been this incredible engagement because of the attachment to the place and to the lakes. Julie: Creating a Great Lakes Commons is a great aspiration, but how do you make it doable? That has been the work of On the Commons. One major piece is the importance of indigenous leadership. Indigenous communities bring cultural beliefs and practices that embody commons-based approaches. Alexa: A second thread has been a movement toward a Great Lakes Charter. One of the things that have been typical of many commons over the centuries has been some kind of people s charter. If you look at the Magna Carta or the Forest Charter, people were suddenly finding their historic territories encroached on. They needed a way to articulate what was collectively theirs: to define and protect common use and common responsibilities.

7 Building a commons movement from the ground up i139 We thought it would be important to actually have a charter that articulated a vision for the Great Lakes as a commons, not just a document that only few people wrote, but a way of engaging people in thinking about what the Great Lakes meant to them and how they envisioned them being taken care of as a commons. The creation of the Charter is a multiple step process in which people from a range of communities around the Lakes are coming together to discuss what they see as the orienting principles and vision for the Great Lakes Commons. We are also exploring both existing and emerging legal traditions that might offer a legal basis for a Great Lakes Commons. This includes public trust laws, a key tradition in Western law that has its origins in Roman law. Treaty law is also very important because it recognizes the right of specific indigenous communities to care for, access, and use water in perpetuity. There are also new international legal approaches based on the rights of Mother Earth, that we think have the potential to bolster the case for our Great Lakes Commons and the care of that as an ecosystem not just as a set of political jurisdictions. Julie: I do think that there s something emerging in this Great Lakes Commons initiative that is helping set the stage for other large battles around the world to protect our natural resources. At the center of this is that the crises in these large international natural commons require a transformed governance. Going back to our earlier conversation about imagination, the Great Lakes Charter is so important because, without it, people can t imagine a different kind of governance. The fundamental world view that our current system of governance is based on is one of dominion over, a narrowly Western interpretation. I think that the idea of transforming governance is going to be front and center over the next twenty-five years. How does that kind of evolution and change take place in the current system dominated by short-term thinking and short-term funding? Tom: I m glad you mentioned governance. One of the big conversations within the commons movement is the relationship between the state and governance within the commons. In the case of the Great Lakes, the state is supposed to serve as the guardian of the public interest and the referee between the various interest groups that make claims on the commons. Would the commons way of governance replace state regulation, would it augment state regulation? Julie: We do believe the state is still important, but it often fails to fulfill its duty of protection and guardianship. We (and many others) are exploring a more nested or polycentric governance in which people have the opportunity to participate at various levels and scales in ways that are authentic and grounded in real agency. And along with rethinking governance, we also need to recognize that a change in world view is required. We need to shift

8 i140 Tom O Connell from the idea that water is a resource that needs to be managed to the notion that we are actually responsible to the water. We need to create processes that can connect people who do have that sense of responsibility to opportunities to actually live that value out. Tom: What are some of your reflections on the work looking backward and moving ahead? Alexa: One thing that really struck me is that when you create space for people to participate in solution-making, they come in. There s a guy who created an entire GIS interactive mapping program for the Great Lakes Commons just on his own. People are creating ideas all the time. One person wants to organize a symposium at his university; another wants to do art projects. There s just an amazing amount of creative energy that is unleashed in a space that really invites community leadership. Julie: We ve talked about the experimental nature of this commons work over the last twelve years. A lot of our work has been largely invisible. It s been about incubating efforts to unleash the creativity that could provide the basis for a transformed governance. And as wealth in this country continues to shift to the one percent, it s going to be harder to fund this kind of work. Yet, at the same time, I think the commons way of working sparks positive forward thinking that we need in these times. Tom: Thinking back to when you started this work, how would you compare the awareness of and interest in the commons then and now? Alexa: When we first started, I remember that in almost every conversation we would ask ourselves, do have to use the word commons? No one is going to recognize it or have any idea what it means. Tom: I think I may have said that. Alexa: I think we all did at some point, right. No one says that anymore. I was just at this gathering in Bangkok and people were starting to talk about land grabs in terms of a fight for the commons. Julie: It s such a relief. It s so ironic that you d ask that question. I just got an from a city staff person for Home Grown in Minneapolis. She has just sent out a notice to our entire team praising a new book, Nature for Sale Commons versus Commodities, by Giovanna Ricoveri with a foreword by Vandana Shiva. That wouldn t have happened even three years ago. Tom: Wow, a city staffer! Julie: I think people are starting to wake up to what is life-giving. I believe the enclosure of so much that is makes life sustainable on so many levels has reached a tipping point. More and more people are seeing the commons as a forward path toward a different and better future.

9 Building a commons movement from the ground up i141 Commons principles:

10 i142 Tom O Connell Commons framework: Julie Ristau, Co-director of On the Commons, has an extensive background in leadership development, community organizing, publishing, and agriculture. She began working with On the Commons in jristau@onthecommons.org. Alexa Bradley is a Senior Associate at On the Commons, working to support community solutions rooted in the commons principles of collective stewardship, ecological responsibility, and democratized decision-making about shared resources. Her current work includes the Great Lakes

11 Building a commons movement from the ground up i143 Commons Initiative, a bio-regional organizing effort to activate broad community leadership for the future of these vital waters. Alexa has worked as an organizer and facilitator and was a popular educator for over twenty-five years, with a particular focus on linking community organizing to broader social movement strategies. She lives in Brooklyn, New York. 4alexabradley@gmail.com. Tom O Connell is Professor Emeritus in Political Studies at Metropolitan State University, St. Paul, MN, USA. A community organizer before he became a professor, O Connell developed a range of courses and programs focused on community empowerment and social justice. In addition, he chairs the Farmer-Labor Education Committee, a group of scholars and activists committed to reacquainting Minnesotans to their state s Cooperative Commonwealth tradition. thomas.oconnell@metrostate.edu. Tom O Connell is Professor Emeritus in Political Studies, Metropolitan State University, St. Paul, MN, USA.

Tackling Wicked Problems through Deliberative Engagement

Tackling Wicked Problems through Deliberative Engagement Feature By Martín Carcasson, Colorado State University Center for Public Deliberation Tackling Wicked Problems through Deliberative Engagement A revolution is beginning to occur in public engagement, fueled

More information

INDIAN ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS:

INDIAN ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS: INDIAN ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS: AN Transforming Cultures ejournal, Vol. 5 No 1 June 2010 http://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/journals/tfc Amita Baviskar Abstract Amita Baviskar is a key analyst of environmental

More information

Consensus Decision Making

Consensus Decision Making 29531_U14.qxd 8/23/06 8:03 AM Page 212 16 TREE BRESSEN Consensus Decision Making Democracy is based upon the conviction that there are extraordinary possibilities in ordinary people. Harry Emerson Fosdick

More information

PROPOSAL. Program on the Practice of Democratic Citizenship

PROPOSAL. Program on the Practice of Democratic Citizenship PROPOSAL Program on the Practice of Democratic Citizenship Organization s Mission, Vision, and Long-term Goals Since its founding in 1780, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences has served the nation

More information

Frances Kunreuther. To be clear about what I mean by this, I plan to cover four areas:

Frances Kunreuther. To be clear about what I mean by this, I plan to cover four areas: In preparation for the 2007 Minnesota Legislative Session, the Minnesota Council of Nonprofit s Policy Day brought together nonprofit leaders and advocates to understand actions that organizations can

More information

9 GRADE CANADA IN THE CONTEMPORARY WORLD

9 GRADE CANADA IN THE CONTEMPORARY WORLD CANADA IN THE CONTEMPORARY WORLD 9 GRADE Grade Overview 62 Cluster Descriptions 63 Grade 9 Skills 64 Core Concept Citizenship 68 General and Specific Learning Outcomes 69 Clusters: Cluster 1: Diversity

More information

Thank you David (Johnstone) for your warm introduction and for inviting me to talk to your spring Conference on managing land in the public interest.

Thank you David (Johnstone) for your warm introduction and for inviting me to talk to your spring Conference on managing land in the public interest. ! 1 of 22 Introduction Thank you David (Johnstone) for your warm introduction and for inviting me to talk to your spring Conference on managing land in the public interest. I m delighted to be able to

More information

POLITICAL SCIENCE 1101 SAMPLE ESSAY ANSWERS BUCKNER F. MELTON, JR.

POLITICAL SCIENCE 1101 SAMPLE ESSAY ANSWERS BUCKNER F. MELTON, JR. POLITICAL SCIENCE 1101 SAMPLE ESSAY ANSWERS BUCKNER F. MELTON, JR. Below is a range of answers to the following essay question, ranging from high A to low F. Carefully read and compare each answer and

More information

Diversity and Immigration. Community Plan. It s Your plan

Diversity and Immigration. Community Plan. It s Your plan Diversity and Immigration Community Plan It s Your plan ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS There was a tremendous response from the community to provide input into the development of this plan and the Local Diversity and

More information

The George Washington University Law School

The George Washington University Law School The George Washington University Law School Access to the Media 1967 to 2007 and Beyond: A Symposium Honoring Jerome A. Barron s Path-Breaking Article Introductory Remarks by The Honorable Stephen G. Breyer

More information

SHOSHANNA WASSERMAN, American Indian Cultural Center and Museum, Oklahoma City

SHOSHANNA WASSERMAN, American Indian Cultural Center and Museum, Oklahoma City SHOSHANNA WASSERMAN, American Indian Cultural Center and Museum, Oklahoma City KENNEALLY: Welcome to Beyond the Book. My name is Chris Kenneally, Director of Author Relations for the nonprofit Copyright

More information

Grassroots Policy Project

Grassroots Policy Project Grassroots Policy Project The Grassroots Policy Project works on strategies for transformational social change; we see the concept of worldview as a critical piece of such a strategy. The basic challenge

More information

Increasing the Participation of Refugee Seniors in the Civic Life of Their Communities: A Guide for Community-Based Organizations

Increasing the Participation of Refugee Seniors in the Civic Life of Their Communities: A Guide for Community-Based Organizations Increasing the Participation of Refugee Seniors in the Civic Life of Their Communities: A Guide for Community-Based Organizations Created by Mosaica: The Center for Nonprofit Development & Pluralism in

More information

MOVE TO END VIOLENCE VISION

MOVE TO END VIOLENCE VISION We are a diverse community of activists that come together as leaders in Move to End Violence to imagine what a more invigorated and powerful movement committed to ending violence might look like. Move

More information

MAHATMA GANDHI INSTITUTE OF EDUCATION FOR PEACE AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT UNESCO S FIRST CATEGORY 1 INSTITUTE IN THE ASIA-PACIFIC

MAHATMA GANDHI INSTITUTE OF EDUCATION FOR PEACE AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT UNESCO S FIRST CATEGORY 1 INSTITUTE IN THE ASIA-PACIFIC MAHATMA GANDHI INSTITUTE OF EDUCATION FOR PEACE AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT UNESCO S FIRST CATEGORY 1 INSTITUTE IN THE ASIA-PACIFIC The Mahatma Gandhi Institute of Education for Peace & Sustainable Development

More information

The 1st. and most important component involves Students:

The 1st. and most important component involves Students: Executive Summary The New School of Public Policy at Duke University Strategic Plan Transforming Lives, Building a Better World: Public Policy Leadership for a Global Community The Challenge The global

More information

Using the Onion as a Tool of Analysis

Using the Onion as a Tool of Analysis Using the Onion as a Tool of Analysis Overview: Overcoming conflict in complex and ever changing circumstances presents considerable challenges to the people and groups involved, whether they are part

More information

Interview with Victor Pickard Author, America s Battle for Media Democracy. For podcast release Monday, December 15, 2014

Interview with Victor Pickard Author, America s Battle for Media Democracy. For podcast release Monday, December 15, 2014 Interview with Victor Pickard Author, America s Battle for Media Democracy For podcast release Monday, December 15, 2014 KENNEALLY: Under the United States Constitution, the First Amendment protects free

More information

Schedule of Events GRAND OPENING. When: Monday, April 23, :00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. Tim Hortons Field 64 Melrose Avenue North (Gate 3)

Schedule of Events GRAND OPENING. When: Monday, April 23, :00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. Tim Hortons Field 64 Melrose Avenue North (Gate 3) Schedule of Events GRAND OPENING When: Monday, April 23, 2018 6:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. The Grand Opening will feature voices of change from the community, musical guests, and refreshments. The Collaboratory

More information

Dancing on our turtle s back

Dancing on our turtle s back Dancing on our turtle s back Stories of Nishnaabeg Re-Creation, Resurgence, and a New Emergence Leanne Betasamosake Simpson B e c a u s e W e b e l o n g t o t h e L a n d Introduction to the Indian edition

More information

Today we re going to look at the roots of US government. You ll see that they run pretty

Today we re going to look at the roots of US government. You ll see that they run pretty Historical Roots of US Government Activity # GV121 Activity Introduction Hey there, I m (name) Today we re going to look at the roots of US government. You ll see that they run pretty deep. So in order

More information

Best Practices and Challenges in Building M&E Capacity of Local Governments

Best Practices and Challenges in Building M&E Capacity of Local Governments Best Practices and Challenges in Building M&E Capacity of Local Governments RDMA REGIONAL EVALUATION SUMMIT, SESSION 7, DAY 2 SEPTEMBER 2013 This document was produced for review by the United States Agency

More information

ADDRESS BY THE HON BLE PRESIDENT OF INDIA SHRI RAM NATH KOVIND ON THE OCCASION OF INAUGURATION OF CONSTITUTION DAY CELEBRATIONS

ADDRESS BY THE HON BLE PRESIDENT OF INDIA SHRI RAM NATH KOVIND ON THE OCCASION OF INAUGURATION OF CONSTITUTION DAY CELEBRATIONS ADDRESS BY THE HON BLE PRESIDENT OF INDIA SHRI RAM NATH KOVIND ON THE OCCASION OF INAUGURATION OF CONSTITUTION DAY CELEBRATIONS New Delhi, November 26, 2018 1. I am glad to be here today to inaugurate

More information

Darren Walker, President, Ford Foundation Opening Plenary Speech Funder Network 15 th Annual Conference Boston, Mass. Monday, March 17, 2014

Darren Walker, President, Ford Foundation Opening Plenary Speech Funder Network 15 th Annual Conference Boston, Mass. Monday, March 17, 2014 Darren Walker, President, Ford Foundation Opening Plenary Speech Funder Network 15 th Annual Conference Boston, Mass. Monday, March 17, 2014 Good afternoon, everyone. Thank you, Scot, for that gracious,

More information

Celebrating Ten Years

Celebrating Ten Years Celebrating Ten Years A LETTER FROM OUR EDITOR IN CHIEF GEOFF PALLAY Prior to joining Ballotpedia, Pallay was a policy analyst for the South Carolina Policy Council, where he covered Jersey, Pallay spent

More information

Dinda Nuur Annisaa Yura Solidaritas Perempuan, Indonesia

Dinda Nuur Annisaa Yura Solidaritas Perempuan, Indonesia Conflict of Interest in UNFCCC: Pull Out Polluters from Negotiation Dinda Nuur Annisaa Yura Solidaritas Perempuan, Indonesia Climate negotiations have been happening since 1991, while UN Framework Convention

More information

Effective Libertarian Activism

Effective Libertarian Activism Effective Libertarian Activism Based on the Book The 7 habits of Highly Effective People by Stephen R. Covey Principles govern human or organizational effectiveness. These principles are natural laws.

More information

Cultivating Engaged Citizens & Thriving Communities

Cultivating Engaged Citizens & Thriving Communities Cultivating Engaged Citizens & Thriving Communities at Washington University in St. Louis Spring 2018 - Fall 2019 Democratic Engagement Action Plan Overview of the Gephardt Institute Mission The Gephardt

More information

HOW A COALITION OF IMMIGRATION GROUPS IS ADVOCATING FOR BROAD SOCIAL AND POLITICAL CHANGE

HOW A COALITION OF IMMIGRATION GROUPS IS ADVOCATING FOR BROAD SOCIAL AND POLITICAL CHANGE HOW A COALITION OF IMMIGRATION GROUPS IS ADVOCATING FOR BROAD SOCIAL AND POLITICAL CHANGE New York, NY "It's not just about visas and legal status. It's also about what kind of life people have once they

More information

Keynote Speech at the High Level Forum on Museums

Keynote Speech at the High Level Forum on Museums Keynote Speech at the High Level Forum on Museums Dear Ministers, Museums Directors and experts, Good morning everyone! It is a great pleasure to meet all of you here in Shenzhen, the Design Capital of

More information

THE WHITE HOUSE Office of the Press Secretary

THE WHITE HOUSE Office of the Press Secretary THE WHITE HOUSE Office of the Press Secretary September 22, 2010 Remarks of President Barack Obama As Prepared for Delivery Millennium Development Goals Summit United Nations Headquarters New York, New

More information

Becoming A City of Peace

Becoming A City of Peace Becoming A City of Peace If there is to be peace in the world, there must be peace in the nations. If there is to be peace in the nations, there must be peace in the cities. If there is to be peace in

More information

Universal Rights and Responsibilities: The Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the Earth Charter. By Steven Rockefeller.

Universal Rights and Responsibilities: The Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the Earth Charter. By Steven Rockefeller. Universal Rights and Responsibilities: The Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the Earth Charter By Steven Rockefeller April 2009 The year 2008 was the 60 th Anniversary of the adoption of the Universal

More information

The State of Our Field: Introduction to the Special Issue

The State of Our Field: Introduction to the Special Issue Journal of Public Deliberation Volume 10 Issue 1 Special Issue: State of the Field Article 1 7-1-2014 The State of Our Field: Introduction to the Special Issue Laura W. Black Ohio University, laura.black.1@ohio.edu

More information

ATTACHMENT: 4 REPORT TO GENERAL PLAN 2040 STEERING COMMITTEE

ATTACHMENT: 4 REPORT TO GENERAL PLAN 2040 STEERING COMMITTEE MEETING DATE: March 14, 2018 AGENDA ITEM: 5.B ATTACHMENT: 4 REPORT TO GENERAL PLAN 2040 STEERING COMMITTEE Subject: Responses to Eight Questions Visioning Exercise EXECUTIVE SUMMARY At the February 14,

More information

The Origins and Future of the Environmental Justice Movement: A Conversation With Laura Pulido

The Origins and Future of the Environmental Justice Movement: A Conversation With Laura Pulido The Origins and Future of the Environmental Justice Movement: A Conversation With Laura Pulido Kathleen Lee and Renia Ehrenfeucht W e invited Associate Professor Laura Pulido from the Department of Geography

More information

Provincial Partnerships

Provincial Partnerships Provincial Partnerships Current FN/M education and governance issues in context Terrance Ross Pelletier Ph. D. Candidate University of Saskatchewan Indian Control of Indian Education There is broad consensus

More information

TRUSTEESHIP OF COMMON WEALTH. Lecture by Peter Barnes Social Wealth Forum, University of Massachusetts, Amherst April 6, 2006

TRUSTEESHIP OF COMMON WEALTH. Lecture by Peter Barnes Social Wealth Forum, University of Massachusetts, Amherst April 6, 2006 TRUSTEESHIP OF COMMON WEALTH Lecture by Peter Barnes Social Wealth Forum, University of Massachusetts, Amherst April 6, 2006 Let me start by putting out a formula that underlies my thinking: Corporations

More information

TOWARDS A JUST ECONOMIC ORDER

TOWARDS A JUST ECONOMIC ORDER TOWARDS A JUST ECONOMIC ORDER CONCEPTUAL FOUNDATIONS AND MORAL PREREQUISITES A statement of the Bahá í International Community to the 56th session of the Commission for Social Development TOWARDS A JUST

More information

Justice First ACTION GUIDE

Justice First ACTION GUIDE Justice First ACTION GUIDE June 2018 Harnessing Grassroots Power in WA Criminal Justice Reform in WA How You Can Light the Fire Our goals Our strategy and tactics Getting started: hosting an organizing

More information

Citizens, Deliberation, and the Practice of Democracy

Citizens, Deliberation, and the Practice of Democracy Citizens, Deliberation, and the Practice of Democracy A Triptych from the Kettering Review Citizens, Deliberation, and the Practice of Democracy A Triptych from the Kettering Review Editor Managing Editors

More information

MILLION. NLIRH Growth ( ) SINCE NLIRH Strategic Plan Operating out of three new spaces. We ve doubled our staff

MILLION. NLIRH Growth ( ) SINCE NLIRH Strategic Plan Operating out of three new spaces. We ve doubled our staff Mission National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health (NLIRH) builds Latina power to guarantee the fundamental human right to reproductive health, dignity and justice. We elevate Latina leaders, mobilize

More information

Bylaws for Slow Food Oahu. Preamble

Bylaws for Slow Food Oahu. Preamble Preamble Slow Food Oahu Vision, Mission and Statement of Principles: The Slow Food Oahu has adopted the vision, mission and statement of principles of Slow Food USA, which are: Vision: Food represents

More information

Minnesota Council on Foundations. Policies and Procedures for Government Relations and Public Policy. MCF Board Approved March 12, 2013

Minnesota Council on Foundations. Policies and Procedures for Government Relations and Public Policy. MCF Board Approved March 12, 2013 Minnesota Council on Foundations Policies and Procedures for Government Relations and Public Policy MCF Board Approved March 12, 2013 Table of Contents Policy Page 3 I. Guiding Mission and Purpose for

More information

Grassroots Leadership Program

Grassroots Leadership Program Grassroots Leadership Program Planting the Seeds of Advocacy By Ali Soltanshahi, Iowa State University Ames, Iowa Planting the Seeds of Advocacy 1 About the Grassroots Leadership Program NAFSA: Association

More information

CIVICUS: World Alliance for Citizen Participation Operational Plan

CIVICUS: World Alliance for Citizen Participation Operational Plan CIVICUS: World Alliance for Citizen Participation Operational Plan 2013-2017 Table of Contents 3 From the Secretary-General 4 Our strategy 5 Our unique contribution to change 6 What went into our plan

More information

Public Policy in Mexico. Stephanie Grade. Glidden-Ralston

Public Policy in Mexico. Stephanie Grade. Glidden-Ralston Public Policy in Mexico Stephanie Grade Glidden-Ralston Food has always been the sustaining life force for the human body. Absence of this life force can cause entire nations to have to struggle with health

More information

92% of alumni reported voting in November 2000, in contrast to 78% of those surveyed in the NES study

92% of alumni reported voting in November 2000, in contrast to 78% of those surveyed in the NES study Executive Summary Between November 2004, and March 2005, the Center for Civic Education conducted a survey of alumni from the We the People: The Citizen and the Constitution program. Altogether, 522 alumni

More information

Realism, Ethics and U.S. Foreign Policy

Realism, Ethics and U.S. Foreign Policy Realism, Ethics and U.S. Foreign Policy A Conversation with Jean Bethke Elshtain Laura Spelman Rockefeller Professor of Social and Political Ethics, The University of Chicago Divinity School INTERVIEW

More information

Building Advocacy & Lobbying Capacity

Building Advocacy & Lobbying Capacity Building Advocacy & Lobbying Capacity Advocacy in Action: Cultivating Champions for a Collective Voice Advocacy can be a powerful catalyst for change to improve the laws, policies, structures, and beliefs

More information

What are Goal 16 and the peaceful, just and inclusive societies commitment, and why do

What are Goal 16 and the peaceful, just and inclusive societies commitment, and why do Peace, Justice and Inclusion: what will it take?. Remarks at the third annual symposium on the role of religion and faith-based organizations in international affairs: Just, Inclusive and Sustainable Peace.

More information

Rethinking Rodriguez: Education as a Fundamental Right

Rethinking Rodriguez: Education as a Fundamental Right Rethinking Rodriguez: Education as a Fundamental Right A Call for Paper Proposals Sponsored by The Chief Justice Earl Warren Institute on Race, Ethnicity and Diversity University of California, Berkeley

More information

From public participation to social movements: engaging citizens in policy development in Canada

From public participation to social movements: engaging citizens in policy development in Canada From public participation to social movements: engaging citizens in policy development in Canada Amanda Sheedy 1 1 People s Food Project, Canada Amanda Sheedy loves good food, good conversation and any

More information

Initiated by The 2012 Women's Congress For Future Generations

Initiated by The 2012 Women's Congress For Future Generations A Declaration of Rights for Future Generations, and a Bill of Responsibilities for those Present. Initiated by The 2012 Women's Congress For Future Generations Table of Contents Preamble... 3 Bill of Rights

More information

The key building blocks of a successful implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals

The key building blocks of a successful implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals The key building blocks of a successful implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals June 2016 The International Forum of National NGO Platforms (IFP) is a member-led network of 64 national NGO

More information

A U.S. Congressional Perspective on North America, Interview with U.S. Representative Henry Cuellar

A U.S. Congressional Perspective on North America, Interview with U.S. Representative Henry Cuellar C. Year 2, number 2, July-December 2007 U.S. Congressional Perspective on North merica, Interview with U.S. Representative Henry Cuellar by ROBERT. PSTOR* From Laredo, Texas, Dr. Henry Cuellar was elected

More information

Concept Note AFRICAN ECONOMIC CONFERENCE Regional and Continental Integration for Africa s Development

Concept Note AFRICAN ECONOMIC CONFERENCE Regional and Continental Integration for Africa s Development African Economic Conference Concept Note AFRICAN ECONOMIC CONFERENCE 2018 Regional and Continental Integration for Africa s Development 3-5 December Kigali, Rwanda African Development Bank Group Economic

More information

INTERNATIONAL SOLIDARITY, THE RIGHT TO DEVELOPMENT AND THE MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS. Virginia B. Dandan

INTERNATIONAL SOLIDARITY, THE RIGHT TO DEVELOPMENT AND THE MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS. Virginia B. Dandan INTERNATIONAL SOLIDARITY, THE RIGHT TO DEVELOPMENT AND THE MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS by Virginia B. Dandan UN Independent Expert on Human Rights and International Solidarity In the 1970s, Karel Vasak

More information

ANDREW MARR SHOW 6 TH NOVEMBER 2016 JEREMY HUNT

ANDREW MARR SHOW 6 TH NOVEMBER 2016 JEREMY HUNT 1 ANDREW MARR SHOW 6 TH NOVEMBER 2016 AM: Mr Hunt, welcome. JH: Morning, Andrew. AM: A very straightforward choice here in a sense: three judges have come under pretty sustained attack for their judgement

More information

TRANSACTIONS, TRANSFORMATIONS, AND TRANSLATIONS:

TRANSACTIONS, TRANSFORMATIONS, AND TRANSLATIONS: ,, AND TRANSLATIONS: Metrics That Matter for Building, Scaling and Funding Social Movements 10.21.11 MANUEL PASTOR, JENNIFER ITO, RACHEL ROSNER, RHONDA ORTIZ WHY METRICS? WHY NOW? The 2008 election of

More information

The Way Forward: Pathways toward Transformative Change

The Way Forward: Pathways toward Transformative Change CHAPTER 8 We will need to see beyond disciplinary and policy silos to achieve the integrated 2030 Agenda. The Way Forward: Pathways toward Transformative Change The research in this report points to one

More information

Fort Collins, Colorado: An Expectation of Public Engagement

Fort Collins, Colorado: An Expectation of Public Engagement Fort Collins, Colorado: An Expectation of Public Engagement Government leaders in Fort Collins, Colorado say that the expectation citizens have regarding engagement has shifted the way they work and the

More information

An Invitation to Apply. THE NEW JERSEY INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL JUSTICE Law & Policy Director

An Invitation to Apply. THE NEW JERSEY INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL JUSTICE Law & Policy Director THE SEARCH An Invitation to Apply THE NEW JERSEY INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL JUSTICE The Board of Trustees of the (the Institute), an urban advocacy and research nonprofit based in Newark, New Jersey, seeks a

More information

HOW WELFARE RECIPIENTS ARE BUILDING THEIR POWER AND CHANGING THE WELFARE SYSTEM

HOW WELFARE RECIPIENTS ARE BUILDING THEIR POWER AND CHANGING THE WELFARE SYSTEM HOW WELFARE RECIPIENTS ARE BUILDING THEIR POWER AND CHANGING THE WELFARE SYSTEM Community Voices Heard (CVH) New York, NY There is nothing that beats the look of revelation on people s faces when they

More information

Radically Transforming Human Rights for Social Work Practice

Radically Transforming Human Rights for Social Work Practice Radically Transforming Human Rights for Social Work Practice Jim Ife (Emeritus Professor, Curtin University, Australia) jimife@iinet.net.au International Social Work Conference, Seoul, June 2016 The last

More information

This is a postprint version of the following published document:

This is a postprint version of the following published document: This is a postprint version of the following published document: Sánchez Galera, M. D. (2017). The Ecology of Law. Toward a Legal System in Tune with Nature and Com, Fritjof Capra & Ugo Mattei, Berrett-Koehler

More information

ICTs, the Internet and Sustainability:

ICTs, the Internet and Sustainability: October 2012 ICTs, the Internet and Sustainability: An interview with Angela Cropper The following is the record of an interview with Angela Cropper, Deputy Executive Director of the United Nations Environment

More information

PODCAST: Politically Powerless, Economically Powerful: A Contradiction?: A Conversation with the Saudi Businesswoman Rasha Hifzi

PODCAST: Politically Powerless, Economically Powerful: A Contradiction?: A Conversation with the Saudi Businesswoman Rasha Hifzi PODCAST: Politically Powerless, Economically Powerful: A Contradiction?: A Conversation with the Saudi Businesswoman Rasha Hifzi In this podcast, originally recorded for I.M.O.W. s Women, Power and Politics

More information

I would like to speak about meaningful representation and empowerment for effective political participation.

I would like to speak about meaningful representation and empowerment for effective political participation. UN Forum on Minorities and Effective Political Participation Agenda Item V. National Practices and Real Experiences Presentation by Mary Anne Chambers Ladies and gentlemen. My name is Mary Anne Chambers.

More information

Democracy: Philosophy, Politics and Power. Instructor: Tim Syme

Democracy: Philosophy, Politics and Power. Instructor: Tim Syme 1 Democracy: Philosophy, Politics and Power Instructor: Tim Syme Timothy_Syme@Brown.edu This course focuses on the development and application of utopian social criticism. We shall first evaluate and engage

More information

OVERVIEW OF A RECOGNITION AND IMPLEMENTATION OF INDIGENOUS RIGHTS FRAMEWORK

OVERVIEW OF A RECOGNITION AND IMPLEMENTATION OF INDIGENOUS RIGHTS FRAMEWORK OVERVIEW OF A RECOGNITION AND IMPLEMENTATION OF INDIGENOUS RIGHTS FRAMEWORK Background The Government of Canada is committed to renewing the relationship with First Nations, Inuit and Métis based on the

More information

MAXINE GREENE: Dewey says that democracy is a community in the making. And always like that, because it means you never really achieve it, but it's

MAXINE GREENE: Dewey says that democracy is a community in the making. And always like that, because it means you never really achieve it, but it's MAXINE GREENE: Dewey says that democracy is a community in the making. And always like that, because it means you never really achieve it, but it's in the making through community... That's why he uses

More information

Closing the Gap: Seeking Reconciliation, Advancing First Nations Well Being and Human Rights

Closing the Gap: Seeking Reconciliation, Advancing First Nations Well Being and Human Rights Closing the Gap: Seeking Reconciliation, Advancing First Nations Well Being and Submission to Canada s Premiers July 15, 2015 Draft Submission to Canada s Premiers, July 15, 2015 1 The Assembly of First

More information

Congressional Forecast. Brian Clifton, Michael Milazzo. The problem we are addressing is how the American public is not properly informed about

Congressional Forecast. Brian Clifton, Michael Milazzo. The problem we are addressing is how the American public is not properly informed about Congressional Forecast Brian Clifton, Michael Milazzo The problem we are addressing is how the American public is not properly informed about the extent that corrupting power that money has over politics

More information

Maiden Show; June 16, 2012

Maiden Show; June 16, 2012 Maiden Show; June 16, 2012 Kris: Welcome to Saturday Morning Live. The show that is all about you, the forgotten People whose lives are most affected by politicians due to the laws and regulations they

More information

Sudanese Civil Society Engagement in the Forthcoming Constitution Making Process

Sudanese Civil Society Engagement in the Forthcoming Constitution Making Process Sudanese Civil Society Engagement in the Forthcoming Constitution Making Process With the end of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement s interim period and the secession of South Sudan, Sudanese officials

More information

Black Economic Empowerment. Paper for Harold Wolpe Memorial Seminar, 8 June Dali Mpofu

Black Economic Empowerment. Paper for Harold Wolpe Memorial Seminar, 8 June Dali Mpofu Black Economic Empowerment Paper for Harold Wolpe Memorial Seminar, 8 June 2005 Dali Mpofu My standpoint is going to be that the BEE debate in South Africa is generally poor at the moment. So, my first

More information

HHr Health and Human Rights Journal

HHr Health and Human Rights Journal HHr Health and Human Rights Journal Human Rights in the World Health Organization: Views of the Director-General Candidates benjamin mason meier Before the 2017 election of the Director-General of WHO,

More information

David B. Grusky, Doug McAdam, Rob Reich, and Debra Satz

David B. Grusky, Doug McAdam, Rob Reich, and Debra Satz Occupy the Future David B. Grusky, Doug McAdam, Rob Reich, and Debra Satz In late September of 2011, the Occupy Wall Street protest in Zuccotti Park began attracting national and international media attention.

More information

RECLAIMING GOVERNMENT FOR AMERICA S FUTURE

RECLAIMING GOVERNMENT FOR AMERICA S FUTURE SUMMARY OF FINDINGS Almost every high-profile public debate today is, to some degree, a referendum on the role of government. Whether it is a tax debate, an effort to strengthen environmental regulations,

More information

The Iraqi Constitution from an Economic Perspective. Interview with Noah Feldman New York University School of Law

The Iraqi Constitution from an Economic Perspective. Interview with Noah Feldman New York University School of Law ECONOMICREFORM Feature Service August 1, 2005 The Iraqi Constitution from an Economic Perspective Interview with Noah Feldman New York University School of Law In his interview with CIPE, New York University

More information

Stories of IMPACT NATIVE AMERICAN COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT INSTITUTE

Stories of IMPACT NATIVE AMERICAN COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT INSTITUTE B U I L D I N G T H E F I E L D O F Stories of IMPACT C O M M U N I T Y T E N G A G E M E N NATIVE AMERICAN COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT INSTITUTE Building the Field of Community Engagement is a collaborative

More information

Why Migrate? Exploring The Migration Series Brewer Elementary School, San Antonio, Texas

Why Migrate? Exploring The Migration Series Brewer Elementary School, San Antonio, Texas Why Migrate? Exploring The Migration Series Brewer Elementary School, San Antonio, Texas Created by Mark Babino, second-grade classroom teacher Christian Rodriguez, Matthew Perez, and Lee Ann Gallegos

More information

Melbourne School of Government Conference: Democracy in Transition. Conference Program. 6-8 December 2015 Venue: The Langham Hotel, Melbourne

Melbourne School of Government Conference: Democracy in Transition. Conference Program. 6-8 December 2015 Venue: The Langham Hotel, Melbourne Melbourne School of Government Conference: Democracy in Transition Conference Program 6-8 December 2015 Venue: The Langham Hotel, Melbourne Day 1: Monday, 7 December Time 8.30am 9.00am Registration Welcome

More information

Saskia Schellekens Special Adviser to the Secretary-General s Envoy on Youth United Nations

Saskia Schellekens Special Adviser to the Secretary-General s Envoy on Youth United Nations Saskia Schellekens Special Adviser to the Secretary-General s Envoy on Youth United Nations UNV Partnerships Forum Session: Innovation for the SDGs - Contributing to the SDGs through a problem-based approach,

More information

DISCUSSION REPORT 24 TALKING ASEAN. Challenges of Raising ASEAN Awareness: Multi-sector Perspectives THE HABIBIE CENTER

DISCUSSION REPORT 24 TALKING ASEAN. Challenges of Raising ASEAN Awareness: Multi-sector Perspectives THE HABIBIE CENTER THE HABIBIE CENTER DISCUSSION REPORT No. 13/August 2015 th 24 TALKING ASEAN Challenges of Raising ASEAN Awareness: Multi-sector Perspectives The Habibie Center, Jakarta August 26, 2015 INTRODUCTION JAKARTA

More information

Expert Group Meeting Youth Social Entrepreneurship and the 2030 Agenda

Expert Group Meeting Youth Social Entrepreneurship and the 2030 Agenda Expert Group Meeting Youth Social Entrepreneurship and the 2030 Agenda 11-12 December 2018 United Nations Headquarters New York, USA Concept Note DRAFT Overview: On 11 and 12 December 2018, the Division

More information

Hungry for change- Frequently Asked Questions

Hungry for change- Frequently Asked Questions Hungry for change- Frequently Asked Questions Q Global hunger is a huge problem, how can CAFOD hope to solve it with one campaign? A On one level, the food system s complex, a deadly mix of different factors

More information

An Inconvenient Truth. Politics, Economics, and Ethics

An Inconvenient Truth. Politics, Economics, and Ethics An Inconvenient Truth: Politics, Economics, and Ethics By John Steen On February 26, 2002, the APHA Executive Board adopted 12 Principles of the Ethical Practice of Public Health. 1 No. 4 reads: Public

More information

The Voice of Children and Youth for Rio+20

The Voice of Children and Youth for Rio+20 The Voice of Children and Youth for Rio+20 2011 Tunza International Children and Youth Conference Bandung Declaration October 1, 2011 1 We, the delegates to the 2011 Tunza International Children and Youth

More information

COP21-REDLINES-D12 TO CHANGE EVERYTHING WE HAVE TO STEP OUT OF LINE DISOBEDIENCE FOR A JUST AND LIVEABLE PLANET IN PARIS AND EVERYWHERE

COP21-REDLINES-D12 TO CHANGE EVERYTHING WE HAVE TO STEP OUT OF LINE DISOBEDIENCE FOR A JUST AND LIVEABLE PLANET IN PARIS AND EVERYWHERE COP21-REDLINES-D12 TO CHANGE EVERYTHING WE HAVE TO STEP OUT OF LINE DISOBEDIENCE FOR A JUST AND LIVEABLE PLANET IN PARIS AND EVERYWHERE Disobedience, in the eyes of anyone who has read history, is our

More information

Community Advisory Committee Meeting #1. Hiawatha Golf Course Property Master Plan

Community Advisory Committee Meeting #1. Hiawatha Golf Course Property Master Plan Community Advisory Committee Meeting #1 Hiawatha Golf Course Property Master Plan Welcome! Take two minutes and introduce yourself, and tell us about your passion for parks and recreation CAC Charge The

More information

LETTER FROM EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR

LETTER FROM EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR 2017 ANNUAL REPORT LETTER FROM EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR In March 2017, I gave birth to a baby boy. We named him We spent 2017 laying the groundwork and building power Anton after my great-grandfather. The paid

More information

Dialogue of Civilizations: Finding Common Approaches to Promoting Peace and Human Development

Dialogue of Civilizations: Finding Common Approaches to Promoting Peace and Human Development Dialogue of Civilizations: Finding Common Approaches to Promoting Peace and Human Development A Framework for Action * The Framework for Action is divided into four sections: The first section outlines

More information

First broadcast Friday 27 th April About the episode

First broadcast Friday 27 th April About the episode Brexit Brits Abroad Podcast Episode 22: Talking with government officials and agencies in EU member states about what Brexit means for UK citizens living in the EU27 First broadcast Friday 27 th April

More information

Key note address. Violence and discrimination against the girl child: General introduction

Key note address. Violence and discrimination against the girl child: General introduction A parliamentary perspective on discrimination and violence against the girl child New York, 1 March 2007 A parliamentary event organized by the Inter-Parliamentary Union and the United Nations Division

More information

The opinions expressed in this work are the responsibility of the author and do not necessarly reflect the official policy of the Council of Europe.

The opinions expressed in this work are the responsibility of the author and do not necessarly reflect the official policy of the Council of Europe. New models of governance of culture by Katarina Pavić 1 The opinions expressed in this work are the responsibility of the author and do not necessarly reflect the official policy of the Council of Europe.

More information

!$2 3 -$( 3 6)(!$!3 ( ( ")# ) $*'

!$2 3 -$( 3 6)(!$!3 ( ( )# ) $*' October 2008, Edition 1!!" #!!"$ # #!!" # # ##!! # %# & "" " ' # # # # ( # # ) * + "' #,- ( "'. # / 0 # $ ) #1 # #) # #, # # #' # - + ( "!$2 3 -$ +42 54( 3!"# $%"&$ # '!$2 3 -$( 3 6)(!$!3 ( ( ")# ) $*'

More information

RE-AMP ORGANIZING HUB. Coalition Ground Rules Discussion Guide A badly illustrated guide to setting good coalition ground rules

RE-AMP ORGANIZING HUB. Coalition Ground Rules Discussion Guide A badly illustrated guide to setting good coalition ground rules RE-AMP ORGANIZING HUB Coalition Ground Rules Discussion Guide A badly illustrated guide to setting good coalition ground rules 2015 About RE-AMP RE-AMP is an active network of nearly 160 nonprofits and

More information

HELEN CLARK. A Better, Fairer, Safer World. New Zealand s Candidate for United Nations Secretary-General

HELEN CLARK. A Better, Fairer, Safer World. New Zealand s Candidate for United Nations Secretary-General HELEN CLARK A Better, Fairer, Safer World New Zealand s Candidate for United Nations Secretary-General Monday 11 April, 2016 Excellency, I am honoured to be New Zealand s candidate for the position of

More information